commission

Video: Holtz-Eakin Says Goldman Slow to Cooperate in FCIC Probe: Video

June 11, 2010

June 11 (Bloomberg) — Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a member of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, talks about the Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s response to the FCIC’s request for records, outlook for the commission’s final report and prospects for financial-rules legislation. Holtz-Eakin talks with Peter Cook on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop With Betty Liu.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Worst Locust Plague in Two Decades Threatens Crops in Australia’s Victoria

June 11, 2010

By Wendy Pugh June 11 (Bloomberg) — The worst locust plague in more than two decades is threatening to strike Australia, the world’s fourth-largest wheat exporter, after rainfall boosted egg-laying by the insects in major crop growing regions. “There are hundreds of millions of dollars worth of crops and pastures that are potentially at risk,” Chris Adriaansen, director at the Canberra-based Australian Plague Locust Commission said in an interview by phone. “Tens of millions of dollars” will be spent during the southern hemisphere spring to reduce the affects of the infestation, he said. The forecast plague could cost Victoria’s agriculture sector A$2 billion ($1.7 billion) if left untreated, the state government said today. Widespread egg-laying across south- eastern Australia has set the scene for the biggest hatching for at least 25 years, according to the commission, which describes locusts as the nation’s most serious pest species. “The advice of leading scientists indicates the scale of the coming spring’s outbreak could be as bad as we experienced in 1973 and 1974 when locusts swarmed through much of Victoria,” state premier John Brumby said today in a statement. “Prior to that, the last outbreak of this scale was in 1934, so we could be facing a once-in-a-lifetime locust plague with locusts swarming right across the state.” Locusts are expected to hatch from August to October in Victoria, New South Wales and South Australia states, according to the commission. The first-generation spring hatching alone could occur over a total area of 1.8 million hectares (4.4 million acres), the commission’s Adriaansen said. ‘Knock Down’ “Egg-laying has happened so it is a case of being prepared to try and knock down their numbers come September,” Victorian Farmers Federation President Andrew Broad said by phone from Bridgewater. The VFF, NSW Farmers Association and South Australian Farmers Federation have asked the federal government for additional funding to help farmers fight the insects. The Victorian government said it will spend A$43.5 million to fight the locusts, which belong to the same order of insects as grasshoppers. Rabobank Groep NV in April raised its wheat- output forecast for Australia to 21.8 million metric tons, little changed from last harvest, after the rains. Australian farmers have mostly completed planting of winter crops including wheat and canola, with final output depending on favorable weather through the remainder of the year. Aerial pesticide spraying and ground-level controls by agencies and growers is planned to curb the spread of the locusts and reduce damage to crops and pastures, according to the commission Damage Potential Locusts can cause widespread and severe damage to pastures, cereal crops and forage crops, according to the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry website. A swarm may contain millions of locusts covering several square kilometers and overnight migrations of as much as several 100 kilometers are not uncommon, it said. The earliest record of an Australian swarm is from 1844. High density swarms, with more than 50 insects in a square meter, can eat 20 metric tons of vegetation a day, according to a South Australian primary industries website . “If we get a massive hatching like they are expecting in spring then what the grasshoppers will do is go into the crops and start chewing the heads off the wheat,” said Mark Hoskinson, who farms 2,500 hectares at Kikoira in New South Wales. Locusts decimated a crop sown by his grandfather after drought in the 1940s and this year’s threat follows recovery from dry weather. ‘Massive Hatching’ “We have experienced 10 years of drought and the last thing we need is a crop failure due to grasshoppers,” said Hoskinson, also chairman of the NSW Farmers Association’s grains committee. “We really need growers to be on the lookout.” Analysis showed every dollar spent by the commission on early intervention saved more than A$20 of later damage, the commission’s Adriaansen said. To be sure, experience from past infestations suggested widespread crop damage from this year’s outbreak would be limited, according to analysts including Commonwealth Bank of Australia agricultural commodities strategist Luke Mathews . “It is something that bears watching but I don’t think it is a significant factor in the minds of traders at the present stage,” Mathews said. “Weather conditions first and foremost dictate the size of the Australian wheat crop and winter crop production in total.” Wheat production this harvest could drop below 20 million metric tons or rise or more than 23 million tons, depending on weather, Mathews said. The bank is forecasting a crop of 20 million to 21 million tons. Output last season was 21.66 million tons, the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics estimated in March. Aerial Spraying State agricultural departments are urging farmers to report and mark signs of infestations so that locust numbers can be reduced before they take flight. Some early-planted winter crops in eastern Australia were re-sown because of locust damage. The plague locust commission, established in 1974 after a plague the previous year, organizes aerial spraying while locusts are at the nymph stage to curb swarming across eastern Australia and reduce damage from further insect generations over the following months. State and regional government agencies also work with farmers on ground-level action to protect local areas and individual properties. The situation and prevention measures are being monitored by GrainCorp Ltd. , eastern Australia’s largest grain handler, spokesman David Ginns said. “GrainCorp has confidence in the competence and effectiveness of the state and commonwealth authorities that have a lot of experience in dealing with locust situations of this type,” he said. Problem Recognized Problems during planting had alerted authorities and farmers to the potential size of the spring hatching and increased the chance that damage would be contained, Rabobank Sydney-based agricultural commodities analyst Wayne Gordon said. “The potential for that problem in the springtime has been recognized and we are fairly confident the authorities will get that under control as they have done in the past,” he said by phone. Rabobank’s wheat forecast for 21.8 million tons had potential “upside,” depending on seasonal conditions, he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Wendy Pugh in Melbourne wpugh@bloomberg.net

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Video: FCIC Subpoenas Goldman Sachs, Seeking Documents: Video

June 7, 2010

June 7 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission issued a subpoena to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. after the Wall Street firm failed to hand over documents in a “timely manner.” Bloomberg’s Peter Cook reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Credit-Rating Agencies May Face Single EU Regulator in Wake of Debt Crisis

June 2, 2010

By Erik Larson June 2 (Bloomberg) — The European Union today called for a single supervisor of credit-rating companies as politicians in the 27-nation bloc demanded a new regional agency to increase competition in the wake of the sovereign debt crisis. The European Commission proposed giving the power to investigate, issue fines and revoke licenses to a new EU authority. The Brussels-based commission also proposed reining in risk-taking behavior at financial companies to prevent a repeat of the credit crunch. “The changes to rules on credit rating agencies will mean better supervision and increased transparency in this crucial sector,” EU Financial Services Commissioner Michel Barnier said today in a statement. “But they are only a first step. We are looking at this market in more detail.” Scrutiny of the industry intensified after Standard & Poor’s cut Greece’s rating to junk status on April 27, adding urgency to European plans to bail out the debt-plagued nation. Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker , who heads the group of euro-area finance ministers, yesterday called for the creation of a European ratings company overseen by the European Central Bank. Commission President Jose Barroso and Barnier said the agency is examining a similar proposal. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble today said he welcomed a French proposal to create European competitors to U.S.-based credit-rating companies, saying in Berlin that their “oligopoly” in the market should be broken. ‘Market Confidence’ “The new EU regulations will play an important part, alongside the measures S&P has taken independently, in building market confidence and integrity and transparency of ratings,” Martin Winn , a spokesman for Standard & Poor’s in London, said in a statement. Jessica Sibado, a spokeswoman for Moody’s Investors Service, didn’t immediately return a call or e-mail seeking comment. Julian Dennison , a spokesman at Fitch Ratings, didn’t immediately return a call for comment. The commission today said it’s also inviting outside comments until Sept. 1 on possible measures and may propose formal laws “to tackle the failures of corporate governance in financial institutions” early next year. Regulators have blamed poor procedures for risk-taking behavior that contributed to the global credit crunch and bank bailouts costing billions of euros. Risk-Taking Compensation structures also led to excessive risk-taking and short-term thinking, the agency said. Rules on pay for directors at companies listed on stock exchanges are under consideration in today’s governance paper, it said. Boards of directors failed to exercise effective control over senior managers or to properly challenge guidelines submitted to them for approval, the commission said. The regulator has already proposed restrictions on pay at banks and hedge funds. Similar restrictions on staff at mutual funds and insurance companies are under preparation, the commission said. “The changes should improve the situation” with credit ratings, Karel Lannoo , chief executive officer of the Centre for European Policy Studies in Brussels said in an interview today. “The credit-rating agencies are already aware of these kinds of concerns, so they know something is coming.” To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Larson in London at elarson4@bloomberg.net .

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Europe Economic Confidence Slips, Inflation Quickens

May 31, 2010

By Simone Meier May 31 (Bloomberg) — European confidence in the economic outlook unexpectedly worsened in May and inflation accelerated less than economists forecast as the euro region’s debt crisis shook markets. An index of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 euro nations fell to 98.4 from 100.6 in April, the European Commission in Brussels said today. Economists had forecast an unchanged reading, based on the median of 25 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Consumer-prices rose 1.6 percent in May from a year ago, a separate report showed, below the 1.7 percent rate forecast by economists. Inflation was 1.5 percent in April. The euro-region economy may struggle to gather strength after the threat of contagion from Greece’s budget woes eroded investor sentiment and forced governments to step up spending cuts to reduce deficits. While a drop in the euro has helped bolster exports, it’s also pushing up import costs. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index has lost 7 percent over the past two months. “The worsening in economic confidence confirms that the sovereign-debt woes in the southern periphery have started to spill over into the real economy,” said Martin van Vliet , an economist at ING Group in Amsterdam. “Domestic recovery prospects in the euro zone are darkening.” The euro remained higher against the dollar after the reports were published and was up 0.3 percent to $1.2306 as of 10:21 a.m. in London. Consumer Sentiment Confidence among consumers fell to minus 18 in May from minus 15 in April, the commission report showed. Sentiment in the retailing, construction and services industries also declined. Manufacturing sentiment rose to minus 6 from minus 7. The commission said that the latest confidence reading is influenced by a “change of classification of economic activities,” affecting the level of business surveys. The consumer index wasn’t affected by the new method, it said. The euro-region economy may expand 0.9 percent this year and 1.5 percent in 2011, the commission forecast on May 5. Inflation may average 1.5 percent this year and 1.7 percent in 2011, while unemployment is seen rising to 10.4 percent from 10.3 percent this year, it said. To help contain the budget crisis, European policy makers earlier this month unveiled a 750 billion-euro ($922 billion) rescue package. Spain, Portugal and Italy have stepped up budget cuts as part of the plan. An index of economic confidence in Greece dropped to 61.9 in May from 69.1 the previous month, the commission report showed, while a gauge for Portugal fell to 91.1 from 93.8. Sentiment in Spain also declined. Euro Weakness The euro’s 14 percent drop against the dollar this year has helped support the region’s export-led recovery as rising unemployment weighs on consumer demand and companies hold back investment. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on May 26 raised its global growth forecast for this year, citing a faster expansion in economies including China. Daimler AG , the world’s second-largest luxury carmaker based in Stuttgart, Germany, on May 28 raised its profit forecast for the Mercedes-Benz division for the second time in six weeks on reviving global demand. “Demand has stabilized on a lower level,” Stefan Fuchs , chief executive officer of Fuchs Petrolub AG , Germany’s largest maker of lubricants, said on May 3. “We still don’t know if this is just re-stocking. The question is if the recovery is sustainable.” The commission’s gauge measuring euro-region manufacturers’ confidence in their export orders rose to minus 30 this month from minus 32. An index of employment expectations advanced to minus 10 from minus 13 and a gauge of order books also increased, today’s report showed. Still, companies may struggle to raise prices as consumers hold back spending amid uncertainty about the recovery. “If you strip energy, there’s no great pressure there,” said Alan McQuaid , chief economist at Bloxham Stockbrokers in Dublin. “I don’t think inflation is a near-term problem.” Today’s inflation report is an initial estimate and the statistics office will release a breakdown of May consumer prices along with core inflation on June 16. To contact the reporter on this story: Simone Meier in Dublin at smeier@bloombert.net

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Europe Economic Confidence Slips, Inflation Quickens

May 31, 2010

By Simone Meier May 31 (Bloomberg) — European confidence in the economic outlook unexpectedly worsened in May and inflation accelerated less than economists forecast as the euro region’s debt crisis shook markets. An index of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 euro nations fell to 98.4 from 100.6 in April, the European Commission in Brussels said today. Economists had forecast an unchanged reading, based on the median of 25 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Consumer-prices rose 1.6 percent in May from a year ago, a separate report showed, below the 1.7 percent rate forecast by economists. Inflation was 1.5 percent in April. The euro-region economy may struggle to gather strength after the threat of contagion from Greece’s budget woes eroded investor sentiment and forced governments to step up spending cuts to reduce deficits. While a drop in the euro has helped bolster exports, it’s also pushing up import costs. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index has lost 7 percent over the past two months. “The worsening in economic confidence confirms that the sovereign-debt woes in the southern periphery have started to spill over into the real economy,” said Martin van Vliet , an economist at ING Group in Amsterdam. “Domestic recovery prospects in the euro zone are darkening.” The euro remained higher against the dollar after the reports were published and was up 0.3 percent to $1.2306 as of 10:21 a.m. in London. Consumer Sentiment Confidence among consumers fell to minus 18 in May from minus 15 in April, the commission report showed. Sentiment in the retailing, construction and services industries also declined. Manufacturing sentiment rose to minus 6 from minus 7. The commission said that the latest confidence reading is influenced by a “change of classification of economic activities,” affecting the level of business surveys. The consumer index wasn’t affected by the new method, it said. The euro-region economy may expand 0.9 percent this year and 1.5 percent in 2011, the commission forecast on May 5. Inflation may average 1.5 percent this year and 1.7 percent in 2011, while unemployment is seen rising to 10.4 percent from 10.3 percent this year, it said. To help contain the budget crisis, European policy makers earlier this month unveiled a 750 billion-euro ($922 billion) rescue package. Spain, Portugal and Italy have stepped up budget cuts as part of the plan. An index of economic confidence in Greece dropped to 61.9 in May from 69.1 the previous month, the commission report showed, while a gauge for Portugal fell to 91.1 from 93.8. Sentiment in Spain also declined. Euro Weakness The euro’s 14 percent drop against the dollar this year has helped support the region’s export-led recovery as rising unemployment weighs on consumer demand and companies hold back investment. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on May 26 raised its global growth forecast for this year, citing a faster expansion in economies including China. Daimler AG , the world’s second-largest luxury carmaker based in Stuttgart, Germany, on May 28 raised its profit forecast for the Mercedes-Benz division for the second time in six weeks on reviving global demand. “Demand has stabilized on a lower level,” Stefan Fuchs , chief executive officer of Fuchs Petrolub AG , Germany’s largest maker of lubricants, said on May 3. “We still don’t know if this is just re-stocking. The question is if the recovery is sustainable.” The commission’s gauge measuring euro-region manufacturers’ confidence in their export orders rose to minus 30 this month from minus 32. An index of employment expectations advanced to minus 10 from minus 13 and a gauge of order books also increased, today’s report showed. Still, companies may struggle to raise prices as consumers hold back spending amid uncertainty about the recovery. “If you strip energy, there’s no great pressure there,” said Alan McQuaid , chief economist at Bloxham Stockbrokers in Dublin. “I don’t think inflation is a near-term problem.” Today’s inflation report is an initial estimate and the statistics office will release a breakdown of May consumer prices along with core inflation on June 16. To contact the reporter on this story: Simone Meier in Dublin at smeier@bloombert.net

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European Economic Confidence Unexpectedly Slips as Inflation Accelerates

May 31, 2010

By Simone Meier May 31 (Bloomberg) — European confidence in the economic outlook unexpectedly worsened in May and inflation accelerated less than economists forecast as the euro region’s debt crisis shook markets. An index of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 euro nations fell to 98.4 from 100.6 in April, the European Commission in Brussels said today. Economists had forecast an unchanged reading, based on the median of 25 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Consumer-prices rose 1.6 percent in May from a year ago, a separate report showed, below the 1.7 percent rate forecast by economists. Inflation was 1.5 percent in April. The euro-region economy may struggle to gather strength after the threat of contagion from Greece’s budget woes eroded investor sentiment and forced governments to step up spending cuts to reduce deficits. While a drop in the euro has helped bolster exports, it’s also pushing up import costs. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index has lost 7 percent over the past two months. “The worsening in economic confidence confirms that the sovereign-debt woes in the southern periphery have started to spill over into the real economy,” said Martin van Vliet , an economist at ING Group in Amsterdam. “Domestic recovery prospects in the euro zone are darkening.” The euro remained higher against the dollar after the reports were published and was up 0.3 percent to $1.2306 as of 10:21 a.m. in London. Consumer Sentiment Confidence among consumers fell to minus 18 in May from minus 15 in April, the commission report showed. Sentiment in the retailing, construction and services industries also declined. Manufacturing sentiment rose to minus 6 from minus 7. The commission said that the latest confidence reading is influenced by a “change of classification of economic activities,” affecting the level of business surveys. The consumer index wasn’t affected by the new method, it said. The euro-region economy may expand 0.9 percent this year and 1.5 percent in 2011, the commission forecast on May 5. Inflation may average 1.5 percent this year and 1.7 percent in 2011, while unemployment is seen rising to 10.4 percent from 10.3 percent this year, it said. To help contain the budget crisis, European policy makers earlier this month unveiled a 750 billion-euro ($922 billion) rescue package. Spain, Portugal and Italy have stepped up budget cuts as part of the plan. An index of economic confidence in Greece dropped to 61.9 in May from 69.1 the previous month, the commission report showed, while a gauge for Portugal fell to 91.1 from 93.8. Sentiment in Spain also declined. Euro Weakness The euro’s 14 percent drop against the dollar this year has helped support the region’s export-led recovery as rising unemployment weighs on consumer demand and companies hold back investment. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on May 26 raised its global growth forecast for this year, citing a faster expansion in economies including China. Daimler AG , the world’s second-largest luxury carmaker based in Stuttgart, Germany, on May 28 raised its profit forecast for the Mercedes-Benz division for the second time in six weeks on reviving global demand. “Demand has stabilized on a lower level,” Stefan Fuchs , chief executive officer of Fuchs Petrolub AG , Germany’s largest maker of lubricants, said on May 3. “We still don’t know if this is just re-stocking. The question is if the recovery is sustainable.” The commission’s gauge measuring euro-region manufacturers’ confidence in their export orders rose to minus 30 this month from minus 32. An index of employment expectations advanced to minus 10 from minus 13 and a gauge of order books also increased, today’s report showed. Still, companies may struggle to raise prices as consumers hold back spending amid uncertainty about the recovery. “If you strip energy, there’s no great pressure there,” said Alan McQuaid , chief economist at Bloxham Stockbrokers in Dublin. “I don’t think inflation is a near-term problem.” Today’s inflation report is an initial estimate and the statistics office will release a breakdown of May consumer prices along with core inflation on June 16. To contact the reporter on this story: Simone Meier in Dublin at smeier@bloombert.net

