crisis

Huffington Post…

The hype over losing U.S. jobs to overseas companies has gone the way of so much of the economic and financial rhetoric these days- statistics getting in the way of a good story. Research published by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco shows that, “in 2010, imports were about 16 percent of U.S. GDP. Imports from China amounted to 2.5 percent of GDP.” It also discusses that for personal consumption, about 2.7 percent was from Made in China goods, with more than half of that amount (55 cents on the dollar) going into U.S. services related to that good (such as transportation, retail markup, and marketing). In fact, most of the gains in Chinese consumer goods and services have come at the expense of other foreign countries, not the U.S. This is far from the “China taking over story” that we often hear from everyone in the media to Main Street. The reality is that we are in a period of job transition as much as job loss. Whatever you want to call it — the digital revolution, the information revolution, the technology revolution — is again bringing change to how goods and services are produced and consumed. As first theorized by the famed economist Joseph Schumpeter in Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy , we are in a period of “creative destruction.” This means that innovation creates advancement, but not without the cost of destroying some of the institutions that came before it ( think of what Ford’s assembly line for cars must have done to the workers making accessories for horses ). While new technology advancements have created new platforms, the web and the latest period of technology is still nascent, which means that workers are displaced — as they have been — while these industry shifts take hold. Therefore, in order to secure future prosperity, we have to shift away from focusing on commoditized jobs, especially in areas that are yesterday’s news. When markets shifted away from pay phones to mobile phones, the answer wasn’t to jump up and down and scream for more focus on pay phone plants, was it? No, the answer was to adapt. For the U.S. to continue to prosper, we need to focus on the future. As one of my dear friends likes to say, you can’t drive the car forward looking in the rearview mirror. According to Morgan Housel at The Motley Fool , manufacturing output (inflation adjusted) has increased 75 percent the U.S. steadily since 1979, with the decline in jobs in the sector due to technological efficiencies (i.e. with automation; we don’t need the same number of workers to do the same jobs). As related to overseas manufacturing, that shouldn’t be an area for attention either. We don’t want to concentrate on low value-add production and assembly work, such as is done in China and that, frankly, can be done anywhere. We need to foster real transformation. It is better for our growth to come from leadership in innovation, engineering, patents, marketing and customer relationships, rather than worrying about low-skilled jobs that can be mimicked worldwide at a fraction of the cost. However, there is a process to this. It doesn’t happen overnight and now, we have a skills and education gap to address. Instead of looking backwards to try to reinstate jobs that the market has demonstrated that we do not need, we need to find a mechanism to increase the skills of the displaced workers. I firmly believe that execution is best left to the private sector (anyone would be hard pressed to give many examples of government programs that were efficiently executed). I would suggest that the government do their part through creating an effective structure as a catalyst. The government should put together some policies, such as tax breaks, that would incentivize private companies (especially those sitting on substantial cash reserves right now and in the STEM-Science, Technology, Engineering & Math-industries) to create training-to-employment programs that not only educate out-of-work Americans, but create a direct path to re-employment at a higher skill level. That would create a solution for not only today, but also the strength of our future. Prosperity and continued growth in our nation will not happen by trying to redistribute wealth or reclaim unskilled jobs; we need to adopt a life-long learning mentality and adapt to the changes in front of us as the landscape continues to change. Let’s not move backwards or sideways. It will be uncomfortable through these growing pains, but it’s what’s required for the U.S. to continue to be the greatest country in the world.

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Carol Roth: Don’t Just Focus on Made in America, Focus on Innovated in America

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Huffington Post…

Finally, a presidential candidate came out and honestly addressed the biggest problem in our economy, the enormous debt overhang in our mortgage market. A few days ago, Mitt Romney was at a forum in Florida talking about foreclosures, and his comments were actually refreshingly honest about our housing and banking situation and the need for a debt write-down . We’re just so overleveraged, so much debt in our society, and some of the institutions that hold it aren’t willing to write it off and say they made a mistake, they loaned too much, we’re overextended, write those down and start over. They keep on trying to harangue and pretend what they have on their books is still what it’s worth. Mitt Romney was pointing out that the banks are carrying debt on their books at inflated values. When was the last serious politician to make that point, openly? There’s more. In some cases, if the debt is not in something you can service, it’s like you have to move on and start over away from those debts. It’s helpful if you get an institution that’s willing to work with you, but if you don’t you have no other option. Romney is now saying that if you can’t pay your debts and your lending institution won’t work with you, walk away. Perhaps this isn’t so surprising, though, as Romney is an expert in debt restructuring. This is actually just common business sense. And finally, he offered a real solution to the mortgage debt crisis. The banks are scared to death, of course, because they think they’re going to go out of business… They’re afraid that if they write all these loans off, they’re going to go broke. And so they’re feeling the same thing you’re feeling. They just want to pretend all of this is going to get paid someday so they don’t have to write it off and potentially go out of business themselves.” This is cascading throughout our system and in some respects government is trying to just hold things in place, hoping things get better… My own view is you recognize the distress, you take the loss and let people reset. Let people start over again, let the banks start over again. Those that are prudent will be able to restart, those that aren’t will go out of business. This effort to try and exact the burden of their mistakes on homeowners and commercial property owners, I think, is a mistake. This is the right approach to the problem. If you force the banks to recognize losses on the mortgage debt they are holding, then all of a sudden they will have an incentive to write down debt. Otherwise, a bank will do anything it can to maintain the fiction that the debt is worth 100 cents on the dollar, including lie, harass, and robo-sign. There are ample reasons for cynicism, the cup overfloweth with them, perhaps. Still, what’s shocking about these comments is how casual they are, as if it’s common knowledge that the banking system is still insolvent and that our debt loan cannot be paid back. Among financial elites, it in fact is common knowledge. Tim Geithner noted this when he talked about Lehman Brothers and the “air in marks” on the debt it was holding on its books. And Martin Feldstein on the Republican side and Alan Blinder on the Democratic side are both arguing for debt write-downs. Everyone knows this has to happen, that the accounting manipulation needs to stop. But Mitt Romney actually said it. We’re pretty sure that Romney will walk these comments back if necessary, since he holds positions only insofar as they are convenient. Since at that same forum he called out for praise one of the most bank-friendly state officials in the country, Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, we can probably measure his adherence to this common-sense approach in micro-seconds. But what this episode shows is that the solutions to our crisis are understood. In the book Greedy Bastards , the question of restructuring debt is considered in detail. We need a debt deal, as Romney inadvertently noted. More fundamentally, getting rid of the accounting gamesmanship will lead to a healthier economy because it will align financial assets with real economic assets. As another example, credit default swaps are linking American banks excessively to an unstable Eurozone. Credit default swaps are in fact yet another accounting game designed to further balance sheet fictions. Dick Grasso offered his solution to this obvious problem. We can, according to Grasso, simply declare these contracts online gaming, and void them. What Americans should be taking from this episode is that finance, while complex, is not conceptually hard. If it’s a lie on the balance sheet, it’s going to be destructive to ordinary people. If you stop the balance sheet lying, the economy will do better. But while Mitt Romney might have said this out loud, they all know it behind closed doors. Our question is, who will be the first to make this a policy reality?

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Eliot Spitzer: Mitt Romney’s State of the Union Challenge on the Mortgage Crisis

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Vladimir Putin’s Russia Gets A Warning

January 16, 2012

MOSCOW — The Fitch rating agency on Monday downgraded the outlook on Russia’s debt, citing political uncertainty. Fitch said in a statement Monday it had changed its outlook from positive to stable, meaning it was less likely to upgrade the country, which has been relatively unaffected by the European debt crisis and recently enjoyed profits from rising oil prices. The rating agency cited the potential impact of weakening global growth and domestic political uncertainty as key reasons for the move. Allegations for fraud surrounding recent parliamentary elections sparked popular protests across the country, including rallies of tens of thousands of people in Moscow that were the largest protests of Russia’s post-Soviet era. The agency said that, although there is little doubt Prime Minister Vladimir Putin would win March’s presidential election, it is unclear how he would respond to the protests. Fitch said recent events “highlighted the limitations and risks associated with Russia’s political model.” Russia’s gross domestic product rose by 4.2 percent last year and the country has been running budget surpluses for the past several years. But the country is likely to face growing budget deficits in the coming years after Putin has pledged hikes in military and social spending which analysts say could hurt the economy.