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European Economic Confidence Unexpectedly Declines, Inflation Accelerates

May 31, 2010

By Simone Meier May 31 (Bloomberg) — European confidence in the economic outlook unexpectedly worsened in May and inflation accelerated less than economists forecast as the euro region’s debt crisis shook markets. An index of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 euro nations fell to 98.4 from 100.6 in April, the European Commission in Brussels said today. Economists had forecast an unchanged reading, based on the median of 25 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Consumer-prices rose 1.6 percent in May from a year ago, a separate report showed, below the 1.7 percent rate forecast by economists. Inflation was 1.5 percent in April. The euro-region economy may struggle to gather strength after the threat of contagion from Greece’s budget woes eroded investor sentiment and forced governments to step up spending cuts to reduce deficits. While a drop in the euro has helped bolster exports, it’s also pushing up import costs. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index has lost 7 percent over the past two months. “The worsening in economic confidence confirms that the sovereign-debt woes in the southern periphery have started to spill over into the real economy,” said Martin van Vliet , an economist at ING Group in Amsterdam. “Domestic recovery prospects in the euro zone are darkening.” The euro remained higher against the dollar after the reports were published and was up 0.3 percent to $1.2306 as of 10:21 a.m. in London. Consumer Sentiment Confidence among consumers fell to minus 18 in May from minus 15 in April, the commission report showed. Sentiment in the retailing, construction and services industries also declined. Manufacturing sentiment rose to minus 6 from minus 7. The commission said that the latest confidence reading is influenced by a “change of classification of economic activities,” affecting the level of business surveys. The consumer index wasn’t affected by the new method, it said. The euro-region economy may expand 0.9 percent this year and 1.5 percent in 2011, the commission forecast on May 5. Inflation may average 1.5 percent this year and 1.7 percent in 2011, while unemployment is seen rising to 10.4 percent from 10.3 percent this year, it said. To help contain the budget crisis, European policy makers earlier this month unveiled a 750 billion-euro ($922 billion) rescue package. Spain, Portugal and Italy have stepped up budget cuts as part of the plan. An index of economic confidence in Greece dropped to 61.9 in May from 69.1 the previous month, the commission report showed, while a gauge for Portugal fell to 91.1 from 93.8. Sentiment in Spain also declined. Euro Weakness The euro’s 14 percent drop against the dollar this year has helped support the region’s export-led recovery as rising unemployment weighs on consumer demand and companies hold back investment. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on May 26 raised its global growth forecast for this year, citing a faster expansion in economies including China. Daimler AG , the world’s second-largest luxury carmaker based in Stuttgart, Germany, on May 28 raised its profit forecast for the Mercedes-Benz division for the second time in six weeks on reviving global demand. “Demand has stabilized on a lower level,” Stefan Fuchs , chief executive officer of Fuchs Petrolub AG , Germany’s largest maker of lubricants, said on May 3. “We still don’t know if this is just re-stocking. The question is if the recovery is sustainable.” The commission’s gauge measuring euro-region manufacturers’ confidence in their export orders rose to minus 30 this month from minus 32. An index of employment expectations advanced to minus 10 from minus 13 and a gauge of order books also increased, today’s report showed. Still, companies may struggle to raise prices as consumers hold back spending amid uncertainty about the recovery. “If you strip energy, there’s no great pressure there,” said Alan McQuaid , chief economist at Bloxham Stockbrokers in Dublin. “I don’t think inflation is a near-term problem.” Today’s inflation report is an initial estimate and the statistics office will release a breakdown of May consumer prices along with core inflation on June 16. To contact the reporter on this story: Simone Meier in Dublin at smeier@bloombert.net

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European May Economic Confidence Unexpectedly Slips, Inflation Accelerates

May 31, 2010

By Simone Meier May 31 (Bloomberg) — European confidence in the economic outlook unexpectedly worsened in May and inflation accelerated less than economists forecast as the euro region’s debt crisis shook markets. An index of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 euro nations fell to 98.4 from 100.6 in April, the European Commission in Brussels said today. Economists had forecast an unchanged reading, based on the median of 25 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Consumer-prices rose 1.6 percent in May from a year ago, a separate report showed, below the 1.7 percent rate forecast by economists. Inflation was 1.5 percent in April. The euro-region economy may struggle to gather strength after the threat of contagion from Greece’s budget woes eroded investor sentiment and forced governments to step up spending cuts to reduce deficits. While a drop in the euro has helped bolster exports, it’s also pushing up import costs. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index has lost 7 percent over the past two months. “The worsening in economic confidence confirms that the sovereign-debt woes in the southern periphery have started to spill over into the real economy,” said Martin van Vliet , an economist at ING Group in Amsterdam. “Domestic recovery prospects in the euro zone are darkening.” The euro remained higher against the dollar after the reports were published and was up 0.3 percent to $1.2306 as of 10:21 a.m. in London. Consumer Sentiment Confidence among consumers fell to minus 18 in May from minus 15 in April, the commission report showed. Sentiment in the retailing, construction and services industries also declined. Manufacturing sentiment rose to minus 6 from minus 7. The commission said that the latest confidence reading is influenced by a “change of classification of economic activities,” affecting the level of business surveys. The consumer index wasn’t affected by the new method, it said. The euro-region economy may expand 0.9 percent this year and 1.5 percent in 2011, the commission forecast on May 5. Inflation may average 1.5 percent this year and 1.7 percent in 2011, while unemployment is seen rising to 10.4 percent from 10.3 percent this year, it said. To help contain the budget crisis, European policy makers earlier this month unveiled a 750 billion-euro ($922 billion) rescue package. Spain, Portugal and Italy have stepped up budget cuts as part of the plan. An index of economic confidence in Greece dropped to 61.9 in May from 69.1 the previous month, the commission report showed, while a gauge for Portugal fell to 91.1 from 93.8. Sentiment in Spain also declined. Euro Weakness The euro’s 14 percent drop against the dollar this year has helped support the region’s export-led recovery as rising unemployment weighs on consumer demand and companies hold back investment. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on May 26 raised its global growth forecast for this year, citing a faster expansion in economies including China. Daimler AG , the world’s second-largest luxury carmaker based in Stuttgart, Germany, on May 28 raised its profit forecast for the Mercedes-Benz division for the second time in six weeks on reviving global demand. “Demand has stabilized on a lower level,” Stefan Fuchs , chief executive officer of Fuchs Petrolub AG , Germany’s largest maker of lubricants, said on May 3. “We still don’t know if this is just re-stocking. The question is if the recovery is sustainable.” The commission’s gauge measuring euro-region manufacturers’ confidence in their export orders rose to minus 30 this month from minus 32. An index of employment expectations advanced to minus 10 from minus 13 and a gauge of order books also increased, today’s report showed. Still, companies may struggle to raise prices as consumers hold back spending amid uncertainty about the recovery. “If you strip energy, there’s no great pressure there,” said Alan McQuaid , chief economist at Bloxham Stockbrokers in Dublin. “I don’t think inflation is a near-term problem.” Today’s inflation report is an initial estimate and the statistics office will release a breakdown of May consumer prices along with core inflation on June 16. To contact the reporter on this story: Simone Meier in Dublin at smeier@bloombert.net

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Obama Appoints Democrat Graham, Republican Reilly to Investigate BP Spill

May 22, 2010

By Nicholas Johnston May 22 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama named Democrat Bob Graham , a former U.S. senator and Florida governor, and Republican William Reilly , a former Environmental Protection Agency administrator, to lead a presidential commission to investigate the BP Plc oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. In his weekly address on the radio and Internet, Obama said the commission, which he established by executive order, will consider the “root causes” of the accident and find ways to “prevent a similar disaster from ever happening again.” To work with Graham and Reilly, Obama said he will name five other commission members, directing them to report in six months with recommendations “on how we can prevent, and mitigate the impact of, any future spills” at offshore wells. “We can only pursue offshore oil drilling if we have assurances that a disaster like the BP oil spill will not happen again,” Obama said. “This commission will, I hope, help provide those assurances so we can continue to seek a secure energy future.” After the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded and sank last month, BP estimates that 5,000 barrels of oil per day has been leaking into the Gulf of Mexico. BP has succeeded in siphoning some oil from the leak, 5,000 feet (1,524 meters) below the surface, and pumping it to ships. In today’s address, Obama called the oil spill an “environmental disaster” and said the nation’s “best minds are using the world’s best technology” to try to stop the leak. Obama said the accident was caused by a breakdown in responsibility on the part of London-based BP, Geneva-based Transocean Ltd. , the company from which BP leased the rig, and Houston-based Halliburton Co. Held Accountable “We will continue to hold the relevant companies accountable” for stopping the leak, repairing the damage, and repaying financial losses, he said. Obama also said the federal government should be held accountable. “If the laws on our books are inadequate to prevent such an oil spill, or if we didn’t enforce those laws, I want to know it,” he said. “I want to know what worked and what didn’t work in our response to the disaster, and where oversight of the oil and gas industry broke down.” Obama has already announced plans to split the revenue and regulatory functions of the Minerals Management Service to prevent conflicts of interest, ordered inspections of all deepwater drilling operations in the gulf and issued a moratorium on new drilling. “But we need to do a lot more to protect the health and safety of our people, to safeguard the quality of our air and water, and to preserve the natural beauty and bounty of America,” Obama said. Republican Address In the Republican address, Louisiana Senator David Vitter called on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to immediately start work — “with BP, by the way, appropriately footing the bill” — dredging material from rivers and deltas to build up barrier islands to help protect the coast from oil. Vitter also said he is working with other Gulf Coast legislators to back legislation that raises the liability cap for companies responsible for spills to the greater of “the last four quarters of the responsible party’s profits” or double the current $75 million limit. The measure would also encourage research on ways to cap wells and develop booms to prevent the spread of oil in rough seas. “That would make offshore drilling safer, smarter and more reliable,” Vitter said. To contact the reporter on this story: Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net .

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Philippine Bonds, Stocks, Peso Tumble on Concern Election May Be Delayed

May 4, 2010

By Francisco Alcuaz Jr. and Clarissa Batino May 5 (Bloomberg) — Philippine bonds, stocks and the peso fell after vote-counting machines malfunctioned in tests this week, raising concern there will be a delay in choosing a new leader to replace President Gloria Arroyo . The Commission on Elections yesterday said it would have to replace flash memory cards in its 76,000 vote-counting machines. It said it could do this before the May 10 election. National Movement for Free Elections , a poll-watching organization, and political analysts have said it may be impossible. “Investors are trimming their holdings and will be on the sidelines in the next couple of weeks,” said Lito Mercado , head of trading at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. in Manila. “Days before the day itself, we find out the whole automation process isn’t ironed out, that it’s not ready. Whoever wins, the loser will think he has enough reason to protest.” The nation is holding its first computerized elections to reduce cheating that occurred in tallying ballots by hand that took weeks. Namfrel and other groups have been warning that delayed delivery and inadequate testing of the machines raised the risk they will fail or produce erroneous results. Senator Benigno Aquino , who leads in the polls, last week said his supporters would take to the streets if “the people’s will is frustrated.” Election commissioners and the commission’s spokesman didn’t answer calls to their phones today. The yield on the 6.5 percent dollar-denominated bonds due January 2020 jumped 17 basis points to 5.442, the biggest rise in yields since the bonds were first sold in July 2009, at 10:15 a.m. according to prices from ING Groep NV. Stocks Fall The Philippine Stock Index had its biggest drop in almost 11 months. The benchmark was down 3.3 percent at 3,147.50 at 11:05 a.m. in Manila. The peso fell as much as 0.8 percent to 45.01 against the U.S. dollar, its weakest since April 6. It traded at 44.99 at 10:29 a.m. “The whole automated process is already compromised,” said Bobby Tuazon, director of the Center for People Empowerment in Governance in Manila. “Many flash cards may not reach their destinations. Many areas will have to go manual again. More things will happen in the days leading up to the election.” President Gloria Arroyo’s spokesman Gary Olivar said the government is hopeful “technical issues will be resolved.” Agence France Presse earlier reported him as saying the elections may have to be delayed. Romulo Macalintal , an election lawyer who has worked for President Arroyo, said he has suggested a 15-day delay to the Commission on Elections. He clarified he wasn’t speaking for Arroyo. “To ensure a clean, honest political exercise, there’s a need for the commission to see that everything is fixed,” he said in an interview on ABS-CBN News Channel. To contact the reporter on this story: Francisco Alcuaz Jr . in Manila at falcuaz@bloomberg.net

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FTC:Telemarketers Fined Record $18 Million For Misleading Practices

March 31, 2010

WASHINGTON — Telephone fundraisers who duped consumers about their donations to police and firefighters must pay a record fine worth $18.8 million, including surrender of pricey Picasso paintings, luxury cars and a guitar collection. The Federal Trade Commission announced the fine Wednesday against two New Jersey-based companies accused of misleading consumers wanting to donate to charities for emergency officials and other nonprofits. The accused didn’t explain they were professional fundraisers and that only a fraction of donations was going to charity, the agency said. The civil penalty is the biggest ever in an FTC consumer protection case. The complaint named Civic Development Group LLC, CDG Management LLC and owners Scott Pasch and David Keezer. As part of the settlement, Pasch will turn over a $2 million home, paintings by Picasso and Van Gogh valued collectively at $1.4 million, a guitar collection valued at $800,000 and $270,000 in proceeds from a recently sold wine collection, the FTC said. Keezer will hand over a $2 million home, a Range Rover, a Cadillac Escalade and a Bentley, the agency said. The commission did not say how much money the defendants made off the alleged scheme. The complaint accuses Pasch, Keezer and their companies of misleading consumers by telling them the telemarketers worked directly for the charities for which they were calling and that “100 percent” of consumers’ donations would go to charity. Only about 10 to 15 percent of donations went to charity. “This scheme packed a one-two punch: It deceived the people who donated, and it siphoned much-needed funds from police, firefighters, and veterans groups,” said David Vladeck, director of the commission’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. The settlement bans the defendants from further telemarketing and soliciting of charitable donations. Keezer and Pasch could not be reached for comment. Phone numbers that appeared to be linked to both men were disconnected. The case against Keezer and Pasch dates to 1998, when the FTC first sued Civic Development Group for false telemarketing claims. A second complaint was filed against them in 2007 and was resolved with Wednesday’s civil penalty. ____ On the Net: Federal Trade Commission: http://www.ftc.gov

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David Isenberg: The Unknown Contractor

March 29, 2010

In my March 25 post I mentioned how difficult it still is, despite years of trying, to collect accurate data on basic private military and security contractor (PMSC) facts, such as how many are there, And I noted that to help increase oversight of activities supporting the Defense and State departments and USAID’s efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan, the three agencies designated the Synchronized Predeployment and Operational Tracker (SPOT) as their system for tracking the required information. That information, required for each contract that involves work performed in Iraq or Afghanistan for more than 14 days, includes: * a brief description of the contract, * its total value, and * whether it was awarded competitively; and * for contractor personnel working under contracts in Iraq or Afghanistan, * total number employed, * total number performing security functions, and * total number killed or wounded. Now, despite years of effort SPOT still has problems in terms of collecting and saving information. Some reasons are disappointing but understandable, given differing methodologies for collecting and saving information across different departments and agencies. But one truly disappointing thing it does not do well is to keep track of contractors who are killed or wounded. According to John Hutton, Director, Acquisition and Sourcing Management, U.S. Government Accountability Office, who on March 23 testified before the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations regarding ” Interagency Coordination of Grants and Contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan: Progress, Obstacles, and Plans “: In addition to agreeing to use SPOT to track contractor personnel numbers, the agencies agreed to use SPOT to track information on contractor personnel killed or wounded. Although SPOT was upgraded in January 2009 to track casualties, officials from the three agencies informed us they are not relying on the database for this information because contractors are generally not updating the status of their personnel to indicate whether any of their employees were killed, wounded, or are missing. In the absence of using SPOT to identify the number of contractor personnel killed or wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan, the agencies obtain these data from other sources. Specifically, in response to requests made as part of our ongoing review, State and USAID provided us with manually compiled lists of the number of personnel killed or wounded, whereas DOD provided us with casualty data for U.S citizens, but could not differentiate whether the individuals identified were DOD civilian employees or contractors. While contractors are not active duty military, although they may very well have been not that long ago, they don’t deserve to be treated like the Unknown Soldier either. Whether or not you like the idea of the government relying on PMSC the reality is that they make a significant contribution, just like regular military personnel. Contractors know going in that if they are killed their family members won’t get the same survivor benefits, except for what they get under the Defense Base Act, as a soldier or marine who is killed. They know no chaplain will arrive at the door of their home to comfort the grieving. So it is really too much to ask that at the very least the government could at least kept track of those who are wounded and killed? After all, one can find contractor casualty lists on Wikipedia . If websites like Icasualties.org could include contractor casualties, as it used to do, the U.S. government with vastly greater informational resources at its disposal should be able to do so as well, albeit in far more comprehensive fashion. Some contractors are extremely good about letting the world know when their people are killed. DynCorp, for example, has for years, put out a press release every time one of its contractors dies. Why other contractors “are generally not updating the status of their personnel to indicate whether any of their employees were killed, wounded, or are missing” is an interesting question that someone ought to ask. Perhaps the Commission on Wartime Contracting can do so the next time it holds a hearing. Needless to say, SPOT data, should include contractors of any and all nationalities working for a PMC, not just a citizen of the host country

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Kingsrose Mining Limited (ASX:KRM) Prepares to Commission the Way Linggo Gold and Silver Mine in Indonesia

March 15, 2010

Kingsrose Mining Limited (ASX:KRM) Prepares to Commission the Way Linggo Gold and Silver Mine in Indonesia

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Banks Defend Sovereign Default-Swaps Trading as EU Meets to Consider Rules

March 5, 2010

By Ben Moshinsky (Corrects that ISDA didn’t attend today’s meeting in second paragraph.) March 5 (Bloomberg) — The banking industry is defending trading in sovereign credit-default swaps at a meeting with the European Commission , the EU’s executive arm. Swaps account for “only a small percentage of government bond trading volumes,” so it isn’t likely speculation in the contracts is “dictating price levels in the larger government bond market,” the International Swaps & Derivatives Association , an industry group, said in a statement today. The group said the Brussels meeting offered a chance to address “misconceptions” about credit swaps. Banks and regulators across Europe have been summoned by the European Commission to an informal meeting to discuss regulation of the market for sovereign credit-default swaps in the wake of the Greek debt crisis. European leaders have said the products fuel speculation that can distort market perceptions, making it harder for countries to borrow. The commission should ban naked swaps speculation, where investors insure bonds they don’t own, because “it is a demonstrably dangerous market,” Richard Portes , founder of the Centre for Economic Policy Research, said in a telephone interview today. “If I were the commission, I’d ask the banks to say what social function the trade in naked CDS has.” The roundtable is a “technical meeting,” and the discussions will be taken into account for the commission’s planned derivatives proposals later this year, Chantal Hughes , a commission spokeswoman, told reporters today. Face Value for Debt Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a country or company default on its debt payments. ISDA defended sovereign swaps, saying in its statement they “can be used to hedge financial, industrial and real estate investments in countries.” The products allow investors to buy and sell default protection “without having access to government bond markets,” the group said. German Chancellor Angela Merkel ’s government is considering ways to tighten rules in the sovereign default swaps market. French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said Feb. 17 “we should examine the suitability” of credit-default swaps. The cost of such contracts on Greece rose to a record 428 basis points last month, according to CMA DataVision in London. That meant it cost $428,000 a year to insure $10 million of debt for five years. Efforts to limit sovereign swaps contracts were criticized by Citigroup Inc. analysts in a note March 2. The analysts said governments should address investor concerns about budget deficits, rather than ban derivatives that hedge against risks. “We would do better to spend our time addressing the defects the mirror shows than blaming the mirror,” Citigroup analysts, led by Michael Hampden-Turner in London, wrote in a note to investors. “After all, banning mirrors does nothing at all to make the world a prettier place.” To contact the reporters on this story: Ben Moshinsky in Brussels at bmoshinsky@bloomberg.net

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European Commission creates two new Directorates-General for Energy

February 17, 2010

European Commission creates two new Directorates-General for Energy

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Greece’s Goldman Swaps Spawn Debate About Whether EU Knew of Hidden Debts

February 15, 2010

By Elisa Martinuzzi and Gavin Finch Feb. 16 (Bloomberg) — A dispute is unfolding about how long European Union officials have known that Greece used derivatives to conceal its growing budget deficit. Greece turned to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in 2002, just after adopting the euro, to get $1 billion in funding through a swap on $10 billion of debt, Christoforos Sardelis , head of Greece’s Public Debt Management Agency at the time, said in an interview last week. Eurostat, the EU’s statistics office, was aware of the plan, he said. Risk Magazine also reported on the swap in July 2003. “Eurostat was not until recently aware of this alleged currency swap transaction made by Greece,” spokesman Johan Wullt said by e-mail yesterday. The disagreement about who knew what and when comes amid the worst crisis in the euro’s 11-year history. The existence of the swaps, which allowed Greece to delay payments and shrink its reported budget deficit, is fueling questions about whether Greece used the contracts to mask the fact it was struggling to comply with the currency’s membership criteria from the early days of its entry into the eurozone. “Greece falsified deficit statistics, and that can’t be legal,” said Wolfgang Gerke , president of the Bavarian Center of Finance in Munich and honorary professor at the European School of Business. “Greece needs to be kicked out of the EU because otherwise there will be new copycats, and that could lead to the next catastrophe on financial markets.” EU regulators pressed Greece yesterday to disclose details of currency swaps after an inquiry by the country’s finance ministry uncovered a series of agreements with banks that it may have used to conceal mounting debt. Legal ‘At the Time’ One issue is whether Greece was legally obliged at the time to notify Eurostat. Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said yesterday the use of swaps was “at the time legal.” The contracts are now no longer legal, and Greece doesn’t use them, he said during a question-and-answer session at a conference in Brussels yesterday. Eurostat has required information about swaps since 2007, Wullt said. The watchdog doesn’t need to be notified of individual deals, he added. “It is legitimate if the underlying exchange rates and the interest rates of such swaps are calculated from the observed market rates and this is something we will have to assess,” European Commission spokesman Amadeu Altafaj said yesterday. EU regulators have blessed the use of derivatives contracts to let countries curb their deficits. In 2001, the Commission, the EU’s regulatory arm, approved Italy’s use of derivatives that helped to reduce its budget deficit in 1997. Italy swapped fixed payments on a three-year, yen-denominated bond in 1996, for a floating rate, allowing it to temporarily cut the amount of interest paid on the debt. ‘Lurking in the Shadows’ European politicians this week criticized New York-based Goldman Sachs for arranging the Greek swap and are pressing for more disclosure. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats aim to push for new rules that will force euro-region nations and banks to disclose bond swaps that have an impact on public finances, financial affairs spokesman Michael Meister said yesterday. “Goldman Sachs broke the spirit of the Maastricht Treaty, though it is not certain it broke the law,” Meister said in an interview yesterday. “What is certain is that we must never leave this kind of thing lurking in the shadows again.” Joanna Carss , a London-based spokeswoman for Goldman Sachs, the most profitable securities firm in Wall Street history, declined to comment. Luxembourg’s Jean-Claude Juncker said euro-area finance ministers discussed Goldman Sachs’s and Greece’s use of derivatives on the fringes of a meeting yesterday in Brussels. Cross-Currency Swap The Goldman Sachs transaction consisted of a cross-currency swap of about $10 billion of debt issued by Greece in dollars and yen, Sardelis said. That was swapped into euros using a historical exchange rate, a mechanism that implied a reduction in debt and generated about $1 billion of funding, he added. Sardelis declined to give specifics on by how much the swap reduced the country’s reported deficit or debt. Greece, whose burgeoning budget deficit caused it to fail the criteria for joining the single European currency in 1999, joined the euro in 2001. Member nations must keep deficits at less than 3 percent of gross domestic product and trim national debt to less than 60 percent of GDP under the pact. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou , who came to power in October, more than tripled the country’s 2009 deficit estimate to 12.7 percent, and officials last month pledged to provide more reliable statistics after the EU complained of “severe irregularities” in the nation’s economic data. To contact the reporters on this story:

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Televisa Agrees to Buy a 30% Stake in NII’s Mexico Unit for $1.44 Billion

February 15, 2010

By Crayton Harrison Feb. 15 (Bloomberg) — Grupo Televisa SA , the world’s largest Spanish-language broadcaster, agreed to buy a 30 percent stake in the Mexican unit of mobile carrier NII Holdings Inc. for $1.44 billion in cash to get access to the wireless market. The companies will together bid on wireless airwaves in a government auction planned for May, Mexico City-based Televisa said in a statement today. Televisa will have the option to buy an additional stake of 7.5 percent on the third or fourth anniversary of the deal. Televisa is seeking a mobile-phone and wireless Internet service to add to the video, Web and home-phone plans it offers through three Mexican cable-TV carriers. The company aims to take more customers from Carlos Slim’s Telefonos de Mexico SAB , the nation’s largest landline phone company, which doesn’t sell wireless or TV service. “This gives them a partner,” said Christopher King , an analyst at Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in Baltimore, about Televisa. He advises buying shares of NII and doesn’t have a rating for Televisa shares. “It’s hard to argue that it would’ve made sense for them to go headlong into the auction process by themselves.” NII, the Reston, Virginia-based carrier that uses the Nextel brand in Latin America, is the smallest of Mexico’s four wireless carriers with less than 4 percent of the market. America Movil SAB leads with 72 percent, followed by Telefonica SA with 20 percent and Grupo Iusacell SA with 4 percent. Auction Process Televisa won approval last week from Mexico’s antitrust agency to buy up to 40 percent of the NII unit. Televisa had 28.7 billion pesos ($2.22 billion) in cash and short-term investments at the end of September. Televisa gained 36 centavos to 48.58 pesos at 2:18 p.m. New York time in Mexico City trading. U.S. markets are closed today for a holiday. Allen & Co. aided Televisa on the transaction and Lazard Ltd. advised NII. Mexico’s auction, scheduled to begin May 25, includes 90 megahertz of spectrum in the 1.7 gigahertz band and 30 megahertz in the 1.9 gigahertz band, airwaves suitable for third- generation wireless services such as high-speed Internet access. The spectrum is enough to allow for two new nationwide wireless networks and for current carriers to add more capacity for their growth plans. 3G Network The Federal Telecommunications Commission has pushed for the auction as a way to increase competition for America Movil . Televisa and NII will be eligible to bid on two national blocks of airwaves measuring 30 megahertz each, enough to start a new network with 3G technology. NII’s three larger competitors aren’t eligible for those 30-megahertz blocks. The Mexican government has spread the cost of acquiring the airwaves over a 20-year period. Auction participants will bid only the down payments. Winners then have to pay annual dues set by the government. Each winning bidder of a 30-megahertz block will pay a total of $493 million in dues over the 20-year period, according to the commission, which used an accounting method that includes the cash flow the airwaves are expected to generate. Down payments for the 30-megahertz blocks will start at about $13.7 million. To contact the reporter on this story: Crayton Harrison in Mexico City at tharrison5@bloomberg.net

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Campaign Finance Chaos: 10 People Gave $266.6 Million In Last Decade

February 10, 2010

The 10 people who gave the most money to California political campaigns during the last decade devoted a combined $266.6 million to their pet causes and candidates, a state report said Tuesday. Leading the list was Los Angeles billionaire Steve Bing, a film producer and heir to a real estate fortune, who made $58 million in such donations, according to the report by the Fair Political Practices Commission. About $40 million of that was in support of a 2006 proposal to tax the oil industry; voters rejected the measure after petroleum companies spent about $45 million opposing it.

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Greek Deficit Plan Wins EU Backing as Papandreou Deepens Cuts in Spending

February 3, 2010

By Maria Petrakis and Meera Louis Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — Greece’s plan to cut the European Union’s biggest budget deficit won European Commission backing after the government announced more measures to reduce the shortfall and try to quell investor concern that the nation may need a bailout. “We are endorsing the Greek program; we are giving confidence and supporting the Greek authorities,” EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia told reporters in Brussels today. “The implementation of this program is not easy.” The Brussels-based commission, the EU executive, said it will demand monthly updates from Greece on its progress in completing the plan to reduce a deficit of 12.7 percent of gross domestic product to within the EU’s 3 percent limit in 2012. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou yesterday announced a fuel-tax increase and said he would broaden a planned partial wage freeze to cover all public workers. The risk premium on Greek bonds rose to an 11-year high last week on concern over the government’s ability to sell the 53 billion euros ($74 billion) of bonds needed this year to finance its deficit and debt. Spanish and Portuguese bonds have also suffered as other high-deficit EU nations came under investor scrutiny, fueling speculation about the possibility of an EU bailout to protect the monetary union. ‘Speculative Game’ “Greece is in the center of a speculative game aimed at the euro,” Papandreou said in a televised speech in Athens late yesterday. “It is our national duty to stop the attempts to push our country to the edge of the cliff.” Greek bonds gained today, with the premium investors demand to buy 10-year Greek securities over comparable German debt, the EU benchmark, sliding 21 basis points to 333. That was down from a peak of 396 on Jan. 28. Papandreou yesterday urged Greeks to support the new measures and said the country couldn’t afford strikes and blockades that may derail the attempt to get the economy back on track. After the announcement of the broader wage freeze, unions urged workers to attend a previously announced strike of civil servants on Feb. 10. Greece’s original deficit plan pledges to cut spending and raise revenue by about 10 billion euros this year to trim the shortfall by 4 percent of GDP. The government said it would meet that goal through cuts in bonuses to civil servants, a crackdown on tax evasion and state-asset sales. The additional measures announced yesterday would reduce spending by 0.3 percent to 0.4 percent of GDP, economists at HSBC Holdings Plc estimate. Monitoring Greece In its statement today, the commission demanded more details on the new measures within a month. “The commission will be in charge of monitoring the implementation of the program through a very intense surveillance,” commission President Jose Barroso said yesterday. “The successful correction of its very excessive deficit is not only important for Greece, but for the euro area and the EU as a whole.” The additional spending cuts and higher taxes may put a further drag on an economy set to contract 0.3 percent in 2010. “Unless the wage-freeze measure is accompanied by initiatives that would boost exports and investments in the economy, the contraction in 2010 should be greater than expected, thus negatively affecting tax revenues,” economists at Marfin Analysis in Athens said in a note to investors today. Worst Performers The nation’s government bonds were the world’s worst performers in January, losing 6 percent in local currency terms and extending their decline over the past three months to more than 11 percent on concern about its deteriorating finances, Bloomberg/EFFAS indexes show. Greece’s financial woes have prompted some economists to question the future unity of the euro region and whether a single monetary policy can be applied simultaneously to 16 disparate economies. The euro has declined 7.1 percent against the dollar since the start on December. Economist Nouriel Roubini said in an interview today that the EU, the European Central Bank or the International Monetary Fund will probably offer financial aid to Greece to help the country avoid default and limit the damage to monetary union. “I expect there is going to be eventually some financial support,” Roubini told Bloomberg Television in Moscow. That support will come “either directly from the European Union or the ECB or, as I suggest, Greece should be going to the IMF to get an IMF package,” he said. Greek Debt The jump in Greece’s debt, which is set to surpass Italy as the region’s largest at more than 120 percent of GDP this year, has prompted investors to increase insurance against a possible default. Credit-default swaps on Greek government bonds reached a record high level of 422 basis points on Jan. 28. They fell 7 basis points today to 380, according to CMA DataVision prices. That means it costs $380,000 a year to insure against losses on the debt for five years. That perceived risk would decline further if the EU publicly offered to aid Greece and defend monetary union, said Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz . “If it made that announcement, then the speculators would know there’s no more hope and they would just go away,” Stiglitz, a Columbia University professor, said in an interview yesterday in Athens. “It would cost nobody.” Persuading Investors Portugal and Spain have also been struggling to convince investors that they can cut their deficits and finance rising debt. In announcing on Jan. 26 its own budget plan to bring the deficit back within the EU limit in 2013, Portugal said that its shortfall was 9.3 percent of GDP last year, higher than the commission’s November forecast of 8 percent. Spain, where the collapse of a real-estate boom deepened the recession and helped flip a budget surplus of 1.9 percent in 2007 into a deficit of 9.5 percent last year, also presented a budget plan calling for spending cuts and higher taxes. Cutting back on stimulus spending may make it harder for the government to reduce the EU’s highest jobless rate at almost 20 percent. The yield premium investors demand to hold Portuguese bonds instead of bunds increased 4 basis points today to 131 basis points, the highest since April. Spain’s spread with Germany fell 2 basis points to 83.7, down from a nine-month high of 98 on Jan. 28. To contact the reporters on this story: Maria Petrakis in Athens at mpetrakis@bloomberg.net ; Meera Louis in Brussels at mlouis1@bloomberg.net .