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Merkel: Mass Eurozone Downgrade Highlights Need For Strong ‘Fiscal Compact’

January 15, 2012

* Leaders see downgrades as wake-up call * Italy seen as problem child number one * Merkel says decision should not impede EFSF * S&P says France could fall further, no euro break-up By Robin Emmott and Brian Rohan BRUSSELS/BERLIN, Jan 14 (Reuters) – European leaders promised on Saturday to speed up plans to strengthen spending rules and get a permanent bailout fund up and running as soon as possible, a day after U.S. agency S&P cut the ratings of several euro zone countries’ creditworthiness. In a conference call with reporters and analysts after downgrading nine of the euro zone’s 17 countries, Standard & Poor’s said it saw continued risks from the debt crisis that has overshadowed Europe for the past two years and said the single currency area was heading towards recession. It also warned that France, which suffered a downgrade to AA+ from the top-notch AAA, was at risk of further cuts if a recession further inflates its debt and budget deficit. “The policy response at the European level has in our view not kept up with the rising challenges in the euro zone,” S&P credit analyst Moritz Kraemer said on the call, forecasting a 40 percent chance of euro zone gross domestic product contracting by up to 1.5 percent in 2012. The downgrades were delivered hours after talks between private bond holders and the Greek government aimed at restructing Greece’s vast debts broke down, pushing Athens closer to default, an event that would tarnish euro zone unity and pose a contagion threat which could engulf the bloc. In Germany – whose top AAA rating survived unscathed – Chancellor Angela Merkel said the downgrades underlined why a so-called ‘fiscal compact’ must be signed by member states quickly, and the next bailout mechanism, known as the ESM, should be funded soon. “We are now challenged to implement the fiscal compact even quicker … and to do it resolutely, not to try to soften it,” she said at a meeting of her conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) in the northern city of Kiel. “We will also work particularly to implement the permanent stability mechanism, the ESM, so soon as possible — this is important regarding investor trust,” she added. European Central Bank policymaker Joerg Asmussen warned that Europe’s drive to tighten fiscal rules was being softened, considering the latest draft of the agreement a “substantial watering down” of budgetary discipline because it would allow extra spending in extraordinary circumstances, the Financial Times Deutschland reported. Leaders including Merkel have urged countries to tighten their belts with higher taxes and deep spending cuts to rein in massive budget deficits. But that has heightened market concern about their ability to grow their way back to health, pushing borrowing costs even higher for heavily indebted governments. S&P said it was not working on the assumption of a euro zone break up, although it blamed its leaders for focusing too much on cutting debts and not sufficiently on competititveness. “We think that the diagnosis of policymakers regarding the crisis is only partially recognising the origin of the crisis,” said Kraemer, mentioning the focus on budget austerity. “The proper diagnosis would have to give more weight to the rising imbalances in the euro zone in terms of the external funding positions, current account positions, much of it is based in diverging trends of competitiveness,” he said. WAKE-UP CALL Austria, which was downgraded one notch from AAA, called S&P’s decision a wake-up call for the country to cut debt and deficits, and for Europe to move more quickly on reforms. “The downgrade is bad news for Austria but it should wake everyone up when such a thing happens,” Finance Minister Maria Fekter said. “Now everyone recognises that this … is a matter of debt and deficits, not primarily of the economy.” The ratings decision hit some countries harder than others, with France, Austria, Malta, Slovakia and Slovenia suffering single-notch downgrades, but Italy, Portugal, Spain and Cyprus falling two notches. Portugal’s debt is now rated junk. ECB policymaker Ewald Nowotny, an Austrian, said Italy in particular would now face problems given large refinancing needs this year in that country and its banks. Asked in an interview broadcast by Austrian radio if Italy – now rated at the same BBB+ level as Kazakhstan – was “problem child number one”, Nowotny agreed. “In a certain sense, yes, because we know this year Italy has a very significant refinancing need. Italian banks also need refinancing,” he said. “In normal times this is all possible, in very nervous and difficult times it can be a problem and in my view this sharp downgrade of Italy is probably one of the most difficult and problematic aspects of this sweeping blow from the ratings agency.” NO TORPEDO Long-standing frustration with ratings agencies echoed across Europe after the S&P decision. While Germany and France downplayed the decision and called it expected, Spain’s finance minister was more alarmed. “The downgrade is far too broad, it effects too many countries, it effects the very credibility of the euro,” Treasury Minister Cristobal Montoro said on the radio. “It’s important that the European institutions understand that it’s time to do everything possible to build and reinforce the euro,” said Montoro, whose highly indebted country has the highest unemployment level in the euro zone. Meanwhile, in a move to circumvent their influence, Germany’s Merkel backed a proposal to reduce the reliance of institutional investors on ratings agencies, which some of her allies say are politically driven. The idea would be to introduce legislation to allow institutional investors to evaluate risk themselves and make decisions independent from the U.S.-based agencies. “I think it is very useful to look at this and see where if necessary we can make changes to legislation,” Merkel said at her party meeting. European leaders are set to meet at a summit on Jan. 30 to discuss how to boost growth and jobs, and Merkel’s words on Saturday suggest she will also be looking for faster progress on tighter common fiscal rules. But now, policymakers at the meeting may have bigger fish to fry. The downgrades threaten the top rating of Europe’s current bailout fund — the European Financial Stability Facility — as contributors France and Austria are no longer rated AAA. A downgrade of the EFSF could increase its borrowing costs, reducing its ability to protect the currency bloc’s weaker members. S&P said it would deliver its view on the impact to the EFSF from the sovereign downgrades “shortly”.

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Alan Krueger: Rising Income Inequality Causing ‘Unhealthy Division In Opportunities’

January 12, 2012

The wealth gap in the U.S. has gotten to such a high level that maintaining it without hurting the economy is unsustainable, according to Alan Krueger, the chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers. “The rise in inequality in the United States over the last three decades has reached the point that inequality in incomes is causing an unhealthy division in opportunities,” Krueger said during a speech at the Center for American Progress , a left-leaning think tank. “And is a threat to our economic growth.” Krueger’s assertion is backed by numerous reports. The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report found that income inequality is a threat to economies worldwide. A recent IMF report also indicates that widening income inequality is bad for economic growth. The rising gap between the rich and the poor has become a large part of the public discourse in recent months thanks in large part to the Occupy Wall Street movement . The top one percent of Americans saw their incomes grow by 275 percent between 1979 an 2009 , according to the Congressional Budget Office. At the same time, the bottom one-fifth of earners only experienced income growth of 20 percent. The comments may come as no surprise from Krueger, a labor economist whose research has often dovetailed with other progressive perspectives. He famously co-authored a paper in 1992 arguing that that a boost in the minimum wage doesn’t always increase unemployment, pushing against the beliefs of many mainstream economists. Krueger noted in his speech that between 1979 and 2009, the percentage of income that went to the top 1 percent is bigger than the total income of the bottom 40 percent of earners. His claims mirror other reports. The richest 400 Americans, according to Forbes, have a combined net worth that is more than that of the bottom 60 percent of Americans . In addition, the six heirs to the Walmart fortune had the same net worth in 2007 as the bottom 30 percent of earners. This marked boost in income inequality has had dire effects on the nation’s middle class, Krueger noted. Middle-class households would have an extra $8,900 to spend if the median household income had grown during the 2000s at the same rate it did in the 1990s, he said in his speech.

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European Retail Feeling The Pain Of Austerity Measures

January 6, 2012

BRUSSELS — Retails sales in the 17-nation eurozone dropped in November, official statistics showed Friday, as consumers felt the bite of austerity measures and feared the currency union could slip deeper into crisis. Retail sales in the eurozone fell 0.8 percent compared with October and were down 2.5 percent from November 2010, according to Eurostat, the EU’s statistics agency. The steepest declines were seen in Portugal, which had to be bailed out in April and where sales fell 2.6 percent during the month and were down a massive 9.2 percent from a year earlier. But even in richer states like Germany and the Netherlands, consumers were more reluctant to part with their money, with retail sales slipping 0.9 percent in both countries during November. That shows how the eurozone’s worsening debt crisis is taking its toll even on countries with strong economies. For the whole European Union, which includes non-euro members like the U.K. and Sweden, November retail sales dropped 0.6 percent from October and 1.3 percent compared with a year earlier. Consumers appear worried by high unemployment, which remained stuck at 10.3 percent in November – unchanged from October but above the 10 percent seen a year earlier – and a darkening outlook on the economy. The weak data also underlines how many people found themselves in a worse position at the end of 2011 than at the end of 2010 – when there were hopes that the continent was turning a corner after two difficult years brought on by the collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008. Spain’s unemployment rate was highest at 22.9 percent, up from 20.4 percent a year earlier. That’s more than four times as high as in Austria, where only 4 percent of people were looking for work. For the whole EU, the unemployment rate remained at 9.8 percent. The dark mood is set to continue in the eurozone, with a Eurostat economic sentiment indicator falling 0.5 of a point to 93.3 in December, far below the long-term average of 100. Italy and Spain, the eurozone’s third and forth largest economies which have been pulled into the eye of the crisis in recent months, grew especially pessimistic about the economy. Economic sentiment fell 4.6 points in Italy and 1.3 points in Spain. In the 27 EU countries, economic sentiment was down 0.8 point at 92.