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James Kwak: Budget Sense and Nonsense

February 1, 2010

With the submission of the Obama administration’s budget today, fiscal silly season is opening. President Obama already launched an opening salvo last week with his proposed freeze on non-security-related military spending , which amounts to a rounding error on the ten-year budget projections, which are themselves a rounding error on the long-term budget projections — at a time when unemployment is running at 10.0 percent. Fortunately, there is a partial saving grace, which is that the freeze does not set in until fiscal year 2011 (which begins in October 2010), and in the meantime Obama has proposed $100 billion in tax cuts and government spending to create jobs. (Whether his proposals are the right way to spend $100 billion is a debate for another time.) The midterm elections are looming already (note: do we have to be satisfied with a political system in which the legislature is preoccupied with upcoming elections half the time?), and the two big themes seem to be jobs and the deficit. With unemployment at levels not seen since the 1980s, it’s obvious why jobs are on the political agenda. With the federal budget deficit at record (nominal) levels, it also seems obvious that the deficit should be on the agenda, but this is really an unfortunate artifact of our political system. A government deficit is the result of insufficient government saving, and a period of high unemployment is absolutely the worst time to increase government saving. The sensible solution would be to use the urgency we currently feel to put in place long-term fiscal solutions, but the political system can’t handle that (see health care reform as Exhibit A). As a result, when deficits go up, we get lots of short-term politicking about the deficit-in Paul Krugman’s words , the “march of the deficit peacocks.” On these two themes, the Democrats’ message is that (a) they are fixing the economy (growth is back, they are doing something about jobs) and (b) they are serious about the deficit (bank tax, three-year freeze, health care reform, etc.). The Republicans’ message is that (a) the Democrats have failed to fix the economy (unemployment is still high) and (b) the deficit is the Democrats’ fault due to runaway government spending. While I have been extremely critical of the Obama administration for its generous policies toward large banks, which I believe have increased the risks facing the financial system in the future, otherwise they have taken, directionally, the right steps as far as jobs are concerned. And when it comes to long-term deficits, the Senate health care reform bill — whose cost-cutting measures are based largely on proposals from the administration, particularly Peter Orszag — is perhaps the biggest deficit-reduction bill of all time . The Republicans, by contrast, are using their status as the party out of power to spout all sorts of nonsense when it comes to the deficit. Representative Paul Ryan was quoted by the New York Times calling the budget “nothing more than a plan for more of the same — a very aggressive agenda of more government spending, more taxes, more deficits and more debt — with just a few cosmetic budget maneuvers to give the illusion of restraint.” To begin with, I can give him a pass for redundancy (“more deficits and more debt”), but complaining about “more taxes” and “more deficits” in the same sentence? Does Paul Ryan not know how a deficit is measured, or does he not know where government revenues come from? Logically speaking, it must be one or the other. Speaking of taxes, how did we get into this deficit mess in the first place? You’ve no doubt seen this chart from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities or something similar before, but that doesn’t make it any less true. And what is it in the president’s proposed budget that the Republicans are aiming at? The plan to let the Bush tax cuts lapse for people making more than $250,000 per year. In other words, the problem with the Obama budget is that the deficits are too high, and the solution is to cut taxes. Huh? None of this is new, of course. Sam Stein pointed out the same issues in December. Yet since Ronald Reagan, a large proportion of the electorate has become wired to believe that deficits are always the product of excess government spending, so the facts bear repeating. The fiscal situation is actually very simple. The budget was in surplus when President Clinton left office, although there was already the prospect of budget-busting Medicare deficits in the long-term future. The 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts and the unfunded Medicare prescription drug benefit created the large deficits of the Bush era. (The Iraq and Afghanistan wars didn’t help, but it’s not fair to blame those entirely on the Republicans; plenty of Democrats went along.) Then the financial crisis and the resulting recession blew a huge hole in government tax revenues, creating the current spike in deficits ; that spike was exacerbated by the stimulus package, which most but not all economists would consider a sensible response to a major recession. (According to an earlier analysis by David Leonhardt , the projected average fiscal balance for the years 2009-2012 has changed, since Clinton left office, from an $846 billion surplus to a $1,215 billion deficit. The biggest lumps are $673 billion in Bush administration policies and $664 billion in the costs of the financial crisis and recession, including bailout costs.) Yet somehow the Republicans have tried — successfully! — to spin our current and projected deficits as the result of “more government spending,” putting the Democrats on the defensive. And unfortunately, the result is the Obama administration buying into the Republican attack line: that government spending must be reduced. How else to explain the three-year spending freeze, which is mainly symbolic and a little bit destructive? The bipartisan commission to reduce the deficit has a little more to recommend it, although I’m skeptical that it will achieve anything . The Republican position seems to be that the deficit commission is bad because — wait for it — it might increase taxes. Here’s what the Wall Street Journal has to say: “Republican leaders are under pressure from conservatives not to cooperate, due to concerns that the commission would recommend tax increases. “‘Look, I don’t think anybody in the country thinks we have a problem because we tax too little, I think the problem is we spend too much,’ Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) said on CNN’s ‘State of the Union’ on Sunday. ‘So, I like the commission idea, just as I said a few months ago. I think a better way to do it is target spending.’ “Deficit hawks in both parties say the commission must be able to look at spending and revenue to make a dent in the deficit in the near term. But politically, its members could be boxed in. Not only are Republicans opposing tax increases, but they are also attacking Democrats for proposing cuts to Medicare.” So, let’s recap. The medium-term deficit problem was created by Bush tax cuts and by an unfunded Bush-era expansion of Medicare. The long-term deficit problem is all about Medicare. Yet the only solution that Republicans can think of is reducing spending, but not Medicare spending. Of course, this shouldn’t surprise us; Mitch McConnell gave us this, after all:* But apparently the sharp political minds in the Obama administration have decided that this is the turf they have to fight on. Now it seems that instead of going back to Bill Clinton in 1995-1996, they are reaching all the way back to 1993, when Clinton, Rubin, et al. decided to kill the deficit monster first and worry about helping the poor and the middle class later. They did kill the deficit monster (OK, they just knocked it out for a decade), but then they lost Congress in 1994 and never got around to helping the poor and the middle class; by the time we got a president and Congress who might have tried, it became time to kill the deficit monster again. The real solution to the deficit problem must fix the long-term Medicare problem. That means some combination of reducing the long-term cost of health care (which the administration tried mightily to do, so far unsuccessfully) and increasing funding (taxes). The idea that we can just spend less money on health care as health care costs increase (and with about 47 million Americans already uninsured) is patently ridiculous — unless your goal is simply to let low- and middle-income seniors die. So the only important question is how to reduce Medicare spending or increase Medicare revenues. But with an opposition party ready to roll out its artillery at any mention of either Medicare cuts or tax increases, it’s hard to see where a solution can come from. * The image is from congressional Democrats, but the press releases were really issued by McConnell. Crossposted with The Baseline Scenario .

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Senate Rejects Conrad Plan for Commission on Cutting U.S. Budget Deficit

January 26, 2010

By Brian Faler Jan. 26 (Bloomberg) — The Senate rejected a proposed bipartisan commission to recommend ways to reduce the U.S. government deficit as a report projected this year’s shortfall will reach $1.35 trillion, the second-biggest since World War II. The vote was 53-46, falling seven short of the 60 needed for passage. The legislation would have required that the panel’s recommendations be voted on by Congress without being amended. Its chief sponsors, Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad and ranking Republican Judd Gregg , had said they were short of the votes for approval. Conrad, of North Dakota, and Gregg, of New Hampshire, said Congress has proven it is incapable of making the difficult decisions needed to reduce the deficit. Congress must send “a message to the American people and the markets all across the world that the United States is prepared to stand up and deal with this debt threat,” Conrad said. “Our nation is on a path that is absolutely unsustainable,” Gregg said. For future generations, paying the national debt will “take away the resources they would have used to buy a house, send their kids to college or get a new car,” he said. The plan ran into opposition from the left and right, with the Washington-based anti-tax group Americans for Tax Reform saying it would result in tax increases while the AFL-CIO and NAACP opposed it because it could mean cuts in government programs such as Social Security and Medicare. Some lawmakers opposed creating the commission because they would not be able to amend its recommendations. ‘House in Order’ “There is no doubt that we have to get our fiscal house in order,” said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus of Montana. “The question is what’s the best way to do it?” The vote came during debate on a proposal to increase the federal debt limit by $1.9 trillion to $14.3 trillion. The Congressional Budget Office said today the federal deficit will amount to $1.35 trillion or about 9.2 percent of the economy. Last year’s deficit was $1.4 trillion. The CBO said the deficit in 2020 would be about the same size it is today if Congress extends the George W. Bush administration’s tax cuts, continues indexing the alternative minimum tax for inflation and increases discretionary spending at the same rate as the economy. The debt would rise to nearly 100 percent of the economy, up from the current 60 percent, the report said. ‘Poised to Skyrocket’ The agency warned that interest payments on the debt are “poised to skyrocket” as the economy strengthens and investors demand larger returns from Treasury bonds. By 2020, annual interest payments on the debt will triple to $723 billion, the report said. As an alternative to the commission rejected today, President Barack Obama is likely to propose creating a debt commission instead through an executive order. Because Congress could ignore recommendations by such a panel, Conrad and others are negotiating for an agreement to ensure its proposals would receive votes in both chambers. Conrad said yesterday an agreement hadn’t been reached. To contact the reporter on this story: Brian Faler  in Washington at bfaler@bloomberg.net

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Financial Crisis Commission’s ‘Show Must Not Go On’: NYT Op-Ed

January 18, 2010

The commission must uncover what bankers, investors, government officials and other people in positions of power, past and present, would prefer not to say — or perhaps do not know or understand — about the crash and the bailouts. The primary aim is not to air issues and foster debate, but to test views, resolve contradictions and arrive at evidence-based conclusions. Yet the commission — which is supposed to file a final report by Dec. 15 — has not issued a single subpoena for documents. Instead, investigators have apparently been relying on voluntary cooperation, public records and information-sharing agreements that have been negotiated with federal agencies. A thorough investigation requires source documents that reveal what people were thinking and doing at the time of the events and that illuminate, buttress or contradict testimony.

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Pin the Tail on Blankfein Is a Game Nobody Wins: David Reilly

January 13, 2010

Commentary by David Reilly Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — Goldman Sachs Group Inc. , in the billiard room, with a rope and a blood-stained collateralized debt obligation. That seemed to be the answer the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission was aiming for yesterday as it kicked off a giant game of “Clue” meant to solve the mystery of who killed the financial system. Now don’t get me wrong. A bit of Goldman bashing is good sport, since the firm is one of the biggest and most profitable on Wall Street. And there are plenty of serious questions that need probing regarding products it created and its dealings with American International Group Inc. It’s just that the commission’s first day of public hearings needed to focus less on Goldman and more on the wider rot within the financial system. This misfire made for an inauspicious start for the panel, whose hot seat was filled by Goldman Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein , JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon , Morgan Stanley chief John Mack and Bank of America Corp. ’s newly minted honcho, Brian Moynihan . The poor showing will only reinforce the perception among many people that this commission, coming after financial-reform legislation has reached an advanced stage, is doomed to irrelevance. To avoid that fate, the commission in subsequent hearings, as well as in its final report due by year’s end, must do more than focus on the events of 2007 and 2008, or engage in academic discussions of risk-management practices. ‘Perfect Storm’ It’s imperative to employ a wider, and more historical, context than was displayed on the first day of hearings. That means questioning the very foundations of modern Wall Street and looking to which events over the past 20 years led the financial system to its current predicament. Commission Chairman Philip Angelides hinted at this possibility at one point, saying, “I do believe that one of the issues we must explore is: Was this purely a perfect storm, or was it a man-made perfect storm in which the clouds were seeded?” Figuring that out means asking the likes of Blankfein or Dimon basic yet pointed questions such as whether their business model was, and possibly still is, broken. That didn’t happen. Instead we got Commissioner John Thompson asking Morgan Stanley’s Mack for suggestions on “how to think about innovation and managing the risks associated with innovation.” Goldman’s Survival Similarly, the commission needed to spend less time grappling with Blankfein over whether Goldman would have survived without government assistance. That’s an unanswerable question that does little more than let Dimon chuckle over how easy a ride he gets compared with Blankfein. Commissioners also have to do more homework. Commissioner Peter Wallison wasted time quizzing the bankers about their leverage — borrowed money banks use to amplify returns. A staff member should have gone to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Web site , called up the firms’ financial statements and plugged the balance-sheet figures into a spreadsheet. It’s that easy, and, once done, would have allowed Wallison to ask meaningful questions. The panel members also should lob questions at the right targets. It was surprising that Commissioner Brooksley Born aimed questions about over-the-counter derivatives at Blankfein and Mack, rather than Dimon, whose bank is the biggest player in the area. Let’s also be less solicitous of those testifying. The group’s stance should be adversarial, forcing witnesses to answer tough questions and cough up the names of individuals who contributed to the crisis. Pinning Accountability Holding individuals in government and on Wall Street accountable may well prove one of the commission’s toughest tasks. Yet it can’t shy away from it. And doing so means more than just playing pin the tail on Blankfein. Of course, Wall Street doesn’t want too much accountability. Speaking earlier this week on Bloomberg Television, Sullivan & Cromwell LLP Chairman Rodgin Cohen warned that “the worst thing that can come out of it is a search for villains, because if we vilify individuals we’re going to miss the real causes of the crisis.” Uh, no. As Angelides said, the storm that swamped markets wasn’t an act of God. “These were acts of men and women.” So name ‘em. There is also no need for the panel to duplicate work done in Congress. So rather than discuss how much interest a bank should retain in securitizations — an already well-plowed area — commissioners could have poked their nose into areas where Congress won’t go. Fannie and Freddie One potential gold mine: the intersection of politics and finance. Given that the firms represented yesterday pay out millions each year in congressional campaign contributions , a few questions about how they influence legislation would have been in order. In that vein, the commission is uniquely positioned to dig into the influence of Congress on the housing market and its stewards, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac . The flip side is that the group can play a vital role in putting the crisis into a much-needed, non-political focus. Too many Americans view events of the past two years through a political prism. Those on the right believe all problems stem from Congress, specifically House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank , regulation and the doings of Fannie and Freddie; those on the left think unfettered greed at big banks and on Wall Street is solely to blame. The truth lies somewhere in between. Getting to it will require a wider, deeper and more coherent effort than we saw yesterday. ( David Reilly is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.) Click on “Send Comment” in the sidebar display to send a letter to the editor. To contact the writer of this column: David Reilly at dreilly14@bloomberg.net

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FCIC Set To Question Bank CEOs About Financial Meltdown

January 12, 2010

WASHINGTON — Two blocks from the Treasury, where the government not long ago scrambled to save a collapsing financial system, a team of investigators armed with subpoena powers is preparing the official narrative of the crisis and what went wrong. As Washington focuses on Congress’ regulatory response to the 2008 Wall Street meltdown, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission that Congress created last spring has been an afterthought. Until now. On Wednesday and Thursday, the commission will hold its first public hearings featuring a gallery of the nation’s top bank executives – Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase, John Mack of Morgan Stanley and Brian Moynihan of Bank of America. “The irony here is it’s as if there was an earthquake and the only buildings standing today are the buildings that were at the epicenter of the earthquake,” the commission’s chairman, Phil Angelides, said in an interview Thursday. “You have millions of people unemployed, millions have lost their homes, and Wall Street is having a record year with record profits and record bonuses. People want to understand why.” Angelides is the Democratic former California treasurer. His vice chairman is Republican Bill Thomas, a former congressman who chaired the House Ways and Means Committee. Together they lead a 10-member bipartisan commission with an ambitious mandate and limited time. They were interviewed jointly Thursday in a small, spare conference room in an eighth-floor office suite on Pennsylvania Avenue within sight of the White House and the Treasury building. Despite their different party labels, both men say that because they aim to explain the crises – not issue recommendations on how to avoid the next one – their work should be fairly nonpartisan. Still, Angelides and Thomas said the commission could also offer proposed remedies or alternatives if there is strong consensus about the causes of the crisis. The two men shrugged off decisions by President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats to proceed with a regulatory overhaul before the commission’s work is done. They said the commission’s final findings could still inform future legislation and could be a resource for regulators and for the industry itself. Thomas in particular displayed impatience with bankers who worry that some additional government scrutiny and transparency will impair the industry. “We came close to the worst thing in the world,” Thomas said. “So whenever you hear from these people, ‘Well, this will make us not to do this and not to do that,’ I immediately flip it from negative to positive and say, ‘Yeah, and so?’” Both agreed that the crisis was the result of failures by individuals specifically and by the banking system in general. But in featuring the bankers at its first public hearings, the commission is sending a clear message that the first part of the narrative starts with the chief executives. The commission is modeled on the 9/11 panel that examined the causes of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. But its prototype could be the so-called Pecora Commission, the Senate committee that investigated Wall Street abuses in 1933-34. It was named after Ferdinand Pecora, the committee’s chief lawyer. On this point, Thomas and Angelides part ways. “Nobody remembers the Pecora Commission,” Thomas protested. “The press created the knowledge of the Pecora Commission. C’mon, it’s mostly not applicable.” “Here’s where I think it is,” Angelides countered. “It is different than the 1930s, but I do think there is a raw hunger for people to know.” Congress instructed the new commission to explore 22 issues, ranging from the effect of monetary policy on terms of credit and government fiscal imbalances to bank compensation structures. Thomas said the commission’s inquiry should include a look at the consequences of the 1999 repeal of the Depression-era Glass-Steagall Act that forced the separation of commercial and investment banks. Without the act, banks were unrestrained, Thomas said. “It was wide open country, which I think is part of the problem in terms of not having a mental, financial, almost moral, obligation anymore because there is no backstop,” he said. And while Angelides said the commission’s job was not to redebate the merits of the $700 billion bank bailout, he also said the commission’s inquiry does not end at the height of the crisis in fall 2008. “We start with the belief that the financial crisis is not a past-tense phenomenon,” he said.