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Why Renting Is Better Than Owning, Bernanke’s Take

January 5, 2012

While millions of foreclosed homes languish on the market at lower and lower prices, new data supports the idea that renting out these foreclosed homes could be the long-sought solution to the housing crisis. Rental units are leasing quickly, and the vacancy rate for apartments is at its lowest level in a decade, according to data released Thursday . In many areas, rents are rising. On Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke got on board, penning a 26-page white paper , arguing that now is an unusually good time to convert foreclosed properties to rental units for three reasons: demand for owner-occupied homes remains low, demand for rental properties is rising, and the problem of banks’ continued hesitance to offer mortgages to everyday Americans means that the situation won’t change anytime soon. The federal government’s recognition of the value of renting foreclosed homes is not entirely new. In August 2011, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the government body that oversees troubled mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, requested proposals on how to implement such a program. The agency received over 4,000 responses, and is currently sorting through them as it considers how best to handle Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s foreclosed properties. The two mortgage companies collectively own roughly half of the nation’s foreclosed homes. However, the just-released white paper expands the conversation by identifying obstacles to transitioning foreclosed homes to rental units, challenges that some housing practitioners say are easily surmountable if there is the political will and financial incentive to fix them. According to the researchers, although small investors are buying and renting foreclosed homes, larger investors capable of scaling up such a model have not entered the market because it’s hard for an investor to collect enough homes in a single geography. “That’s a small problem,” said Laurie Hawkes, president of American Residential Properties, an Arizona-based firm that has bought, and then rented, over 500 foreclosed properties in the Southwest, and is nearing completion on a $100 million deal to acquire an additional 800 homes. “Most of the big players have so many foreclosed homes on their books that that’s the least of their problems.” The larger issue, according to Hawkes, is the lack of financing available for the transactions. “The government has been offering attractive financing for years to developers of multi-family rental units. There needs to be a comparable program for single-family rentals, something straightforward that is cheaper than the equity financing investors will otherwise have to look for. That’s how you lower the costs of doing this work.” Bernanke’s paper did acknowledge the need for funding for a rental program, but left vague how the financing would work or who would provide it. He instead cautioned that any subsidies could increase the cost of such a program. Another obstacle identified by the Federal Reserve is the fact that the companies that own the foreclosed properties — Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, various banks — don’t want to sell the homes with the level of discount required to attract investors. Dean Baker, an economist and one of the earliest proponents of the rental model, disagrees. “If they’re measuring the cost of selling at a discount versus at the face value of the mortgage, it’s a moot point because we’re in a depressed market,” Baker said. “It’s difficult to find a buyer for an owner-occupied home anytime soon, so why not provide a discount on rental sales?” Housing practitioners are also frustrated that the Fed report places relatively little emphasis on the idea of renting the home back to the previous homeowner. “Overall, the paper focuses on vacant properties where someone with no emotional tie to the property is invited in to rent it,” said Jorge Newberry, director of American Homeowner Preservation, a company that has purchased, and subsequently rented, more than 400 foreclosed properties nationwide. “If you can rent to the former owner, and give them the chance to buy back the home at some later date, then you’re going to have an ally in caring for the property. Their interests as the potential owner, and your interests as the investor, are aligned so you end up with a much more efficient system.” Hawkes agrees that the report overlooked a key opportunity in the rental market — short sales where a borrower sells the home, in this case to an investor, for less than the amount outstanding on the mortgage. “Right now, if you wait until foreclosure, that borrower has been bounced from their home, and it’s incredibly disruptive,” she said. “With a short sale you eliminate the stigma of the financial hardship for the borrower. As an investor, I’d pay more to get that home as a short sale.”

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Regulators Have Missed Three-Fourths Of Dodd-Frank Deadlines So Far

January 4, 2012

When the Dodd-Frank financial reform law became official in 2010, supporters hoped it would herald in a new era of sobriety and transparency for the financial sector — largely through the implementation of hundreds of rules meant to prevent another crisis like the one that rattled the economy in 2008. But for the most part, this has yet to come to pass. Only one-quarter of the rules that regulators were supposed to have written by now have actually been devised. As of New Year’s Day, two hundred deadlines for writing rules based on Dodd-Frank have come and gone, according to a report from the law firm Davis Polk . Regulators have missed 149 of these, meaning they’ve only met about one out of every four deadlines so far. All told, the Dodd-Frank law contains 400 rule-making requirements. Only 286 have time-specific deadlines, meaning that most of those have already passed. The Davis Polk report provides evidence for a common criticism among financial reform advocates — namely, that the government, many of whose members have close ties to the banking sector is dragging its feet on formulating rules that would place checks on financial institutions and force them to adopt safer positions in case of another systemic shock. Financial lobbyists have come out strongly against Dodd-Frank, as have a number of conservative politicians, including virtually all of the Republican presidential candidates . On Wall Street, where profits fell by about $3 billion in the third quarter of 2011, opponents of Dodd-Frank say the planned regulations will further stifle firms’ performance. On the campaign trail, a common refrain for Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich and other candidates has been that the rules outlined in Dodd-Frank will discourage lending, smother small businesses and worsen the nation’s unemployment problem. The Hill notes that such strenuous political opposition to Dodd-Frank has probably contributed to the lag in regulators writing rules. Regulatory agencies like the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which has missed 31 deadlines out of 54 so far, and the Securities and Exchange Commission, which has missed 59 deadlines of 73, have not gotten the budgets from Congress that the White House has requested for them, largely due to opposition from some lawmakers. In November, Congress approved a budget for the CFTC that was about $100 million less than what President Obama had sought.

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Major Insurer’s Lawsuit Against Bank Of America Gets Easier

January 3, 2012

The bad news continues to pile up for Bank of America, with a New York state court issuing a ruling Tuesday that will make it easier for a major bond insurer to proceed with its closely-watched fraud lawsuit against the bank , according to Bloomberg. The ruling lessens the burden of proof on MBIA, a large and troubled insurer that is seeking damages against Bank of America. Like many mortgage-bond insurers, MBIA took a big hit during the implosion of the real estate bubble, when cascading defaults caused the entire market to collapse. Mortgage lenders like BofA have been the target of much ire in the years since, with critics alleging that their aggressive circulation of subprime loans was one of the biggest factors contributing to the financial crisis. In its $1.4 billion lawsuit against Bank of America, MBIA is trying to win back losses it suffered after guaranteeing bonds backed by mortgages from Countrywide Financial — a firm that was later bought by Bank of America. MBIA says that Countrywide understood the loans backing those bonds — some 368,000 loans in all — to be riskier than it let on at the time. Tuesday’s ruling made MBIA’s path to recouping its losses a little bit easier. In the ruling, New York state judge Eileen Bransten said that MBIA only needs to prove that Countrywide misrepresented the quality of its loans, Bloomberg reports. MBIA does not have to prove that the misrepresentations caused it to incur losses, the court said. The court’s decision is seen as a significant victory for MBIA, whose stock price bounced on Wednesday to end the day with 8.1 percent gains , and a setback for Bank of America, which seems to be having nothing but trouble lately. In November, in an unrelated case, a court imposed a $410 billion settlement on Bank of America as a result of a class-action lawsuit related to overdraft fees. And two weeks ago, BofA reached a $335 million settlement to resolve accusations that Countrywide engaged in discriminatory practices toward black and Hispanic customers during the height of the real estate bubble. Bank of America struggled throughout 2011, ending the year as the worst-performing stock on the Standard & Poor’s 500 . Along the way, the bank lost its ranking as largest in the country and suffered the public relations disaster of a debit fee debacle , along with many allegedly improper foreclosures .

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Major Fishing Cuts To Protect Dwindling Cod Could Ruin Fishermen

January 1, 2012

BOSTON (AP) — In an industry where agreement comes slowly, the sudden prospect of huge fishing cuts to protect New England’s codfish inspired a quick consensus: Scores of fishermen will be ruined if those cuts are passed. But it’s not clear how or if that pain can be avoided, weeks after new scientific numbers indicated cod in the Gulf of Maine is much weaker than thought. “We really haven’t heard of something that works right now,” said Gib Brogan, of the environmental group Oceana. Fishery science and law present major obstacles to preserving both cod and fishermen. The law requires scientists to set a limit on how hard fishermen can fish for any species. If they exceed it, they’re illegally overfishing and regulators are charged with “immediately” stopping it. That means, given the grim new estimate of cod’s health, fishermen would have to accept a debilitating cut of about 90 percent in their cod catch next year, and there’s little wiggle room to avoid it. Meanwhile, the new data — though attacked from the outset by skeptical fishermen — has survived an initial review, and scientists say it likely won’t change much. Several lawmakers, starting with U.S. Sen. John Kerry, are now asking the U.S. Commerce Secretary to order a new assessment of the cod’s health in hopes of getting better data, but prospects are uncertain. Still, there’s optimism a solution can be found, if only because the alternative is devastating cuts that could sweep away remaining fishermen from Provincetown to northern Maine. “I’m not a betting man, but I’m optimistic to a fault,” said fisheries scientist Steve Cadrin, who works at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth. He added, “Someone up high (in government) is going to have to make a bold move to allow a common-sense solution.” For centuries, Gulf of Maine cod has been the key species for small-boat fishermen on day trips from northern New England ports, including historic Gloucester. In 2010, cod brought in $15.8 million, second-most among the valuable bottom-dwelling groundfish species fishermen have long chased, such as flounder and haddock. Cod’s future looked great in 2008, when a major assessment indicated the Gulf of Maine species was headed for full recovery. But the new data, released this fall, said cod was actually so badly overfished that even if fishermen completely stop catching it, it can’t recover to a federally mandated level of abundance by a 2014 deadline. The new numbers are still being verified. If they hold up, onerous cutbacks on the cod catch are certain, and that would also mean tight limits on many other valuable groundfish off New England, to protect the cod that swim among them. But cod aren’t scarce and anyone who fishes the Gulf of Maine knows it, New Hampshire fishermen David Goethel said. He said the gap between the new estimate and reality demands a complete reworking of the new cod assessment, just as lawmakers have requested. That includes rethinking the numerous assumptions that go into the various population models, including such complexities as how well the federal boat that catches fish population samples scoops up older cod. “We need a do-over,” Goethel said. Absent new science that leads to a drastically different outlook for cod, another hope is that regulators will interpret fishery law differently than they ever have. Right now, fishermen are boxed in by the requirement to stay under that maximum rate at which they can catch codfish without overfishing it. In essence, the rate allows fishermen to haul home a safe fraction of a species. But in the case of Gulf of Maine cod, the new stock estimate is so low that that fraction shrinks to a pittance the fishing industry can’t survive on. And since the rate is determined by such basic biological factors as a species’ growth, reproductive and natural death rates, political pressure can’t do much to budge it. But Cadrin sees one possibility for fishermen to get some help. He hopes for new flexibility in how regulators react after they determine there’s overfishing on cod. He said that regulators have traditionally acted as if the law requires them to “immediately” stop overfishing on any species, but the actual law doesn’t require that — the word “immediately” is contained in a guideline to the law. Cadrin said if fishery managers want to be bold, they could give fishermen a short amount of time to stop overfishing, rather than “immediately” enforcing lethal restrictions when the new fishing year starts in May. More time would mean less severe cuts now, and a chance for more fishermen to survive. There is some sign from the top levels of U.S. fishery management that regulators are ready to do something different about codfish, even if they don’t know what. At a quickly called meeting last month to deal with the cod crisis, Eric Schwaab, the head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries Service spoke of undiscovered solutions outside the traditional channels of government bureaucracy. The situation is so serious, Schwaab said, “those kind of extraordinary options ought to be on the table.”

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Mohamed A. El-Erian: A Make or Break Year?

January 1, 2012

Lots of things are coming together to give 2012 the feel of a make or break year — a year that could well determine whether the world transitions to a better and more stable place or, instead, battles an even larger number of economic, political and social fires. The drivers in four key geographical areas will be heavily influenced by the interaction of political leadership, the strength and agility of institutions, and the newly empowered segments of society. First, there is the US where, to state the obvious, the results of the November elections will meaningfully impact the path taken by the largest economy in the world, and its only superpower. This is an election about the economy 00 past, present and future. In the next few months, we will all be bombarded by various explanations of why America lacks its traditional growth dynamism, why so many people remain un- and underemployed, and why poverty is rising to such unacceptable levels. Influenced by movements on both the left and right that are able to effectively self organize and project near and far, our votes will send important signals on what is needed to overcome our economic malaise. I suspect that, collectively, we will opt for compromise rather than corner solutions. We will challenge Washington to strike the right balance between tax and spending reforms, immediate stimulus and medium-term debt and deficit solutions, incentives for businesses and safety nets for the vulnerable segments of our population, etc. In the process, we will urge our politicians to shed legacy shackles in order to come together for the good of the nation. None of this will materialize without effective leadership. Our leaders need to quickly unite on a common vision, distill common purpose, catalyze multi-year nationwide efforts, and embrace midcourse corrections as needed (and there will be quite a few given how many unthinkables are now realities in America and in societies that we interact with closely). Europe, the second key area, no longer has room for compromise. Its “moment of truth” is in 2012 when critical decisions — taken either actively or passively — will determine whether the Eurozone breaks up or, to use the words of French President Sarkozy, is “re-founded” with a firmer foundation. Again, the interaction between popular movements, institutions, and leadership will be key. Many more people in many more European countries will be taking to the street. They will be united by a simple demand — to end the economic and financial turmoil that is killing jobs. Europe cannot afford more political bickering, misdiagnosis, and incomplete solutions. Its leaders and institutions need to urgently pivot, abandoning active inertia that has been anchored for too long by the delusion of returning to a status quo ante that, in reality, is no longer feasible. There is no going back to the old Eurozone of 17 countries. It is either fragmentation or a smaller and less imperfect union of countries with similar conditions. This brings us to the third area where, also, there is no going back to the old — the growing number of countries where dissatisfied citizens only have the streets, as opposed to also fair and free elections, to change their governments. Such popular movements are no longer limited to the Arab world. They will pop up in many other countries. The required pivots here are much harder and more complex. Most uprisings are led by leaderless grass root movements, enabled by social media and fueled by multiyear grievances. Rulers still hanging on to power often opt for fear tactics to divide citizens, thus repressing the forces of orderly change and experimentation that are an inevitable part of the political maturation process. And existing institutions are not much help, having been corrupted over many years to serve now-discredited elites rather than the newly empowered masses. So, where does all this leave us? America should be able to come together, recognize its structural challenges, and unite on multi-year efforts needed to promote economic growth, create jobs, and restore the sense that the system is fair. Europe should be able to redefine its regional underpinnings and, after the inevitable initial disruptions, regain the financial stability that underpins economic and social well-being. Newly transitioning countries should be able to pivot, albeit noisily and imperfectly, from dismantling the past to building a better future. Regrettably, in today’s world, what SHOULD happen does not easily translate into what is LIKELY to happen. Reality is far trickier, messier and, well, more uncertain. Uncertainty is the defining characteristic of the fourth and final area where it is even harder to reconcile the should and likely. I am referring here to countries that are under enormous pressure and, to use Thomas Friedman’s insightful analogy, can explode rather than implode when critically destabilized. Countries like Iran, North Korea, and Syria face a mix of destabilizing influences that could well come to a boil in 2012. Containment forces will compete with those fueling accelerated change. And here, neither institutions nor leaders and popular movements can be credible and effective stabilizers. By all counts, 2012 is shaping up to be a memorable year. In some areas, the potential clearly exists for societies to seize opportunities for change and transition to a better place. In others, stability can only follow a period of even greater uncertainty and risks. This balance is not pre-determined. Much will depend on decisions to be made, and actions to be taken. Let us all hope that they end up tipping the balance favorably. There is a lot at stake.

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U.S. Companies Finding Opportunity In Europe’s Woes

December 26, 2011

As Europe struggles with its debt crisis, American businesses and financial firms are swooping in amid the distress, making loans and snapping up assets owned by banks there — from the mortgage on a luxury hotel in Miami Beach to the tallest office building in Dublin.