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Bank of America Kept Shareholders in Dark on Merrill Losses, SEC Suit Says

January 12, 2010

By Bob Van Voris and Thom Weidlich Jan. 12 (Bloomberg) — Bank of America Corp. failed to disclose billions of dollars in losses at Merrill Lynch & Co. before a shareholder vote to take over the bank in 2008, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission claimed in a lawsuit. The suit was filed in federal court in Manhattan today, less than a day after U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff ruled in a different SEC suit against Bank of America that the commission must file a separate case to pursue claims that the bank failed to disclose “extraordinary losses” by Merrill Lynch in the weeks before investors voted on the deal. “Bank of America kept shareholders in the dark as they were called upon to vote on the proposed merger at the end of a quarter of nearly unprecedented volatility and uncertainty,” the SEC said in today’s complaint. In the first SEC suit, filed in August, the agency claimed that Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America violated securities laws by failing to tell shareholders about as much as $5.8 billion in bonuses and incentive pay authorized for Merrill Lynch employees at a time when the bank’s annual losses reached $27.6 billion. Bank of America opposed an attempt by the SEC to include the loss-disclosure claims in the original case, which is set for trial March 1. Rakoff said in a hearing yesterday that “there is no impediment” to the SEC filing the new claims in a second case. Rakoff said a trial date could be set as early as this summer. “The company and its officers provided sufficient and appropriate disclosure prior to the shareholder vote in 2008,” Bank of America spokesman Robert Stickler said in a statement. Stickler said the new complaint is “totally without merit” and the bank looks forward to presenting the facts in court. The case is Securities and Exchange Commission v. Bank of America Corp., 10-CV-215, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan). To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Van Voris in New York at rvanvoris@bloomberg.net .

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CFTC’s Gensler Says U.S. Should `Explicitly’ Regulate Derivatives Dealers

January 6, 2010

By Asjylyn Loder and Matt Leising Jan. 6 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. should “explicitly” regulate derivatives dealers, said Gary Gensler , who has pushed Congress to impose new rules on the $300 trillion over-the- counter derivatives market. Gensler, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, has pushed Congress to give the commission greater authority to regulate over-the-counter contracts, a move that may give it more control of commodity speculation that takes place outside of regulated exchanges. “Leading up the financial crisis, it was assumed that the banks that deal in derivatives were already regulated, and thus did not need to be explicitly regulated for their derivatives transactions,” he said in a speech to the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. This was a “flawed assumption,” he said. He outlined a three-prong approach: regulate derivatives dealers, bring transparency to the OTC market, and move standard derivatives to regulated clearinghouses. He cited estimates that half of all commodity and energy derivatives transactions could be standardized. Clearinghouses, which are capitalized by their members, increase stability in over-the-counter derivatives markets because they lessen the effect of a default by sharing that risk among the membership and use daily margining procedures to keep accounts current. They also allow regulators to see market positions and prices. Congressional Action Congress has proposed new rules on derivatives as part of an overhaul of the financial system after the worst recession since the Great Depression led federal government to spend, lend or commit as much as $12.8 trillion to shore up the U.S. economy. Gensler is seeking additional authority from Congress to curb speculation in off-exchange commodity contracts so that traders can’t use OTC transactions to sidestep limits meant to keep one trader from gaining too much control of the market. House legislation passed in December requires that standardized contracts be processed by clearinghouses and executed on regulated exchanges or swap execution systems. Clearinghouses impose capital and margin requirements for trading. Commodity-based businesses such as manufacturers, airlines and energy producers that use derivatives would be exempt from the clearinghouse requirement if they can show they are using the contracts to hedge operational risk. The transactions would have to be reported to regulators. To contact the reporters on this story: Asjylyn Loder in New York aloder@bloomberg.net ; Matthew Leising in New York at mleising@bloomberg.net .

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Dimon, Blankfein, Mack Among First to Testify Before Finance Crisis Panel

December 24, 2009

By Lorraine Woellert Dec. 24 (Bloomberg) — The chief executive officers of JPMorgan Chase & Co. , Goldman Sachs Group Inc. , and Morgan Stanley will headline the inaugural hearing of a congressional panel investigating Wall Street’s financial crisis. JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon , Goldman’s Lloyd Blankfein , and Morgan Stanley’s John Mack will testify next month in Washington, Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Chairman Phil Angelides said in a telephone interview yesterday. Bank of America Corp.’s incoming CEO, Brian Moynihan , has been invited and is expected to appear as well, Angelides said. “There’s no question that these institutions were at the center of this storm, not to make any prejudgments about their role in it,” Angelides said. He called the witnesses “key leaders who have been involved in the financial crisis.” The hearing on Jan. 13 and 14 will kick off the public work of the crisis commission, which was appointed by Congress in July. Privately, the 10-member panel has been meeting with administration officials including Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Securities and Exchange Commission Chairwoman Mary Schapiro. Publicly, it has taken criticism over the pace of its work. The group’s Web site remains under development and the commission only recently hired an investigative staff. It is required to file its final report by next December. ‘Set the Tone’ “It hard to say where you should begin,” said commission Vice President Bill Thomas , who also spoke on the phone interview. The January hearing “was appropriate to set the tone and direction,” Thomas said. Banking industry testimony will be followed by analysis from academics and others over the course of the two-day hearing, Thomas said. “We aren’t just bringing people in to give their story and leave,” he said. The commission was created by Congress to examine the causes of a collapse that roiled global markets and led to a $700 billion U.S. government bailout of the nation’s banks. Issues to be examined subprime lending, the activities of credit-rating companies and executive pay, Angelides said. The Obama administration has directed regulators to cooperate with its requests for information. The commission has vowed a thorough inquiry and will hear from “hundreds” of witnesses over the next year, Angelides said. Scope of Witnesses “We’ll be calling private- and public-sector folks who over the course of the last two years have been involved in the center of this crisis,” Angelides said of future hearings. Bank of America spokesman Lawrence Di Rita , in an e-mail, noted that the Charlotte, North Carolina-based company is in transition and said its executives look forward to working with the commission. Bank of America this month announced that Moynihan would take the company reins as of Jan. 1, replacing Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Lewis , who will retire Dec. 31. New York-based Goldman and Morgan Stanley didn’t immediately return calls requesting comment. The commission, led by Californians Angelides , a Democrat and former state treasurer, and Thomas, a Republican and former U.S. House member, is armed with an $8 million budget and subpoena power. It plans hearings until September. To contact the reporter on this story: Lorraine Woellert in Washington at lwoellert@bloomberg.net .

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Cate Long: Derivatives Regulation: The Devil in the Details

December 11, 2009

The House of Representatives has begun the debate on the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act … (HR 4173) The real devil lurking in the details is the regulation of derivatives … The weeds of the competing legislative proposals are a little thick but the high level concept relates to where the derivatives trade gets done… Will the trade get done in the light or in the dark? Will the trade get done on a public exchange or alternative swap facility? Or will it be done during a phone call between two big banks and then buried deep in an opaque trading book? Where it will lurk as a weapon of mass destruction as Warren Buffett would say Derivatives trading must happen in the light… These trades must be done publicly to provide stability in our financial system… Remember the AIG darkness? Which almost melted down the global economy… it was really dark around all those AIG trades… dark as a graveyard. * * * Here are the particular details where the devil is lurking… from Baseline Scenario : Colin Peterson (D-MN), Chairman of the House Committee on Agriculture, along with Barney Frank, has added an amendment to the OTC Bill (opens large pdf). There are two relevant sentences for reformers from the long document. The first is on page 32: (49) SWAP EXECUTION FACILITY.–The term ‘swap execution facility’ means a person or entity that facilitates the execution or trading of swaps between two persons through any means of interstate commerce, but which is not a designated contract market, including any electronic trade execution or voice brokerage facility. This replaces other language in the original bill (opens even larger pdf), on page 546: SEC. 5h. SWAP EXECUTION FACILITIES. (a) REGISTRATION.– (1) INGENERAL.– (A) No person may operate a swap execution facility unless the facility is registered under this section. (B) The term ‘swap execution facility’ means an entity that facilitates the execution of swaps between two persons through any means of interstate commerce but which is not a designated contract market. So notice any differences? First the definition of a swap execution facility has been expanded to include “a person” (different from the “or entity”). It’s also expanded to an “or trading” definition, and includes voice brokerage firms. So now we are moving from the definition of something that is a platform for swaps to be traded on to instead something that simply helps swaps get traded. This could, quite simply, be a telephone over which two people trade a derivative (with one person declaring himself to be the exchange?). Instead of changing the way business is done for reform it looks like it redefines reform as the way things are currently done, and just calls it a victory. Now on page 89 of the amendment: 2) RULES FOR TRADING THROUGH THE FACILITY.–Not later than 1 year after the date of the enactment of the Derivative Markets transparency and Accountability Act of 2009, the Commission shall adopt rules to allow a swap to be traded through the facilities of a designated contract market or a swap execution facility. Such rules shall permit an intermediary, acting as principal or agent, to enter into or execute a swap, notwithstanding section 2(k), if the swap is executed, reported, recorded, or confirmed in accordance with the rules of the designated contract market or swap execution facility. * * * To see the legislation and amendments here … Here are all the amendments that are being debated on the floor: The ‘ manager’s amendment ‘ is a kitchen-sink amendment that pulls in all the last minute deals (so you can actually see handwriting on the PDF). It is 242 pages long and that is where you are going to find a lot of important policy changes.

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Dean Baker: The Return of the TARP Hostage Takers

December 10, 2009

When Congress debated the TARP last fall, the political elites insisted that the bill must be passed immediately or the economy would collapse. For example, Federal Reserve Board President Ben Bernanke told Congress that the commercial paper market was shutting down, which meant that the country’s largest companies would soon be unable to meet their payrolls and pay other bills. (He neglected to mention that the Fed could single-handedly support the commercial paper market by directly buying commercial paper. Bernanke took steps to begin purchasing commercial paper the weekend after Congress voted.) Under this pressure, Congress didn’t take the time to ensure that the country would share in the upside from bailing out the banks. It didn’t put in restrictions that ensured that bank executives would not get huge bonuses as the economy continued to sink. Nor did it impose any conditions that would curb the speculative excesses that fueled the bubble and led to the disaster. The political elites said that the banks needed the money right away, and Congress buckled under the pressure. After all, no one wants to be responsible for the collapsing the economy. So, the banks got the blank check they needed to ensure that they would be largely protected from economic maelstrom that they had created. Since the TARP escapade worked so well, the Wall Street gang is now trying another round of hostage taking, possibly for even bigger stakes. This time the plan is go after Social Security and Medicare. The Wall Street crew knows that members of Congress are not likely to vote to gut these two hugely popular programs under normal circumstances. These programs are essential to the economic well being of tens of millions of retirees, disabled workers, and their families. In fact, these programs are now more important than ever, since the collapse of the housing bubble has destroyed most of the savings of middle-income families. Under normal circumstances, members of Congress who voted to cut these programs would be looking to an early retirement: hence the hostage-taking route. The plan is to hold up legislation for raising the debt ceiling unless a provision is included for establishing a commission for the purpose of cutting future deficits. This commission in turn would be stacked with people who want to cut Social Security and Medicare. The bill also provides that the commission’s report to Congress would be fast-tracked so that it would not be subject to normal procedures. It would not be subject to the same debate or amendment process as other bills. Finally, the commission would issue its report after the November 2010 election, with a vote required before the end of the year. This means that people who were just voted out of office would be able to decide the future of Social Security and Medicare. The lead culprits in this venture are Senators Kent Conrad and Judd Gregg. The latter is best known for his brief stint as President Obama’s Commerce Secretary designate before he realized this his deeply-held convictions required him to decline the position that he had previously sought. Another leading proponent of this measure is the foundation financed by Peter Peterson, the Commerce Secretary under Richard Nixon who is best known for pocketing tens of millions of dollars through the investment fund manager’s tax break. The country got suckered by the hostage-taking tactics used to pass the TARP. But, we don’t have to get fooled again. It would be disastrous to create a situation in which the country could not legally finance its debt, but the Peter Peterson Wall Street gang stands to lose much more in this story than the rest of us. If they want to put a gun to their head and threaten to pull the trigger, we should tell them to go ahead and shoot. We have an elected Congress. If Peterson, Conrad and Gregg want to bring their ideas to be debated, we have the forum. If they have problem with democracy; they can look for a dictatorship somewhere.

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Cioffi’s Lawyer Says SEC `Not Likely’ to Settle Suit After Jury Acquittal

December 9, 2009

By Patricia Hurtado Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) — A lawyer for Bear Stearns Cos. hedge fund manager Ralph Cioffi said the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission wasn’t likely to drop or settle its suit after Cioffi and co-defendant Matthew Tannin were acquitted last month. At a hearing today in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, New York, Edward Little , a lawyer for Cioffi, told a federal magistrate presiding over the civil suit that he’d met with the SEC yesterday to ask the commission to drop it in light of the jury’s verdict. After a monthlong trial, a panel of eight women and four men took only nine hours to find both men not guilty on all six counts. During interviews after the verdict, several jurors said the government failed to prove the defendants defrauded investors who lost $1.6 billion in the two hedge funds run by the men — both of which were mostly made up of subprime mortgage-backed securities. “What are the prospects for a settlement, by now you’ve seen a lot of each other’s evidence?” U.S. Magistrate Judge Viktor Pohorelsky asked. “We had a meeting yesterday and the gist of it is we were imploring the SEC to drop the case in light of the swift jury verdict,” Little told Pohorelsky. “No, that’s not likely, it’s not going to settle and we’re going to trial,” he said. Scapegoats The funds collapsed in 2007, as did Bear Stearns itself less than a year later. The defendants, according to juror Serphaine Stimpson, were made “scapegoats for Wall Street.” Prosecutors missed the mark so widely in the fraud trial that a juror said after the acquittal she would invest with the fund managers if she had the money. Cioffi, 53, the portfolio manager for the two funds, and Tannin, 48, their chief operating officer, went on trial Oct. 13 in federal court in Brooklyn, New York, on charges of conspiracy, securities and wire fraud. Each had faced as many as 20 years in prison if convicted. Their two funds failed when prices for collateralized debt obligations linked to home loans fell amid rising late payments by borrowers with poor credit or heavy debt. Bear Stearns was purchased the next year by New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co. The government alleged Cioffi and Tannin continued to seek investors in their funds after they learned they were financially unsound. Dispute Little told Pohorelsky that he believed a wire fraud count dismissed by prosecutors because of lack of venue was “duplicative” and he thought that effort to pursue that count in another jurisdiction, such as in Manhattan, where the Bear Stearns funds were located, would constitute “double- jeopardy.” Pohorelsky today asked about a dispute between the SEC and Tannin’s lawyers regarding evidence which the commission sought from him, including computers, hard-drives and e-mails. The SEC said in court papers that it had produced nine million pages of documents while Tannin objected to turning over evidence, if any relevant materials existed, citing Fifth Amendment privilege. The SEC in June filed a motion to compel Tannin for the material. The matter was held in abeyance pending the criminal trial. Chance to Review “I’m really looking at the defense,” Pohorelsky said. “Their set of road blocks was the assertion of privilege, but it appears that has given way, seeing the acquittals? “The motion to compel was held in abeyance pending the criminal trial but it may all be moot now?” the magistrate asked. “We do assert privilege without waiving it,” said Tannin’s lawyer, Nina Beattie . “We just want to review, given the passing of time. We would like to take a good hard look.” John Worland Jr., an SEC lawyer, said he would defer the issue to another commission lawyer, Brian Sano, who he said, “knows more about the case than anyone at the SEC.” “By the end of January we’ll know, your honor,” he said. Pohorelsky directed that the parties return to court on Jan. 27 to discuss the number of witnesses’ depositions which needed to be taken in the civil case, which is being presided over by U.S. District Court Judge Frederic Block , who oversaw the criminal case. Beattie declined comment after court. ‘Zero’ Chance Asked after court his opinion on the likelihood the SEC would settle or drop the case, Little, who is representing Cioffi with another lawyer, Marc Weinstein , said “Zero.” “We told them they should drop the case in light of the quick, definitive verdict and they didn’t say one way or another,” he said. “We’re prepared to go to trial.” Neither Cioffi nor Tannin were in court today. Cioffi managed the two funds that collapsed, and Tannin served as his chief operating officer. The funds, which invested most of their assets in subprime mortgage-related securities, failed in June 2007 when prices for collateralized debt obligations linked to home loans fell amid rising late payments by borrowers with poor credit or heavy debt. The funds, part of Bear Stearns Asset Management Inc., were the Bear Stearns High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Enhanced Leverage Master Fund Ltd. and the Bear Stearns High- Grade Structured Credit Strategies Master Fund Ltd. The case is SEC v. Cioffi, 08-CV-2457, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Brooklyn). To contact the reporter on this story: Patricia Hurtado in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York in Brooklyn at pathurtado@bloomberg.net .