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Analysis: Region Formerly Gorged On Debt Adjusting To Great Stagnation

December 22, 2011

LONDON (Reuters) – With governments laboring under too much debt and banks hobbled by too little capital, 2012 is shaping up as another year of hard slog for Europe’s economy that could yet test the single currency to destruction. The Netherlands on Thursday became the latest country to report that output shrank in the third quarter, lending credibility to forecasts that the broader euro zone will soon be in recession if it is not already. A generation that gorged on debt is now adjusting to what some are calling the Great Stagnation. Talk of a lost decade, like Japan in the 1990s, no longer seems outlandish. So far so familiar. What worries economists is that the longer the deleveraging of government and bank and household balance sheets drags on, the greater the risk of market or policy accidents. If the economy is already at stall speed, an unexpected shock could send it into a deep dive. In an age of globally integrated supply chains and capital markets, the impact on the rest of the world could be severe. “Entering 2012, we are facing uncertainty on the grandest of scales,” HSBC economists led by Stephen King said in their latest quarterly report. The good news was that euro zone policymakers recognized that a break-up of the 17-member bloc could spark another great depression. But, despite signs of greater urgency, investors for the most part remained unconvinced that a strategy was in place to ease the debt burdens straining the single currency. “This loss of faith is reminiscent of the collapse in confidence in 2008, when the wheels came off the global economy. Back then, forecasters completely failed to grasp the gravity of the situation. The same may be true today,” HSBC said. TALL ORDER As the world economy slumped after the collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008, governments had room for maneuver. Today, with fiscal austerity in fashion and interest rates near zero across the developed world, firepower is limited. “Indeed, with the risk of recession on the rise, debt dynamics are in danger of spinning out of control,” HSBC said. The European Central Bank acted decisively on Wednesday to limit the immediate danger by lending banks a whopping 489 billion euros in cheap three-year loans. The cash injection will reduce the risk of a credit crunch and fire sales of assets by banks shut out of the wholesale funding markets. But the ECB is at best buying time to help weaker euro zone members put their finances back in order and recoup competitiveness lost as a result of having weaker productivity and higher labor costs than core countries led by Germany. It is the sheer magnitude of this task that is unnerving markets. Take Greece, which is racing to thrash out sweeping pro-growth structural reforms demanded by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to unlock a 130 billion euro loan needed to stave off default. “This is a process, as we’ve seen in IMF program countries, that takes well over 10 years and that’s as long as Greece will need with the help of financial support and technical assistance missions from the EU and the IMF,” said Antonio Garcia Pascual, an economist at Barclays Capital in London. Yet Greece is already in the fourth year of a deep recession. And even if the EU-IMF program succeeds, its debt in 2020 would still be a suffocating 120 percent of GDP. How long will voters endure austerity imposed from abroad and, at the same time, go along with sweeping changes to everything from pensions to labor laws and the prizing open of long-protected professions and industries? “Structural reform is essentially about a society changing its way of life,” a senior European central banker said. “It’s not obvious that creating extra liquidity can make those fundamental reforms easier.” QUESTION OF BALANCE New modeling by Goldman Sachs dramatizes the challenge facing countries on the periphery of the euro zone. In order to stabilize the net debt of the entire economy these countries need a sizeable adjustment in their current account deficits. This in turn points to the need for a depreciation in the real, or inflation-adjusted, exchange rate of as much as 44 percent in Portugal, 35 percent in Greece and Spain and 20 percent in Italy, Goldman estimates. That means prices would need to rise less, or even decline, relative to the euro zone average for about 15 years in the case of Greece and Spain and almost 20 years in Portugal, requiring savage wage cuts in the process. This required correction immediately throws up another huge problem: if the periphery is holding inflation down to zero to cut costs, core countries will have to tolerate prices rising above 3 percent if the ECB is to keep euro area average inflation on target at no more than 2 percent. “This might be problematic for the ECB as certain core countries (such as Germany) could potentially have difficulties accepting such higher inflation for a prolonged period of time,” wrote Goldman economist Lasse Holboell W. Nielsen. GLOBAL DEBT MESS The euro zone is not alone in its struggles to manage excessive debt. Japan’s gross public debt has soared to more than 200 percent of GDP. The deterioration has not prevented the government from selling its bonds at low and stable yields, but a new IMF working paper warns that over the medium term, the market’s capacity to absorb new debt is likely to diminish as the population ages and appetite for riskier assets recovers. The result could be a worsening of Japan’s debt dynamics that poses a threat to financial stability. “Without a significant policy adjustment, the stock of gross public debt could exceed household financial assets in around 10 years, at which point domestic financing may become more difficult,” IMF economists Waikei Raphael Lam and Kiichi Tokuoka wrote. And in the United States, alongside what most economists see as an unsustainable public-sector debt trajectory, families still have too much debt accumulated in the go-go years before the great financial crisis. Household debt as a percentage of disposable income peaked in mid-2007 at 135 percent of GDP. It has since declined to around 120 percent but remains more than 20 percentage points above its 30-year average, according to Nathan Sheets, global head of international economics at Citi in New York. He said it was reasonable to assume deleveraging would continue at the same steady rate – which would prolong the process into the second half of this decade – but the pace could quicken markedly in the event of a collapse of asset prices, a sharp drop in disposable income or a renewed tightening of financial conditions. Which brings us back to the mountain the euro zone still has to climb in 2012. “Given the ongoing stresses in Europe, such risks are not just abstract possibilities but rather all-too-plausible outcomes that need to be carefully considered, with an eye to reducing potential vulnerabilities,” Sheets said in a report. (Editing by Mike Peacock) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Jeff Madrick: The 10 Worst Economic Ideas of 2011