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Heads Of Financial Crisis Commission Call Wall Street Bonuses Unjustifiable, Vow To Investigate (EXCLUSIVE)

December 8, 2009

The chair and vice chair of the federal commission charged with investigating the causes of the financial crisis had harsh words on Tuesday for the Wall Street banks that are preparing to grant their executives enormous bonuses. And they said that the huge profits some banks have made as a direct result of a massive infusion of taxpayer funds are going to be part of the panel’s investigation. “This dichotomy of record profits and bonuses on Wall Street while you have real unemployment of 15 percent-plus in this country is very striking,” Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Chairman Phil Angelides said during a visit to The Huffington Post’s Washington bureau. “Our primary mission is not to re-litigate TARP, but I do think in examining the crisis it’s legitimate to look at where things stand today, and we’re going to do that.” Angelides, a Democrat and former California state treasurer, and the commission’s vice chair, former longtime Republican Congressman Bill Thomas, said the commission will produce a report on the causes of the crisis by next December. But in the meantime, they are plenty frustrated by what’s happening on Wall Street. “I think a legitimate question is: the bonuses are based on what? The ability to borrow cheap? And the ability to make money on that spread?” Angelides asked. The Federal Reserve’s near-zero borrowing rate has enabled banks to borrow for basically nothing yet lend it out at normal rates to households and businesses, pocketing the difference. “I’m not running those businesses, but the bonuses are offensive to me and to a broad segment of the American public,” he said. Angelides added: “Our job is to examine the meltdown. From a personal viewpoint, this disconnect between how Americans are faring and what’s happening on Wall Street with respect to bonuses is extraordinarily disconcerting.” Thomas lashed out at the Wall Street titans he mockingly called the “Masters of the Universe,” saying: “I am absolutely outraged at people who took government money, went to bed that night, woke up, and [then could say] that they didn’t need to take it.” He said the bailout has had the effect of encouraging the same kind of behavior that got the country into its current economic mess. “And now they’re making a lot of money, and they’re going to go back to the same old behavior that encouraged people to take inordinate risks with other people’s money,” he said. “What difference does it make if it comes from private [funds] or taxpayers? It’s money that can be fed into the mill that produced bonuses for me,” he said channeling a Wall Streeter. Angelides said the bonuses are “unjustifiably wrong,” to which Thomas quickly added, “And dumb! I mean, why do you draw attention to yourself right now?” he asked. Angelides said the banks benefited enormously from government intervention, including the ability to borrow cheaply and the deals they got in the taxpayer-funded bailout known as TARP: “The deal that those banks got was a stunning deal, un-gettable in the private sector,” he said. “The notion that a corporation could be on its knees, about to go to bankruptcy, and get money that they could effectively borrow at seven or eight percent is, you know, it’s just nothing that any private equity firm would have done, that any private source of capital would have done. And so I think it’s fair to say the American taxpayer enabled many of these companies to survive and be in the position they’re in today — and that’s not unnoticed.” Private investors, he said, would have wanted more like 30 percent interest. “Bank of America — they took $45 billion, right?” Angelides said. “They’re talking about a payoff. The government is saying they’re going to make two-and-a-half billion [in profit]. Annualized, that’s probably seven to eight percent interest.” To which Angelides exclaimed, “What a deal!”

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BHP Agrees on Rio Tinto Venture to Combine Australia Iron Ore Mines, Ports

December 5, 2009

By Rebecca Keenan and Brett Foley Dec. 5 (Bloomberg) — BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group agreed to the terms of an iron ore joint venture that will save the companies at least $10 billion a year. “The companies today signed binding agreements on the proposed JV that cover all aspects of how the joint venture will operate and be governed,” Rio said in an e-mailed statement . The plan, announced in June, is to combine mines, rail, ports and workforces in Western Australia’s Pilbara region, the world’s second-largest iron ore resource, into a 50-50 joint venture. The companies expect the venture to be completed by mid-2010, today’s statement said. “Signing binding agreements brings us one step closer to unlocking the full production potential of our Pilbara iron ore assets and achieving substantial benefits for all our stakeholders,” Rio Chief Executive Officer Tom Albanese said in the statement. “Completing the joint venture is a priority for Rio Tinto in 2010 and I look forward to realizing this vision and capturing the synergies for our shareholders.” Rio and BHP have filed submissions with the European Commission and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission in relation to the joint venture. “The companies understand that the European Commission will review the production joint venture under Article 101,” today’s statement said. Under the article, the commission will investigate whether the proposed joint venture is a restrictive business agreement that may harm competition. ‘Antitrust Rules’ The European Commission “will ensure that the deal complies with EU antitrust rules,” Jonathan Todd , a commission spokesman, said by telephone today. The deal will curb competition and development of mining capacity, steel industry group Eurofer , representing producers including ArcelorMittal and ThyssenKrupp AG, said Nov. 16. The plan is the second attempt to combine both mining companies’ iron ore operations in Western Australia. Melbourne- based BHP abandoned a hostile bid for Rio in November 2008, citing Rio’s debt, falling commodity prices and regulatory hurdles. The bid faced a probe from the European Commission, which had “serious doubts” over a combination that would control more than a third of global iron ore exports. Iron Ore Imports “We are very pleased to now have formal and binding agreements in place to develop this important joint venture,” BHP Chief Executive Marius Kloppers said in the statement. “With the history of both companies’ attempts to join together these two world-class iron ore operations in Western Australia at various times, this deal has effectively been more than a decade in the making.” Australia’s BHP and London-based Rio are the world’s second- and third-biggest iron ore producers, behind Brazil’s Vale SA . BHP and RIO may supply 75 percent of China’s imports of iron ore this year, according to Goldman Sachs JBWere Pty. Both companies said in June they planned to reach a binding agreement by Dec. 5 before seeking regulatory approvals. BHP was to have paid Rio a so-called equalization payment of about $5.8 billion to bring the two companies into 50-50 ownership. Combining iron ore assets in Western Australia’s Pilbara region had been studied as far back as 1999 and was a key driver behind BHP’s bid for Rio, Citigroup Inc. said in a note in May. The mining companies, amid pressure from steelmakers, in October scrapped a plan to jointly market up to 15 percent of ore from the proposed venture. To contact the reporters on this story: Rebecca Keenan in Melbourne at rkeenan5@bloomberg.net ; Brett Foley in London at bfoley8@bloomberg.net .

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Dean Baker: Hostage-Takers in the Senate

November 16, 2009

As most of us are preparing for the holidays a small clique in the Senate, with their collaborators in the Washington punditry, are planning for a dramatic hostage-taking event. Their target of opportunity is a bill to increase the nation’s debt limit. The hostage-takers propose to obstruct the bill’s passage unless the rest of the country gives into their demands to cut Social Security and Medicare and takes other steps to meet their warped sense of fiscal responsibility. The debt limit must be increased at regular intervals in order to allow the government to function normally because the government is currently operating at a deficit. If the debt limit is not passed, then at some point the government will not be able to pay workers and contractors. It won’t be able to send out Social Security checks or make payments for Medicaid and unemployment insurance to state governments. And, it will not be able to make interest payments on government bonds, effectively defaulting on the national debt. As a condition of allowing a bill to increase the debt limit to pass the Senate, the hostage-takers are demanding that Congress agree to establish a special commission to make recommendations for reducing the long-term budget deficit. This commission would be stacked with people who want to cut Social Security and Medicare. When the commission makes its report to Congress, which would include huge cuts for these programs along with some tax increases, the report would not be subject to regular Congressional procedures. It would be fast-tracked, which means that it could not be amended, debate would be limited, and there would not be the usual 60 votes required to bring the report to a vote in the Senate. In short, the deck would be stacked toward approving large cuts in ways that would not ordinarily be the case. The hostage-takers argue that such a commission is necessary because the current system is broken. This is another way of saying that the hostage-takers have been unable to get what they want through the normal democratic process. Rather than trying to organize popular support for their position, like people pushing for health care reform, restrictions on greenhouse gas emissions, or an end to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, this group of senators and their collaborators prefer the route of hostage-taking. They hope that by threatening the passage of a vital bill, they can advance measures for which they lack public support. This adventure in hostage-taking is especially infuriating since this gang did so much to push the country into its current economic crisis. At a time when some of us were trying to warn of the housing bubble and the economic disaster that would inevitably follow in the wake of its collapse, this crew was filling the airwaves and newspapers with their scare stories of huge deficits in 2050. Of course, these deficits were driven almost entirely by the cost of maintaining a broken health care system, a point that they rarely chose to highlight. As a result of the bubble and its collapse, we have enormous deficits today, in addition to 15 million unemployed and tens of millions of homeowners underwater in their mortgage. But the hostage-takers act as though nothing has changed. They acknowledge no responsibility for this disaster and just press on in their drive to gut Social Security and Medicare, two programs that are now more important than ever as a result of the economic mismanagement of the last decade. The key here is to refuse to give in to the hostage-takers. This is a high stakes game of chicken, but at the end of the day, the hostage-takers, many of whom are financed by Wall Street money, stand to lose far more than the rest of us. None of us should want to see the government defaulting on its debt, but if this crew wants to press the matter, the Wall Street gang will lose much more than those of us who don’t possess great wealth. The Wall Street gang may have suckered us with getting the TARP bailout money last year, but we don’t have to let them get away with the same trick again. If they want to threaten to crash the financial system with their irresponsible hostage-taking, then we should steal a line from a former president: “bring it on!”

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Financial Crisis Commission Chair: ‘The Investigative Work Is Underway’

November 13, 2009

The federal commission created to investigate the roots of the financial crisis has begun its review of documents and will announce next week a series of senior staff appointments, its chief said Friday. Phil Angelides, head of the bipartisan Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, emphasized the importance of establishing accountability, noting that “in 1929 on Wall Street, people were throwing themselves out of windows. This year, they’re lining up for bonuses.” The commission, created earlier this year, is styled after the 9/11 Commission and the Pecora Commission, which exposed in riveting detail the role played by the titans of Wall Street in the 1929 stock market crash. “The investigative work is underway,” said Angelides, a former California State Treasurer. His investigators have been reviewing regulatory filings, he noted, though he didn’t get into specifics. In a speech to a gathering of progressive economists in Washington, D.C., Angelides noted that the commission’s ultimate contribution will be a “historical accounting” of the crisis. “It’s critically important,” the Democrat said. “True reform does not come with the sweep of new regulation alone. True reform is about cultures and values.” He noted that there’s “a hunger to hold people accountable…a hunger to find out what happened…and a hunger (for the responsible) to take responsibility.” “We haven’t had that robust dialogue” about what we want the financial system to be, he said. Angelides added that the commission will be holding a series of public hearings throughout next year. The commission has the power to compel testimony through subpoenas, and has the authority to refer wrongdoers for criminal prosecution though he emphasized that he is more interested in gathering information: “If we find 30 perps and line them against the wall, we will have undersized the problem. The most important thing we can do is shed light, not heat.”

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Merchants Securities Raises $1.6 Billion, China’s Third-Largest 2009 IPO

November 11, 2009

By Bloomberg News Nov. 12 (Bloomberg) — China Merchants Securities Co . raised 11.1 billion yuan ($1.6 billion) in the nation’s third-largest initial public offering this year after investors ordered almost 100 times the number shares on offer. The Shenzhen-based brokerage sold 358.5 million shares at 31 yuan each, valuing the stock at 56.3 times 2008 earnings, according to a statement to the Shanghai Stock Exchange late yesterday. The sale drew 111.1 billion yuan of orders from institutional and retail investors. The Shanghai Composite Index has jumped 74 percent this year, helping draw investors to stock offerings. Equity sales following the lifting of a moratorium on IPOs in June helped increase daily trading on the nation’s two exchanges to an average 97.1 billion yuan a day in the third quarter from 93.8 billion yuan a year earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Domestic companies have raised 138 billion yuan in share sales this year, compared with 139 billion yuan for all of 2008, when the Shanghai Composite fell a record 65 percent. This year’s offerings still amount to less than a third of the amount raised in 2007, according to Bloomberg data. Everbright Securities Co. raised 11 billion yuan in August in China’s first IPO by a brokerage since 2002. The shares were priced at 21.08 yuan, 59 times last year’s earnings, and have gained 17 percent since their Aug. 18 debut. Citic Securities Co. , the nation’s largest brokerage by market value, trades at 25 times earnings after the shares rallied 64 percent this year. Companies included in the benchmark Shanghai Composite trade at an average 34 times their 2008 earnings, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Citic Securities said last month that third-quarter profit more than doubled after more active stock trading brought higher commission revenue. Merchants Securities sold 20 percent of the shares on offer to institutions though an offline tranche, while the remaining stock was offered to all investors through an online sale, according to today’s statement. Institutional investors will have a three-month lockup on their holdings. The company didn’t say when the shares will start trading. Goldman Sachs Gao Hua Securities Co. and UBS AG’s mainland venture managed the sale. For Related News and Information: China Merchants Securities News: 600999 CH CN Equities Calendar: ECDR Top finance Stories: FTOP

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European Finance Ministers Commit to Start Curbing Budget Deficits by 2011

November 10, 2009

By Jennifer Ryan and Francois de Beaupuy Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) — European Union finance ministers committed to start reining in budget deficits by 2011 at the latest even as they said economic stimulus remains necessary to nurture the recovery from the deepest slump in six decades. “Restoring the public finances and tackling unemployment will be the priorities for the time to come,” Spanish Economy Minister Elena Salgado told a press conference in Brussels late yesterday after leading a meeting of euro-area finance chiefs. “Without doubt, public finances are on an unsustainable course,” said Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg , whose government holds the EU’s rotating six-month presidency. European governments have put forward billions of euros in measures aimed at reviving growth and saving jobs. The average budget shortfall in the euro region will balloon to a record 6.9 percent of gross domestic product next year with all 16 euro nations breaching the EU limit of 3 percent of GDP, the European Commission forecasts. The jobless rate is projected to reach 10.9 percent in 2011, the most since at least 1995. The commission, the Brussels-based EU executive, tomorrow will issue reports assessing efforts by France, Spain, Ireland, Greece and the U.K., which isn’t in the euro area, to start to bring their deficits back into line with EU rules. Germany, Europe’s largest economy, and eight other countries will be given deadlines to correct their deficit overruns. “We have to orient ourselves toward the Stability and Growth Pact,” which sets out the rules for government debt and deficits, Austrian Finance Minister Josef Proell said in Brussels yesterday. “The goal to get below 3 percent of gross domestic product for the deficit and 60 percent for debt has to be kept in mind in the short and medium term.” Budget-Cutting Efforts Overall government debt for the 27 nations in the EU will reach 79 percent of GDP in 2010 and more than 83 percent the following year, the commission forecast last month. Without budget-cutting efforts, the debt-to-GDP ratio “could reach 100 percent as early as 2014 and keep on increasing,” according to a commission document discussed at yesterday’s meeting. The finance ministers last month agreed to wait until 2011 before cutting deficits to allow government spending to boost growth while the region recovers from the recession. EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia affirmed that timeframe at a press conference following yesterday’s meeting. “If things go the way most central projections suggest, then 2011 would be the year to start consolidation and fiscal exit,” Dutch Finance Minister Wouter Bos said. “We shouldn’t stop stimulating too early.” Risks to Growth The euro-region economy will contract 4 percent this year before expanding 0.7 percent in 2010, according to the forecasts by the commission, the EU executive. European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said yesterday that while the recovery is taking hold a little faster than expected, risks to growth mean there is “no time for complacency.” Group of 20 governments meeting in St. Andrews, Scotland, on Nov. 7 pledged to keep interest rates low and maintain record budget deficits until recoveries take hold. Global stocks rallied yesterday and the dollar slid after the G-20 commitment to maintain stimulus efforts. Trichet said at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, that central bankers agreed on the need for a “gradual and timely phasing out” of non-conventional policy measures without signaling that such a move was imminent. The U.K. last week gave more support to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc , making it the most expensive bank bailout ever. UBS AG, which amassed the biggest writedowns and losses from the credit crisis among European competitors, on Nov. 3 reported a loss that was bigger than analysts estimated. “We are not yet out of crisis, we have to count on a couple of setbacks in the coming quarters,” ECB Executive Board member Juergen Stark said in a speech tonight in Tuebingen, Germany. “We can’t speak of a self-sustaining recovery, it is mostly due to temporary factors.” The euro-area finance ministers will be joined today by the counterparts from the rest of the 27 EU nations. To contact the reporters on this story: Jennifer Ryan in Brussels at jryan13@bloomberg.net ; Jurjen van de Pol in Brussels at jvandepol@bloomberg.net .

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European Finance Ministers Commit to Start Curbing Budget Deficits by 2011

November 10, 2009

By Jennifer Ryan and Francois de Beaupuy Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) — European Union finance ministers committed to start reining in budget deficits by 2011 at the latest even as they said economic stimulus remains necessary to nurture the recovery from the deepest slump in six decades. “Restoring the public finances and tackling unemployment will be the priorities for the time to come,” Spanish Economy Minister Elena Salgado told a press conference in Brussels late yesterday after leading a meeting of euro-area finance chiefs. “Without doubt, public finances are on an unsustainable course,” said Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg , whose government holds the EU’s rotating six-month presidency. European governments have put forward billions of euros in measures aimed at reviving growth and saving jobs. The average budget shortfall in the euro region will balloon to a record 6.9 percent of gross domestic product next year with all 16 euro nations breaching the EU limit of 3 percent of GDP, the European Commission forecasts. The jobless rate is projected to reach 10.9 percent in 2011, the most since at least 1995. The commission, the Brussels-based EU executive, tomorrow will issue reports assessing efforts by France, Spain, Ireland, Greece and the U.K., which isn’t in the euro area, to start to bring their deficits back into line with EU rules. Germany, Europe’s largest economy, and eight other countries will be given deadlines to correct their deficit overruns. “We have to orient ourselves toward the Stability and Growth Pact,” which sets out the rules for government debt and deficits, Austrian Finance Minister Josef Proell said in Brussels yesterday. “The goal to get below 3 percent of gross domestic product for the deficit and 60 percent for debt has to be kept in mind in the short and medium term.” Budget-Cutting Efforts Overall government debt for the 27 nations in the EU will reach 79 percent of GDP in 2010 and more than 83 percent the following year, the commission forecast last month. Without budget-cutting efforts, the debt-to-GDP ratio “could reach 100 percent as early as 2014 and keep on increasing,” according to a commission document discussed at yesterday’s meeting. The finance ministers last month agreed to wait until 2011 before cutting deficits to allow government spending to boost growth while the region recovers from the recession. EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia affirmed that timeframe at a press conference following yesterday’s meeting. “If things go the way most central projections suggest, then 2011 would be the year to start consolidation and fiscal exit,” Dutch Finance Minister Wouter Bos said. “We shouldn’t stop stimulating too early.” Risks to Growth The euro-region economy will contract 4 percent this year before expanding 0.7 percent in 2010, according to the forecasts by the commission, the EU executive. European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said yesterday that while the recovery is taking hold a little faster than expected, risks to growth mean there is “no time for complacency.” Group of 20 governments meeting in St. Andrews, Scotland, on Nov. 7 pledged to keep interest rates low and maintain record budget deficits until recoveries take hold. Global stocks rallied yesterday and the dollar slid after the G-20 commitment to maintain stimulus efforts. Trichet said at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, that central bankers agreed on the need for a “gradual and timely phasing out” of non-conventional policy measures without signaling that such a move was imminent. The U.K. last week gave more support to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc , making it the most expensive bank bailout ever. UBS AG, which amassed the biggest writedowns and losses from the credit crisis among European competitors, on Nov. 3 reported a loss that was bigger than analysts estimated. “We are not yet out of crisis, we have to count on a couple of setbacks in the coming quarters,” ECB Executive Board member Juergen Stark said in a speech tonight in Tuebingen, Germany. “We can’t speak of a self-sustaining recovery, it is mostly due to temporary factors.” The euro-area finance ministers will be joined today by the counterparts from the rest of the 27 EU nations. To contact the reporters on this story: Jennifer Ryan in Brussels at jryan13@bloomberg.net ; Jurjen van de Pol in Brussels at jvandepol@bloomberg.net .

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NTS Realty Holdings Limited Partnership Announces It Intends to File Its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the Three and Nine Months Ended September…

November 6, 2009

LOUISVILLE, KY–(Marketwire – November 6, 2009) – ( NYSE Amex : NLP ) – NTS Realty Holdings Limited Partnership (the “Company”) announced that it intends to file its Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2009 with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”) today. The Quarterly Report will contain earnings information for the Company for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2009. A copy of the Quarterly Report will be available on the Company’s website at http://www.ntsdevelopment.com under the heading “Investor Relations” and from the Commission’s website at http://sec.gov .

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EU Raises GDP Outlook to See 0.7% Growth in 2010 as Deficits, Jobless Rise

November 3, 2009

By Emma Ross-Thomas Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) — The euro-area economy will return to growth next year, the European Commission said, raising its forecasts even as budget deficits and unemployment swell to the highest levels since at least 1995. The economy of the 16 countries sharing the euro will expand 0.7 percent in 2010 and 1.5 percent in 2011, after contracting 4 percent this year, the Brussels-based commission , the European Union’s executive, said today in its semi-annual economic forecasts . It previously forecast a 0.1 percent contraction in 2010. The region’s average deficit will widen to 6.9 percent of economic output next year and unemployment will reach 10.9 percent in 2011, the most since at least 1995. European companies from STMicroelectronics NV to Pernod Ricard SA cited signs of recovery as they reported earnings in the past month, suggesting that record-low interest rates and emergency stimulus measures are feeding into the broader economy. At the same time, the European Central Bank is warning that it is time for governments to start shoring up budgets or face the risk of higher rates when the stimulus is removed. European governments should start reining in budget deficits in 2011, by which time the recovery should be “sustained,” EU Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia told a news conference in Brussels after issuing the forecasts. ‘Major Challenges’ “In 2011, I think everybody should start the consolidation,” he said “Major challenges persist for the near term; we are optimistic but we see in 2010 and 2011 only a gradual recovery.” The euro, which has strengthened 10 percent against the dollar in the past six months, traded at 1.4645 at 11:30 a.m. in London, down 0.9 percent from yesterday. The global economy is emerging from the worst recession in six decades, led by China, where data showed yesterday that the manufacturing industry expanded at the fastest pace in 18 months in October. Manufacturing also grew in the euro region last month for the first time in more than a year and expanded more than anticipated in the U.S. Global stocks have soared on expectations of recovery. The MSCI World Index has risen almost 60 percent since March. The commission’s growth forecasts are more optimistic than predictions from the International Monetary Fund on Oct. 1 that the region will grow 0.3 percent next year after a 4.2 percent contraction in 2009. The IMF forecast an unemployment rate of 11.7 percent for next year. ‘Far From Certain’ “It’s still far from certain that we’ve got a sustainable recovery,” said Howard Archer , chief European economist at IHS Global Insight in London. “Global economic activity could suffer a relapse and particularly in the euro zone with the euro at $1.50 any relapse in global activity, together with the strong euro, could really hit European exports.” Euro-area economies are recovering at different speeds, with Germany and France returning to quarterly growth in the three months through June, while Spain, Greece and Ireland are set to post full-year contractions in 2010, according to the commission’s forecasts. Those three countries are also projected to have some of the highest budget deficits and unemployment rates in the region, posing further risks to the recovery . Deficits next year will amount to 14.7 percent of gross domestic product in Ireland, 10.1 percent of GDP in Spain, 8.2 percent in France and 5 percent in Germany, the region’s largest economy, the commission said. All euro-area nations will breach the EU’s deficit limit of 3 percent of GDP in 2010 and 2011, according to today’s forecasts. Large Deficits “The combination of sustained large deficits, lower potential growth and unfavorable demographic trends is a source of major concern,” Almunia said. As some fiscal and monetary stimulus measures start to be withdrawn next year, rising unemployment will also stretch deficits, as joblessness is projected to rise to 10.7 percent next year and 10.9 percent in 2011. Metro AG , Germany’s largest retailer, said today that quarterly profit plunged 61 percent as rising joblessness eroded consumer spending across Europe. The company forecast no improvement for the rest of the year. While unemployment has more than doubled in two years in Spain, countries including Germany and the Netherlands have held down job losses with government incentives. “These schemes are softening the pain,” said Martin van Vliet , senior economist at ING Bank in Amsterdam. “The flip side is that the odds of a jobless recovery in the euro zone are much higher than in the U.S.” Price Declines Inflation next year will remain below the 2 percent ceiling set by the ECB, the commission said, with annual price declines projected in Ireland in 2009 and 2010. The euro-area inflation rate will be 0.3 percent this year, rising to 1.1 percent next year and 1.5 percent in 2011, it said. The Frankfurt-based ECB expects annual price growth to average about 0.4 percent this year and 1.2 percent in 2010. The ECB, which holds its next rate-setting meeting in two days, is expected to keep its benchmark rate at a record low of 1 percent until the third quarter of next year, according to the median forecast of economists in a Bloomberg survey. To contact the reporter on this story: Emma Ross-Thomas in Madrid at erossthomas@bloomberg.net

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EU Raises 2010 GDP Forecast to See 0.7% Growth as Deficits, Jobless Rise

November 3, 2009

By Emma Ross-Thomas Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) — The euro-area economy may expand 0.7 percent next year, the European Commission said, raising its growth forecast even as budget deficits and jobless ranks swell further. The economy of the 16 countries sharing the euro will resume growth in 2010 and expand 1.5 percent in 2011, after contracting 4 percent this year, the Brussels-based commission , the European Union’s executive, said today in its semi-annual economic forecasts. It previously forecast a 0.1 percent contraction in 2010. The region’s average budget deficit will swell to 6.9 percent of gross domestic product next year and slip to 6.5 percent in 2011 and unemployment will rise into 2011, reaching 10.9 percent, the highest since at least 1995. European companies from STMicroelectronics NV to Pernod Ricard SA cited signs of recovery as they reported earnings in the past month, suggesting that record-low interest rates and government stimulus measures are feeding into the broader economy. Even as consumer confidence improves, soaring budget deficits and unemployment rates threaten to undermine the recovery from the worst recession in six decades. “While the recession may be over, the impact of the crisis is not,” the commission said in the report. For a “solid, sustainable” recovery, “it will be key to tackle the labor- market and debt challenges.” The commission’s growth forecasts are more optimistic than predictions from the International Monetary Fund on Oct. 1 that the region will grow 0.3 percent next year after a 4.2 percent contraction in 2009. The IMF forecast an unemployment rate of 11.7 percent for next year. Six Months The euro, which has strengthened 10 percent against the dollar in the past six months, traded at 1.4739, down 0.2 percent from yesterday before the report. Inflation next year will remain below the 2 percent ceiling set by the European Central Bank, the commission said, with annual price declines projected in Ireland in 2010. The euro- area inflation rate will be 0.3 percent this year, rising to 1.1 percent next year and 1.5 percent in 2011, it said. The Frankfurt-based ECB, which aims to keep inflation just below 2 percent, expects annual price growth to average about 0.4 percent this year and 1.2 percent in 2010. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said on Oct. 8 that inflation would turn positive again “in the coming months” and inflation expectations are “anchored.” The ECB, which holds its next rate meeting in two days, is expected to keep its benchmark interest rate at a record low of 1 percent until the third quarter of next year, according to the median forecast from a Bloomberg survey. ‘More and More’ Trichet said on Oct. 15 that there are “more and more signs of stabilization in the euro area,” even as it is “premature to declare the financial crisis to be over.” ECB council member Mario Draghi issued a warning about the sustainability of the recovery on Oct. 29, saying it may be based only on extraordinary stimulus measures and fade once those supports are removed. Also threatening the recovery are surging budget deficits and rising unemployment . Deficits next year will amount to 14.7 percent in Ireland, 10.1 percent in Spain, 8.2 percent in France and 5 percent in Germany, the commission said today. All euro region countries will breach the EU’s 3 percent limit in 2010 and 2011, it said. Increasing unemployment will stretch deficits, as joblessness is projected to rise to 10.7 percent next year and 10.9 percent in 2011. Metro AG , Germany’s largest retailer, said today that third-quarter profit plunged 61 percent as rising joblessness eroded consumer spending across Europe. The company forecast no improvement for the rest of the year. While unemployment has more than doubled in two years in Spain, countries including Germany and the Netherlands have held down job losses with government incentives. “These schemes are softening the pain,” said Martin van Vliet , senior economist at ING Bank in Amsterdam. “In the longer term, if unemployment remains relatively low compared to the pain in the economy, the flip side is that the odds of a jobless recovery in the euro zone are much higher than in the U.S.” To contact the reporter on this story: Emma Ross-Thomas in Madrid at erossthomas@bloomberg.net

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Euro Economies to Grow 0.7% in 2010 as Unemployment Rises, Commission Says

November 3, 2009

By Emma Ross-Thomas Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) — The euro-area economy may expand 0.7 percent next year, the European Commission said, raising its growth forecast even as budget deficits and jobless ranks swell further. The economy of the 16 countries sharing the euro will resume growth in 2010 and expand 1.5 percent in 2011, after contracting 4 percent this year, the Brussels-based commission , the European Union’s executive, said today in its semi-annual economic forecasts. It previously forecast a 0.1 percent contraction in 2010. The region’s average budget deficit will swell to 6.9 percent of gross domestic product next year and slip to 6.5 percent in 2011 and unemployment will rise into 2011, reaching 10.9 percent, the highest since at least 1995. European companies from STMicroelectronics NV to Pernod Ricard SA cited signs of recovery as they reported earnings in the past month, suggesting that record-low interest rates and government stimulus measures are feeding into the broader economy. Even as consumer confidence improves, soaring budget deficits and unemployment rates threaten to undermine the recovery from the worst recession in six decades. “While the recession may be over, the impact of the crisis is not,” the commission said in the report. For a “solid, sustainable” recovery, “it will be key to tackle the labor- market and debt challenges.” The commission’s growth forecasts are more optimistic than predictions from the International Monetary Fund on Oct. 1 that the region will grow 0.3 percent next year after a 4.2 percent contraction in 2009. The IMF forecast an unemployment rate of 11.7 percent for next year. Six Months The euro, which has strengthened 10 percent against the dollar in the past six months, traded at 1.4739, down 0.2 percent from yesterday before the report. Inflation next year will remain below the 2 percent ceiling set by the European Central Bank, the commission said, with annual price declines projected in Ireland in 2010. The euro- area inflation rate will be 0.3 percent this year, rising to 1.1 percent next year and 1.5 percent in 2011, it said. The Frankfurt-based ECB, which aims to keep inflation just below 2 percent, expects annual price growth to average about 0.4 percent this year and 1.2 percent in 2010. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said on Oct. 8 that inflation would turn positive again “in the coming months” and inflation expectations are “anchored.” The ECB, which holds its next rate meeting in two days, is expected to keep its benchmark interest rate at a record low of 1 percent until the third quarter of next year, according to the median forecast from a Bloomberg survey. ‘More and More’ Trichet said on Oct. 15 that there are “more and more signs of stabilization in the euro area,” even as it is “premature to declare the financial crisis to be over.” ECB council member Mario Draghi issued a warning about the sustainability of the recovery on Oct. 29, saying it may be based only on extraordinary stimulus measures and fade once those supports are removed. Also threatening the recovery are surging budget deficits and rising unemployment . Deficits next year will amount to 14.7 percent in Ireland, 10.1 percent in Spain, 8.2 percent in France and 5 percent in Germany, the commission said today. All euro region countries will breach the EU’s 3 percent limit in 2010 and 2011, it said. Increasing unemployment will stretch deficits, as joblessness is projected to rise to 10.7 percent next year and 10.9 percent in 2011. Metro AG , Germany’s largest retailer, said today that third-quarter profit plunged 61 percent as rising joblessness eroded consumer spending across Europe. The company forecast no improvement for the rest of the year. While unemployment has more than doubled in two years in Spain, countries including Germany and the Netherlands have held down job losses with government incentives. “These schemes are softening the pain,” said Martin van Vliet , senior economist at ING Bank in Amsterdam. “In the longer term, if unemployment remains relatively low compared to the pain in the economy, the flip side is that the odds of a jobless recovery in the euro zone are much higher than in the U.S.” To contact the reporter on this story: Emma Ross-Thomas in Madrid at erossthomas@bloomberg.net

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European Commission offers $745m loan for Ukraine

November 1, 2009

European Commission offers $745m loan for Ukraine

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California’s Push for Electric Cars May Make Residents Pay More for Power