December 22, 2011

Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 . I was at an Occupy Wall Street demonstration this weekend and many clergy addressed the group. One nun told the crowd it was Christmas season and that it was time for something new to be born in America. It was a nice thought, and I hope that the “something new” is good sense, because it has been a year in which some of the worst economic ideas ever have gained support and are being applied around the world. So here’s my list of the 10 worst economic ideas of 2011: 1. Taxes should be more regressive. At the top of the list for sheer scandalous insensitivity are Herman Cain’s and New Gingrich’s tax plans for America. Cain and Gingrich are both flat tax advocates. Cain proposes “9-9-9″ — a 9 percent sales tax, 9 percent income tax, and 9 percent corporate tax. He would also eliminate most deductions. Would this raise more or less money? The romantic conservatives claim the lower income tax rate would mean more growth. Never mind that the evidence to support that claim has been found profoundly lacking time and again. What is eyebrow-raising is how regressive the Cain tax would be. According to the Tax Policy Center , those who make more than $1 million would get a tax cut of about $455,000 on average. Those who make between $40,000 and $50,000 would get a tax increase of about $4,400. The tax rate would be 23.8 percent for this group, compared to 17.9 percent for those who make $1 million or more. Cain’s plan might take in as much money as is now taken in by the federal government. But Gingrich’s plan wins the gold medal: his plan is both regressive and a gigantic revenue loser . His flat tax is 15 percent on incomes, with plenty of deductions like the one for mortgage interest still intact. He would eliminate taxes on capital gains and dividends. Those who earn more than $1 million would make out like bandits, saving an average of more than $600,000 a year, while those earning $50,000 a year would save about $1,000. Meanwhile, the government would forego about $1 trillion in annual revenues by 2015. 2. Austerity works. Is it conceivable that we have learned nothing from history — or from economic theory, for that matter? It is hard to believe that after a year or so of the momentary return of Keynesianism in the wake of the deep recession of 2007-2009, it has been utterly renounced in practice in most rich nations around the world. The U.S. refuses to adopt a new fiscal stimulus as fears of a long-term deficit now determine short-term policy. The eurozone’s decision makers are even more obtuse and dangerous . Germany is leading the pack by imposing harsh limits on deficits as a percent of GDP on member states, which is sure to lead to slow growth and probably growing deficits. In the near term, the refusal to restructure the debt of the southern periphery along with demands for harsh austerity there could lead to a break-up of the eurozone and general catastrophe. The conventional wisdom, however wrong-headed, is widely accepted in the media. Britain is imposing austerity and its economy only gets weaker, yet a recent Financial Times article gives the country points for economic enlightenment compared to France because it is more willing to punish itself. John Banville, the estimable Irish novelist, writes in The New York Times that Ireland is now considered the “good boy” of Europe because of its intense austerity program. I am not sure he was being ironic. In fact, despite a couple of spikes in GDP, austerity is failing there as well. GDP and GNP (which is relevant because so much of their income is export-dependent) are way below their highs of a couple of years ago in Ireland. IMF economists have recently produced solid research putting the lie to claims that austerity has led to rapid growth in some countries in the past. It almost never has, and in the couple of cases it has, it was because the countries devalued their currencies sharply to promote exports. Of course, there will be no devaluations in the eurozone. 3. Export growth models are sustainable. Germany is especially proud that it has exported its way to becoming the strong man of Europe. It has suppressed wage growth , used subsidies to make its products more competitive, and taken advantage of the fixed euro , set at too low a rate to maintain trade balances. It is determined to remain oblivious to the fact that such a model requires countries that buy its products to run deficits and therefore borrow lots of money. This is why export models are known as beggar-thy-neighbor models, and it is why Germany has a moral obligation to help bail out nations like Greece, Italy, and Spain. Export models are really debt models on a global scale. China also runs on an export model, and the U.S. borrows relentlessly from it. But China occasionally seems to recognize that this model may not be sustainable and is trying to raise wages and reduce imbalances some. More to the point, unlike Germany, it is now prepared to increase fiscal stimulus. This doesn’t mean China gets an A for policy — more like a C. But Germany gets an F, and its low-wage export model cannot be adopted by all of Europe. Someone has to be able to afford to buy something. 4. Fannie and Freddie did it. A lawsuit by the Securities and Exchange Commission has revived the argument that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were the causes of the housing collapse and the financial crisis. The SEC is suing high-level executives for failing to disclose that they had more sub-prime loans than they admitted. In fact, by the actual definition for subprimes that was commonly used, they probably did make these disclosures. But they also piled on risky mortgages in 2006 and 2007, not to meet affordable lending goals as some claim, but to make a profit. Frank Partnoy and I have written about this in the New York Review of Books. The problem was not Fannie and Freddie. The crisis was created by the highly risky mortgages bought and sold by the private sector between 2003 and 2006, when Fannie and Freddie were cutting back their activities. They became big buyers when the damage was already done. And even now, their mortgage defaults as a percentage of their portfolios, despite the devastation in the housing market, are much lower than defaults in the private sector. Those who want to blame the government for the crisis keep coming back to this stale and very misleading issue. Get over it. And as for the SEC, can it be that the only case they can drum up against high-level executives is at Fannie and Freddie? You mean there were no bad big-time execs at Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Lehman, Goldman, and so on? 5. Cutting Social Security benefits is a priority. We have a very long-term deficit problem, not a short-term one. Social Security did not contribute to the short-term deficit — the Bush tax cuts, the recession, and the slow recovery are the main culprits over the next 10 years. But even in the longer run, Social Security benefits will rise from a little under 5 percent of GDP to 6 percent of GDP. Cutting these benefits is not a priority and any deficit can be fixed with affordable tax increases. So why is everyone focusing on Social Security? Because it is the low-hanging fruit. The really big problems, like Medicare and Medicaid, are driven by a dysfunctional healthcare system, and that is too hard to fix. It is a little like Reagan invading Grenada and calling it a great American victory. 6. Inflation is just around the corner. Remember the claims by the right wing that all that Federal Reserve stimulus in 2008 and 2009, not to mention the Obama spending bill, would lead to big-time inflation? Nothing would be better than a little inflation in the U.S. right now, but the economy has been too weak to deliver it. Bring on some inflation, please. 7. The Medicare eligibility age should be raised. Reports had it that President Obama had momentarily agreed to raise the Medicare eligibility age from 65 to 67. Indeed, a New York Times editorial recently seemed (a little less than wholeheartedly) to endorse the idea . Yes, this might reduce Medicare expenditures, but it would raise the total amount Americans spend on health care. In fact, the Kaiser Family Foundation figures it would increase private health care costs for most of the seniors leaving Medicare by more than $2,000 a year on average. There would be other cost-raising effects, as, for example, healthier seniors left Medicare. Kaiser figures the increase in total health spending by Americans would be twice the amount of savings to Medicare. And of course some seniors would simply give up coverage. Call it triage. 8. Competition between Medicare and private health insurance will reform the health care system and reduce costs. Say it ain’t so, Ron Wyden. The Democratic senator from Oregon has teamed up with Congressman Paul Ryan to propose an option for Medicare recipients to buy private plans. They would be offered a flat payment to buy private plans if they so chose. Competition for these dollars will supposedly make Medicare and the health insurance companies more efficient. More likely, however, it will result in misleading claims by the health insurance companies or reduced coverage plans. It will raise costs for Medicare as healthy seniors are induced to take cheaper private plans with healthier individuals. Allegedly, the Wyden-Ryan plan would control for all this by setting minimal standards. Forget about that. The Obama administration has already given in on federal standards for Obamacare, letting states set their own. Guess who most of the states will favor. Seniors will probably have to move to New York or Massachusetts to get decent plans. But that’s not even the big rub. It is that Medicare payments will be limited to growing just 1 percent faster than GDP. Health care costs have risen considerably faster than that for a long time. Somehow Wyden thinks that such a limit will force reforms. In sum, it will simply lead to less coverage and more expense for beneficiaries. 9. Federal spending should be capped at 21 percent of GDP. The president’s Simpson-Bowles budget balancing commission proposed this cap because it is the average for the last 40 years. How’s that for reasoning? With fast-rising health care costs and an aging population, such a limit is patent nonsense. For a nation that needs significant investment in infrastructure, energy savings, and education, it is especially damaging. There is no evidence to support the claim that such a cap would promote economic growth. An alternative plan offered by Rivlin and Domenici at least raises the cap to about 23 percent, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The whopper is the House Republican plan to adopt a budget balancing amendment to the Constitution. It would reduce federal expenditures to 18 percent of the previous year’s GDP, meaning more like a 16.5 percent cap. This would change America as we know it, testing the nation’s political stability with harsh cuts in social spending and precluding any serious public investment in the nation’s economic foundations. 10. Balancing the budget should involve equal parts tax hikes and government spending cuts. This is not economics; it is politics. But economists argue for it all the time as if it is good economics, not admitting their conservative bias that high taxes are bad for growth and government social and investment spending never helps. Most of the major budget balancing plans of 2010 and 2011 argued for more spending cuts than revenue increases. The Bowles-Simpson plan is comprised of two-thirds spending cuts, one-third revenue increases. Obama’s budget plan last spring also had much more in spending cuts than tax increases. Only the Rivlin-Domenici plan was balanced. The one conspicuous exception was the plan from the Congressional Progressive Caucus, which of course got short shrift in the press. It was about two thirds tax increases to one third program cuts.

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Moody’s Downgrades Belgium’s Credit Rating

December 16, 2011

Moody’s on Friday cut Belgium’s credit ratings by two notches, saying “fragile sentiment” in the euro zone may cause funding stress for countries with high public debt burdens. The ratings agency lowered Belgium’s local- and foreign-currency government bond ratings to Aa3 from Aa1. The new rating has a negative outlook, which signals another downgrade is possible in a couple of years. (Reporting By Walter Brandimarte and Daniel Bases; Editing by Dan Grebler) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Crunch Time: Bank Downgrade, Credit Squeeze Signal Possible Return To 2008