October 23, 2009

By Alan Ohnsman and Mark Chediak Oct. 23 (Bloomberg) — California’s push to lead U.S. sales of electric cars may result in higher power rates for consumers in the state, as a growing number of rechargeable vehicles forces utilities to pay for grid upgrades. The impact of the vehicles on electricity fees is being reviewed this month by California’s Public Utilities Commission as the most populous U.S. state will require Toyota Motor Corp. , General Motors Co., Honda Motor Co. , Ford Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co. to sell more vehicles that can be powered at electric outlets from late 2011. Power companies including Southern California Edison, the state’s largest, have to install new transformers and meters to handle greater demand and prevent blackouts from circuits being overloaded by too many vehicles plugging in. The utilities will boost rates to recover investment costs, said Travis Miller , an analyst at Morningstar Inc. in Chicago. “If you look at the kind of money that will be needed for a full smart grid and support for electric vehicles, then you are talking about a substantial amount,” Miller said in a phone interview. The spending may total “multiple billions” of dollars over a decade or more, he said. From model years 2012 through 2014, the largest carmakers by volume in California must sell about 60,000 plug-in hybrids and electric cars combined, according to the state Air Resources Board. President Barack Obama is aiming for 1 million plug-in cars on U.S. roads by 2015 to curb tailpipe emissions and cut dependence on foreign oil. Overload Rosemead, California-based Edison International , the owner of Southern California Edison, has identified Santa Monica, California, as a community with many potential battery-car customers that may require transformer upgrades. A typical Santa Monica circuit, which serves about 10 households, may be overloaded should two or three customers on that circuit charge vehicles simultaneously, even if they do so overnight during off-peak hours, Ted Craver , Edison’s chief executive officer, said in a phone interview on Oct. 20. While surplus power is available at night at cheaper rates, the grid needs adjustments to handle such charging, Craver said. For example, additional or larger transformers may be needed in neighborhoods with numerous plug-in car owners. “If all those people do it at off hours, in the middle of the night, a lot of our system is designed so the transformers cool down at night,” Craver said. “That’s part of how they are able to function at full capacity during the day.” Rates Edison, PG&E Corp. , owner of Pacific Gas & Electric Co., and Sempra Energy’s San Diego Gas & Electric have said in filings with the state utilities commission they’ll have to make infrastructure investments related to plug-ins, without proving specific figures. Expenses will start next year for plug-in “readiness efforts, and will require a reasonable process for seeking recovery of these costs,” Edison said in its filing . Utilities providing power to recharge vehicles are set to receive “low-carbon fuel” credits that may be sold to oil companies. Edison, PG&E and San Diego Gas all said they’ll use revenue from the credits to moderate potential rate increases. A decision by the commission on rate changes linked to plug-ins isn’t likely for “several months,” Craver said. ‘Urgent Imperative’ The Edison Electric Institute , the main industry group for U.S. investor-owned utilities, said Oct. 21 its members are increasing efforts to prepare for electric vehicles, calling it an “urgent imperative.” Minneapolis-based utility Xcel Energy Inc. helped fund and install “ Smart Grid City ,” a $100 million project in Boulder, Colorado, designed for electric-vehicle charging. Toyota said this week it will supply 10 plug-in Prius hybrids for testing on the Boulder system in a program by the University of Colorado and the Energy Department. In addition to transformers, so-called smart meters and upgrades to public chargers installed in California a decade ago, individual customers will also have costs if they install home- use charging units, Craver said. Edison estimates that by 2020, as many as 1.6 million cars recharged by the grid may be in use in its 50,000-square-mile coverage area , about the size of Alabama. Edison is making system-wide upgrades to improve efficiency and doesn’t have a cost estimate for modifications related solely to battery vehicles, Craver said in an Oct. 15 interview at the company’s Electric Vehicle Technology Center in Pomona, California. “I don’t think you can really isolate and say this is just the pure incremental case related to electric vehicles,” he said. In preparation for vehicles such as Nissan’s Leaf electric car and GM’s Chevrolet Volt, due in late 2010, Edison is trying to estimate how much demand there will be, where most of the vehicles will be in use, and potential impacts on its system. “It’s important that the customer experience with plug-in electric vehicles be a good one,” Craver said. To contact the reporters on this story: Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net ; Mark Chediak in San Francisco at mchediak@bloomberg.net

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Ticketmaster’s Merger With Live Nation Is Opposed by U.K. Competition Body

October 8, 2009

By Matthew Campbell Oct. 8 (Bloomberg) — U.K. antitrust regulators ruled against a proposed merger of Ticketmaster Entertainment Inc. and Live Nation Inc., saying the deal would curb competition in the country’s live music market. Live Nation and Ticketmaster Entertainment, the largest companies in live music, agreed in February to combine to create an entity with about $6 billion in annual sales. The deal may “severely inhibit” the entry of German rival CTS Eventim AG into the U.K. market, the Competition Commission said in a statement detailing its provisional ruling today. “It was pretty clear that it would be difficult for Live Nation and Ticketmaster to do this merger,” said Marcus Sander , an analyst at Sal Oppenheim in Frankfurt. The U.K. ruling may set the tone for other antitrust decisions on the merger. The rejection also puts British authorities in the position of opposing a deal between two U.S. companies, an exercise more frequently attempted by their European Union counterparts. European regulators stopped a merger between General Electric Co. and Honeywell International Inc., and are currently reviewing a proposed merger of Sun Microsystems Inc. and Oracle Corp. Ticketmaster and Live Nation defended their merger. “Live entertainment is now the future of the music industry,” they said in a statement today. “Both our companies are committed to this merger and look forward to addressing any and all issues that the commission deems necessary.” U.K. Ruling The U.K. competition body will “consider a range of possible ways to address the loss of competition” before publishing a final report, it said in its statement. “The merger could severely inhibit the entry of a major new competitor (CTS Eventim) into the U.K. ticketing market,” the commission said. “We will continue to consult with the U.S. authorities, who are also investigating the merger.” Ticketmaster, based in West Hollywood, California, owns the world’s largest ticket-selling network and the biggest artist- management firm. Beverly Hills, California-based Live Nation, the largest concert promoter, owns the most venues and has exclusive deals with Madonna, U2 and Jay-Z. “The fact that it’s a U.S. company is neither here nor there,” said Giorgio Monti , a professor of competition law at the London School of Economics. “If any competition authority says the merger should be prohibited, then the companies cannot consummate the transaction” without a local solution. Other Opposition In July, Senator Herb Kohl , a Wisconsin Democrat, and a bipartisan group of House members asked the U.S. Justice Department to determine whether the combination would lead to higher concert prices or harm competition in the music industry. The companies have testified before the U.S. Congress that the combination will benefit fans by giving them more choices in seating and price flexibility. At a U.S. senate antitrust subcommittee hearing on Feb. 24, Ticketmaster Chief Executive Officer Irving Azoff said: “The fierce competition we face in our businesses will continue to thrive,” and that the combined company will benefit fans. To contact the reporters responsible for this story: James Cone at jcone@bloomberg.net ; Robert Valpuesta in London at rvalpuesta@bloomberg.net .

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Sears Will Settle Discrimination Case for a Record $6.2 Million, U.S. Says

September 29, 2009

By Jim O’Connell and Vivek Shankar Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) — Sears Roebuck & Co. agreed to settle a case under the Americans With Disabilities Act for $6.2 million, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said. A federal court judge approved a consent decree settling the lawsuit today, the agency said in an e-mailed statement. The case, in which the retailer was accused of terminating employees instead of providing reasonable accommodations for their disabilities, is the commission’s largest disability-related case settlement, the agency said. “The facts of this case showed that, nearly 20 years after the enactment of the ADA, the rights of individuals with disabilities are still in jeopardy,” said Stuart J. Ishimaru , the commission’s acting chairman. “The EEOC will use its enforcement authority boldly to protect those rights and advance equal employment opportunities.” Sears Holdings Corp., the biggest U.S. department-store company, settled the case because the legal proceedings could have taken another five years and “considerable expense” to resolve, said Kimberly Freely , a spokeswoman. “Sears continues to believe that it reasonably accommodates its associates on leave due to work-related illnesses or injuries under the Americans With Disabilities Act,” Freely said in a statement. “We have always proceeded and will continue to proceed in good faith when considering and making reasonable accommodations for our associates.” Injured Technician Sears Holdings fell 12 cents to $66.17 in Nasdaq Stock Market trading at 2 p.m. in New York. The stock of the Hoffman Estates, Illinois-based company has risen 70 percent this year. The commission’s allegations arose from a discrimination case filed by a former Sears service technician who was injured on the job, took a leave and was still disabled when he sought to return to work. Sears refused to reinstate the technician with reasonable accommodation for his disability and fired him when his leave expired, the commission said. Agency lawyers said they found more than 100 cases of employees who sought to return to work with an accommodation and were fired by the company. To contact the reporters responsible for this story: Jim O’Connell at joconnell3@bloomberg.net Vivek Shankar at vshankar3@bloomberg.net

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Democrats Win First Skirmishes Over Plans to Curb U.S. Health-Care Costs

September 24, 2009

By Nicole Gaouette Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) — Senate Finance Committee members clashed over Medicare cost-cutting plans, with Democrats winning the first skirmishes yesterday over how to curb spending in the federal program for the elderly. On the panel’s second day of debate over legislation to remake the U.S. health-care system, Republicans assailed a provision to create an advisory body empowered to propose Medicare cuts, part of a broader assault on the bill. Democrats said spiraling costs and looming Medicare insolvency call for tough decisions. “We have to learn how to discipline ourselves,” said Senator Jay Rockefeller , a West Virginia Democrat, as he argued against an amendment that would have killed the commission. The amendment, which failed, was one of 564 filed to modify the $856 billion proposal that committee Chairman Max Baucus released last week. The finance panel is the last of five committees to produce legislation that would expand coverage for tens of millions of Americans and rein in health- care costs, President Barack Obama’s top domestic priority. Baucus, a Montana Democrat, has faced criticism from Democrats for wooing Republicans, most of whom have responded to his efforts by attacking the proposal. Senator Olympia Snowe of Maine, the Republican most likely to support the measure, says she wants to amend the plan to make insurance more affordable for Americans. Orszag Praise The Obama administration’s budget chief, Peter Orszag , praised Baucus’s plan in an interview, saying it “significantly expands coverage while doing so in a way that is not only deficit-neutral” but “deficit-reducing,” citing a review last week by the Congressional Budget Office . Finance committee members, 13 Democrats and 10 Republicans, have been debating amendments to alter the bill. The changes would add to the proposal’s cost, though Baucus said its cost would still fall under $900 billion over 10 years. The committee yesterday accepted an amendment by Senator Charles Schumer , a New York Democrat, that would encourage the use of biosimilar drugs, which are copies of expensive drugs made from living organisms. The amendment would reward physicians or hospitals who dispense biosimilar drugs sold through Medicare, reimbursing them at the average sales price of the biosimilar product plus 6 percent of the price of the original brand drug as a bonus. The panel also approved a provision suggested by Senator Thomas Carper , a Delaware Democrat, to encourage states to return the federal share of any Medicare overpayment. ‘There’s a Goldmine’ “There’s a goldmine to be found there in going after fraudulent, incorrect and other forms of payments in which the taxpayers of the United States are being cheated,” said Senator Kent Conrad , a North Dakota Democrat. Baucus rejected two Republican amendments to limit medical liability suits, saying they didn’t fall under the committee’s jurisdiction. He signaled interest in acting on medical malpractice changes, however, echoing Obama’s Sept. 9 pledge in a speech to Congress that he would explore a way to curb lawsuit-driven medical costs. “We need to act in this area,” Baucus said. He said some surveys indicated that physicians’ use of “defensive medicine,” in which they order costly tests and procedures to avoid a lawsuit for neglecting something, drives up costs by as much as 12 percent. Clash Over Commission The most heated exchange yesterday was prompted by the amendment proposed by Senator John Cornyn , a Texas Republican, to strike the 15-member, independent Medicare Commission created by Baucus’s bill. The commission would recommend ways Congress could reduce excess cost growth in Medicare and improve care. In years when costs were projected to be unsustainable, the body’s proposals would take effect unless Congress passed an alternate measure. “Outcomes, that is the future, Senator Cornyn,” said Rockefeller. “Who is performing and who isn’t. I know the idea is right and I know the idea is the way to improve health-care in this country in a fair way.” Cornyn criticized the commission’s potential reach, yet said it wouldn’t even go into effect for four years. “Rather than making tough decisions about how to pay for new spending now, this proposal would delegate the commission broad spending-reduction powers beginning in 2013,” he said. The Obama administration has been pushing back against Republican claims that Medicare recipients would see their benefits cut. Vice President Joe Biden , trying to shore up support among older Americans for a health-care overhaul, urged them to ignore “distortions” and “misrepresentations” that he said were being spread by opponents. Not Touching Benefits “Nobody is going to mess with your benefits,” Biden told more than 200 people yesterday at a town-hall meeting at a Leisure World retirement facility in suburban Maryland. He said much of the criticism aimed at the Democrats echoes Republican voices that once denounced efforts to create Medicare. Baucus’s plan sidestepped one potential Republican assault, calling for nonprofit cooperatives rather than a federally backed insurance plan to compete against private insurers such as Hartford, Connecticut-based Aetna Inc . The government program, or “public option,” is favored by many Democrats as the best way to tamp down costs. To appease Democrats, Baucus revised his proposal this week, scaling back a tax on high-end insurance plans, a labor union priority. He also expanded government subsidies to help Americans fulfill his proposal’s mandate to buy insurance. To contact the reporters on this story: Nicole Gaouette in Washington at ngaouette@bloomberg.net

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Democrats Win First Skirmishes Over Plans to Curb U.S. Health-Care Costs

September 24, 2009

By Nicole Gaouette Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) — Senate Finance Committee members clashed over Medicare cost-cutting plans, with Democrats winning the first skirmishes yesterday over how to curb spending in the federal program for the elderly. On the panel’s second day of debate over legislation to remake the U.S. health-care system, Republicans assailed a provision to create an advisory body empowered to propose Medicare cuts, part of a broader assault on the bill. Democrats said spiraling costs and looming Medicare insolvency call for tough decisions. “We have to learn how to discipline ourselves,” said Senator Jay Rockefeller , a West Virginia Democrat, as he argued against an amendment that would have killed the commission. The amendment, which failed, was one of 564 filed to modify the $856 billion proposal that committee Chairman Max Baucus released last week. The finance panel is the last of five committees to produce legislation that would expand coverage for tens of millions of Americans and rein in health- care costs, President Barack Obama’s top domestic priority. Baucus, a Montana Democrat, has faced criticism from Democrats for wooing Republicans, most of whom have responded to his efforts by attacking the proposal. Senator Olympia Snowe of Maine, the Republican most likely to support the measure, says she wants to amend the plan to make insurance more affordable for Americans. Orszag Praise The Obama administration’s budget chief, Peter Orszag , praised Baucus’s plan in an interview, saying it “significantly expands coverage while doing so in a way that is not only deficit-neutral” but “deficit-reducing,” citing a review last week by the Congressional Budget Office . Finance committee members, 13 Democrats and 10 Republicans, have been debating amendments to alter the bill. The changes would add to the proposal’s cost, though Baucus said its cost would still fall under $900 billion over 10 years. The committee yesterday accepted an amendment by Senator Charles Schumer , a New York Democrat, that would encourage the use of biosimilar drugs, which are copies of expensive drugs made from living organisms. The amendment would reward physicians or hospitals who dispense biosimilar drugs sold through Medicare, reimbursing them at the average sales price of the biosimilar product plus 6 percent of the price of the original brand drug as a bonus. The panel also approved a provision suggested by Senator Thomas Carper , a Delaware Democrat, to encourage states to return the federal share of any Medicare overpayment. ‘There’s a Goldmine’ “There’s a goldmine to be found there in going after fraudulent, incorrect and other forms of payments in which the taxpayers of the United States are being cheated,” said Senator Kent Conrad , a North Dakota Democrat. Baucus rejected two Republican amendments to limit medical liability suits, saying they didn’t fall under the committee’s jurisdiction. He signaled interest in acting on medical malpractice changes, however, echoing Obama’s Sept. 9 pledge in a speech to Congress that he would explore a way to curb lawsuit-driven medical costs. “We need to act in this area,” Baucus said. He said some surveys indicated that physicians’ use of “defensive medicine,” in which they order costly tests and procedures to avoid a lawsuit for neglecting something, drives up costs by as much as 12 percent. Clash Over Commission The most heated exchange yesterday was prompted by the amendment proposed by Senator John Cornyn , a Texas Republican, to strike the 15-member, independent Medicare Commission created by Baucus’s bill. The commission would recommend ways Congress could reduce excess cost growth in Medicare and improve care. In years when costs were projected to be unsustainable, the body’s proposals would take effect unless Congress passed an alternate measure. “Outcomes, that is the future, Senator Cornyn,” said Rockefeller. “Who is performing and who isn’t. I know the idea is right and I know the idea is the way to improve health-care in this country in a fair way.” Cornyn criticized the commission’s potential reach, yet said it wouldn’t even go into effect for four years. “Rather than making tough decisions about how to pay for new spending now, this proposal would delegate the commission broad spending-reduction powers beginning in 2013,” he said. The Obama administration has been pushing back against Republican claims that Medicare recipients would see their benefits cut. Vice President Joe Biden , trying to shore up support among older Americans for a health-care overhaul, urged them to ignore “distortions” and “misrepresentations” that he said were being spread by opponents. Not Touching Benefits “Nobody is going to mess with your benefits,” Biden told more than 200 people yesterday at a town-hall meeting at a Leisure World retirement facility in suburban Maryland. He said much of the criticism aimed at the Democrats echoes Republican voices that once denounced efforts to create Medicare. Baucus’s plan sidestepped one potential Republican assault, calling for nonprofit cooperatives rather than a federally backed insurance plan to compete against private insurers such as Hartford, Connecticut-based Aetna Inc . The government program, or “public option,” is favored by many Democrats as the best way to tamp down costs. To appease Democrats, Baucus revised his proposal this week, scaling back a tax on high-end insurance plans, a labor union priority. He also expanded government subsidies to help Americans fulfill his proposal’s mandate to buy insurance. To contact the reporters on this story: Nicole Gaouette in Washington at ngaouette@bloomberg.net

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