December 15, 2011

The situation in Europe is hitting global credit markets, making it harder for companies and banks to secure loans. Investors are buying fewer corporate bonds, and banks are finding it more difficult to borrow from each other. On Thursday, as the European Central Bank again resisted pleas for it to rescue the eurozone, worries about a severe credit crunch along the lines of the 2008 crisis grew. “In some ways this is part two of the U.S. financial crisis,” said Srinivas Thiruvadanthai, an economist at the Jerome Levy Forecasting Center. Credit rating agency Fitch Ratings downgraded nine major banks on Thursday, including Goldman Sachs, Bank of America and Morgan Stanley. While acknowledging that the banks are in better shape now than in 2008, the rating agency cited vulnerability to the increased market turmoil stemming from “economic developments and regulatory challenges.” Many fear that one cataclysmic event — such as the default of Italy or a major European bank failure — could freeze credit markets, plunging the world into a recession similar to the downturn resulting from the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in 2008. “As the situation in Europe goes, so does the global economy,” said Adrian Miller, fixed-income strategist at Miller Tabak Roberts Securities. Miller said that the bond markets have been moving in sync with the European crisis; recently he’s noted that investors are growing wary of lending even to so-called safe businesses. Global investors are buying about 40 percent fewer new high-quality U.S. corporate bonds than in mid-May, according to Miller. Meanwhile, there’s been about a 70 percent plunge in the purchasing of new, risky U.S. corporate bonds: While global investors bought about $8 billion of these bonds per week in mid-May, now they are buying just $2.5 billion. As European banks slash lending in order to meet new capital requirements, European companies have been hit somewhat harder. Purchases of newly issued risky European corporate bonds have plunged about 80 percent since mid-May, according to Miller. Banks also are finding it harder to borrow from one another. It is now more than twice as expensive to secure a three-month loan from another bank than at the beginning of August, according to Rich Gordon, managing director of fixed-income market strategy at Wells Fargo Securities. On Thursday Fitch downgraded Bank of America and Goldman Sachs’ long-term debt to A from A+, Barclays’ long-term debt to A from AA-, BNP Paribas’ long-term debt to A+ from AA-, Credit Suisse’s long-term debt to A from AA-, and Deutsche Bank’s long-term debt to A from AA-. The downgrades reflect “balance sheet damage” emanating from the increased riskiness of European sovereign debt, but they would not result in any major economic repercussions, said Michael Spence, a Nobel Prize-winning economics professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. “There has been some significant credit tightening already,” Spence said. He added that the Federal Reserve ultimately would step in if credit markets dry up. “If left unattended, it will cause some damage, but I don’t think it will be left unattended,” he said. In a speech in Berlin on Thursday, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi disappointed investors when he repeated that the bank would not come to the rescue and step in to buy large amounts of government bonds. “There is no external savior for a country that doesn’t want to save itself,” Draghi said. In an attempt to reassure the audience and jittery investors across the globe, Draghi said that “a return of confidence,” stemming from government budget cuts, likely would materialize and mitigate the economic damage of austerity measures in struggling countries. Observers were not reassured. “There isn’t any likelihood of it [confidence] returning,” said Jay Bryson, global economist at Wells Fargo Securities. Bryson added that the ECB is the only organization with the firepower to save European countries and banks from default, and that ultimately when it seems to have no other choice, it will most likely step in. “Authorities at least in the past have always blinked, or generally have always blinked,” Bryson said. Markets slightly recovered but remained cautious on Thursday after the previous day’s turmoil. The interest rate on 10-year Italian government bonds fell slightly but remained above the unsustainable 7 percent level. Russian leaders said that they would step in to help, indicating that the country would lend more than $10 billion to the International Monetary Fund, as a backstop for struggling European governments. Europe’s troubles first came to light in 2010 when Greece’s debt troubles caused a financial panic. And the situation continues to evolve, reminding some of the slow motion pace of the U.S. housing market collapse, which took hold in 2007 and triggered the financial crisis in 2008. After Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy in September of that year, banks stopped lending to each other, fearful that more failures were coming. Banks hiked the cost of their loans to other banks (like they’re doing now), making it more difficult for banks to come up with the capital necessary to cover all of their liabilities. Meanwhile, as more investments in the housing market fell apart, banks were forced to pay out insurance on those mortgage defaults. But they didn’t have the money. Companies that relied on short-term financing to maintain their daily operations found themselves on the brink of shutting down, as loans became prohibitively expensive. Major banks were about to fail. After the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve rescued the U.S. banking system from collapse, credit remained tight in 2009, and companies that were unable to secure loans ended expansion plans and laid off workers, reducing consumer demand and worsening the economy. That forced companies to cut even more workers and making lending even tighter. Though the vicious cycle of layoffs and reductions in lending has ended, it could resume again if the crisis in Europe spirals out of control with a default by the Italian government, said Stijn van Nieuwerburgh, associate finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. “As banks become less and less solvent, or their bottom lines are hit, they’ll be less inclined to do risky lending,” he said. Catherine New contributed reporting.

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Banks Face Crisis Of Confidence, As Europe Falls Further

December 14, 2011

The crisis in Europe showed no sign of letting up on Wednesday, and analysts and observers warned of the potential for a sharp financial downturn overseas. Hours after the markets closed in Europe, the credit ratings agency Fitch Ratings downgraded five major European banks and banking groups: Credit Agricole in France, Rabobank Group in the Netherlands, Danske Bank in Denmark, OP Pohjola Group in Finland, and Banque Federative du Credit Mutuel in France. While U.S. banks were unscathed, they now face a possible crisis of confidence. Many dumped risky European debt and other assets earlier this year, but banks in the U.S. are still at risk in the face of a recession and credit crunch in Europe. In a report last month, Fitch called the outlook for U.S. banks “stable” at the end of the third quarter, but warned that the spread of debt problems in Europe would have “sizable” effect because of the connectivity of global banking firms. Earlier on Wednesday the euro plunged to below $1.30, an 11-month low; Italian government bond yields traded above 7 percent, the level widely considered unsustainable, and stock markets in the United States and Europe fell. The FTSE Eurofirst 300 fell 2.25 percent, the CAC 40 in France plunged 3.33 percent, the DAX fell 1.72 percent and the S&P 500 fell 1.13 percent. “Europe is on the cusp of a recession: one that will be mild at best,” said Michael Gregory, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets. For more than a year, U.S. banks have been reducing their direct exposure to Europe, particularly its most stressed countries — net exposure to bad debt in Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain by the six largest U.S. banks represented only 0.5 percent of total assets at the six largest U.S. banks, according to the Fitch report. However, banks have substantially more assets tied to France, Germany and the United Kingdom, according to this report. Banks do hedge their bets on Europe, buying insurance essentially against falling assets. Goldman Sachs reported in an earnings call in September that its exposure to Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain was net $2.5 billion after hedges, for example. However, whether or not those hedges will actually work in the event of a government default is an open question. Voluntary debt forgiveness, which has already happened in Greece, is not covered under these hedges, notes the Fitch report. No matter the direct amount of assets U.S. banks have in Europe, the risks of a 2008-style credit crunch loom in such an interconnected economy. “If we were to get a series of failures in Europe, [it would be] hard to avoid a seizing up of markets as everyone pulls back and avoids risk,” said Martin Baily, an economist at Brookings Institution and former chairman of the council of economic advisers under President Bill Clinton.

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Banks At Risk As Crisis Drags On

December 12, 2011

Concerns about a global slowdown sharpened on Monday as markets cast a vote of no confidence in Europe’s leaders. Economists and analysts expressed worries that the European problem is spreading to American banks. Any further shock to the system could spur a credit crisis, they said, raising the possibility that the Federal Reserve would have to step in to prop up banks. Though most U.S. banks said that they have limited exposure to Europe’s troubles, economists and analysts counter that financial institutions are substantially vulnerable. At issue is not just how exposed each bank is to Europe, but how exposed their financial partners are. “You may not be holding any problem debt yourself, but your counterparty could be experiencing distress, and the relationship is no longer on firm footing,” said John Jay, senior analyst at Aite Group, a financial research firm. “If you’re an American bank, and global in nature, undoubtedly you are dealing with someone who holds that sovereign risk.” By Monday morning it was clear that the most recent European pact didn’t reassure investors, as had been hoped. Every country in the European Union except for the United Kingdom agreed on Thursday night to sign a treaty that would raise the penalties for a country running a higher deficit or debt than allowed. The S&P 500 fell 1.48 percent, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 1.34 percent (a 162.87 point drop) on Monday. The DAX in Germany plunged 3.36 percent, and the CAC 40 in France fell 2.61 percent. “They are doing window dressing right now. No matter what they say, they will still be backsliding,” said Frank Trotter, president of online bank EverBank Direct, of European leaders. American banks’ vulnerability to the crisis in Europe is “substantial across the board,” said Nicholas Economides, economics professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. One negative event in Europe, such as a failed bond auction or an announcement by Greece that it needs a larger writedown on its government debt, could spur a credit crisis in the United States, he said. “They cannot sustain another big shock,” Economides said of American banks, which are still recovering from the global meltdown of 2008. With a weak pact in place, investors are worried about any kind of Lehman-like shock to the system. Back in 2008, when Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, it led to a “credit freeze,” banks were afraid to lend to each other and the financial system ground to a halt until the Federal Reserve stepped in and greased the wheels by lending. The direct exposure of banks to Europe is modest relative to banks’ total assets. U.S. banks held $1.48 trillion in exposure to all of Europe as of the end of June — this includes government debt, insurance on that debt, as well as loans to European business — according to the Bank for International Settlements. In comparison, FDIC-insured financial institutions hold $13.8 trillion in assets. Bank of America said it has a total $14.6 billion exposure to the five eurozone countries in danger of default; the bank holds $2.26 trillion in total assets. Still it’s not clear that risk can be cleanly contained to banks’ direct exposure. Since banks are valuing their assets at face value rather than market value, trust will break down between banks in the event of a credit crunch, said Gabriel Palma, economics professor at the University of Cambridge. Even though American banks are not nearly as exposed to European sovereign debt, he said, they will be just as vulnerable to that breakdown in trust. “If there is another credit crunch, it will not really matter that much how much you actually own sovereign debt,” Palma said. “Because nobody trusts each other, because they hide their risks so well and so deep … no bank in the world will get any money from anybody else.” Palma said that if there is a credit crisis in Europe, it will be “100 percent necessary” for the Federal Reserve to lend cheap money to American banks to keep them operating. Already credit is tightening up for small business owners. “What’s going on in Europe is part of the equation that helps banks determine when to issue a loan, and there’s a real concern that U.S. banks are going to take a hit,” Bernard Baumohl, chief global economist of the Economic Outlook Group, an economic forecasting firm in Princeton, N.J., told HuffPost Small Business . “There could be spill-over into the U.S. banking system, and with that dark cloud hanging over the global and U.S. economy, it’s understandable why small businesses are not the client of choice for big banks. They don’t want to go with what they perceive is a risky customer.”

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U.S. Financial Sector By Far The Worst Performer In S&P 500 This Year

December 12, 2011

(Angela Moon and Ryan Vlastelica) – Even experienced Wall Street contrarians are eyeing the beaten-down U.S. financial sector warily. The sector is down 20 percent this year, by far the worst performer in the S&P 500. The weakness has been so pervasive that the S&P, which is down 1.8 percent in 2011, would be up 3.3 percent on the year if financials were excluded, according to Standard & Poor’s Equity Research. Most market participants agree these stocks are set for a rebound over the long term. They still appear too risky for short-term traders. Arguably, this is when intrepid bargain hunters who buy into investor fear would be snapping up the beaten-down sector. But the problems dogging banks all year – from the debt crisis in Europe to the bleak outlook for profits – do not appear to be abating. “Our job is to buy low and sell high. With financials, I’m still questioning, ‘What is low?’” said John Manley, chief equity strategist for Wells Fargo Advantage Funds in New York. The aversion to financials is great. Assets in bank-focused funds have dropped by 40 percent in the last six months, and the group is the only one of 10 S&P sectors trading at less than the value of the assets on their books. Market participants cite various reasons for financials to decline further, including regulations, weakness in the housing sector and fears linked to Europe’s escalating debt crisis. “Valuations are attractive, but there has to be a catalyst to move prices higher and I just don’t see that,” said Peter Coleman, director of research at JMP Securities in San Francisco. VALUATIONS In the last six months through the week ended December 7, the assets under management (AUM) in the U.S. financial/banking funds sector have dropped a net $8 billion, or nearly 40 percent, according to Thomson Reuters’ Lipper U.S. Fund Flows database. Assets in the sector hit a peak in February 2011 of nearly $23 billion in AUM. Since then, it’s been mostly outflows. Investors have remained skittish due to the worries about Europe. The predominant investing strategy this year has been to trade on macro events, specifically the euro zone debt crisis. Whenever the outlook for Europe worsens, the banks are punished, particularly brokerages such as Morgan Stanley and Jefferies & Co, on fears of exposure to Europe. It has contributed to high volatility in the sector. “The things that made these stocks cheap are still around. It’s still a risky business and you have no idea how bad business can get until they really get bad,” said Manley. That’s contributed to making banks more undervalued than any other sector based on anticipated growth. By StarMine’s current estimates, the financials are priced at 57 percent of their intrinsic value, compared with 72 percent for the S&P. Intrinsic value is where StarMine believes a stock should trade based on likely growth over the next decade. “If you have a three to five year timeline you’ll look back at today’s prices and wish you bought in, but I don’t see anything to move them higher over the next 12 months and I just can’t ignore the headwinds,” said Coleman. This is the reason the market capitalization of the bank sector is less than the value of the assets on their books. The combined market cap of the sector is $1.68 trillion, compared with book value of $1.95 trillion, according to StarMine. OPTIONS AND DOOM Even the options market does not suggest optimism for the future. Last week open interest on the Select Sector Financial SPDR fund , which tracks the S&P financial sector, reached its highest since the financial crisis. Put options outpaced call options by a ratio of 1.7, according to Interactive Brokers. Normally, the ratio is between 1 to 1.2. When Bank of America shares fell to a fresh two-year low of $5.03 last week, instead of betting on a rebound, option traders moved to hedge themselves against more declines. “There’s a group of high-quality banks that have bottomed, but Bank of America isn’t one of them,” said Marty Mosby, large-cap bank analyst at Guggenheim Partners in Memphis, Tennessee. Mosby listed Wells Fargo, US Bancorp and Bank of New York Mellon among those where “we haven’t yet reached an inflection point where their strong fundamentals will drag prices up in a risk-averse market.” Among individual names, the put-to-call open interest ratio on Goldman Sachs was 1.11 while Citigroup’s ratio was 0.62. “I think what you would find looking at trades on specific names is that there are traders positioning for a range of scenarios from recovery to disaster,” said Caitlin Duffy, Equity Options Analyst at Interactive Brokers. Even some of those speak positively about the banks are staying cautious. BNY Mellon’s wealth management core portfolio recently moved to a slight “overweight” position on the group due to the bad news already priced into the sector. “As a group, banks are fairly valued, however it’s understandable that we’re going to be cautious about moving to a large overweight at this time,” said Leo Grohowski, chief investment officer at BNY Mellon Wealth Management in New York. “This could turn out to be an outstanding entry point, but it depends on your risk appetite… there could be more risk than potential reward.” (Reporting by Angela Moon and Ryan Vlastelica; Additional Reporting by Dan Bases; Editing by Andrew Hay) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Markets Still Wary After EU Deal

December 12, 2011

A European summit deal to strengthen budget discipline in the euro zone failed to restore financial market confidence on Monday, forcing the European Central Bank to step in again gingerly. The euro fell, stocks slid and borrowing costs for Italy and Spain rose as investors weighed the outcome of last week’s summit that split the European Union, with Britain blocking treaty change and forcing euro zone countries to negotiate a fiscal accord outside the Union. Friday’s initial market rally petered out in less than 24 trading hours due to legal uncertainty surrounding the new pact and the absence of an unlimited financial backstop for the single currency. French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the legal basis of a new accord to enforce debt and deficit rules in the 17-nation euro area with quasi-automatic sanctions and intrusive powers to reject national budgets would be worked out before Christmas. “In the next fortnight, we will put together the legal content of our agreement. The aim is to have a treaty by March,” Sarkozy told newspaper Le Monde in an interview. “You have to understand this is the birth of a different Europe — the Europe of the euro zone, in which the watchwords will be the convergence of economies, budget rules and fiscal policy. A Europe where we are going to work together on reforms enabling all our countries to be more competitive without renouncing our social model,” he said. Traders said the ECB intervened to buy short-term Italian debt after yields on Italian and Spanish debt spiked. But ECB sources told Reuters last week that purchases would remain limited with a maximum ceiling of 20 billion euros a week. There is no prospect of a “big bazooka” to shock the markets. Despite the central bank dabbling, Italian 5-year bond yields shot up above 7 percent, widely seen as a danger level while 10-year yields spiked above 6.8 percent and Spanish 10-year yields topped 6 percent. Investors’ appetite for short-term paper drove Italian one-year borrowing costs down just below 6 percent at an auction but yields remain uncomfortably high. “Let’s not raise expectations too high, there will be more summits,” credit ratings agency Standard & Poor’s chief European economist Jean-Michel Six said. “Time is running out and action is needed on both sides of the equation, on the fiscal and monetary side,” he told a business conference in Tel Aviv. S&P has put 14 euro zone governments on watch for a possible rating downgrade in the coming weeks, arguing that the deepening debt crisis and looming recession will increase their potential liabilities and reduce their ability to cope with them. If some of the euro zone’s ‘AAA’-rated members are downgraded, it would call into question the solidity of the euro zone’s rescue fund, which would likely suffer a similar fate. “There is probably yet another shock required before everyone in Europe reads from the same page, for instance a major German bank experiencing difficulties in the market,” Six said. “Then there would be a recognition that everyone is on the same boat and even German institutions can be affected by this contagion.” Interbank lending rates in the euro zone fell to their lowest level since May after the ECB threw cash-starved banks a lifeline last week by offering unlimited three-year liquidity to counter a credit crunch. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Euro zone crisis graphics r.reuters.com/hyb65p ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ POLITICAL FALLOUT Political aftershocks from Friday’s historic rift between Britain and the rest of the 27-nation bloc continued to shake Europe on Monday with Prime Minister David Cameron facing tension in his coalition and doubts in the business community. Cameron was assured of a hero’s welcome from Eurosceptics in his Conservative party in parliament but faced a backlash from his Liberal Democrat coalition allies when he explains a veto that has cast Britain adrift from its continental partners. LibDem Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said on Sunday he was “bitterly disappointed” with an outcome that would diminish Britain’s global influence and was bad for jobs and business. In business, the chief executive of the world’s largest advertising group, Martin Sorrell of London-based WPP, told Reuters that Britain’s interests would be better serviced “inside the EU tent” than on the sidelines. In Brussels, officials were groping for a strong legal basis for the planned fiscal compact, with Britain arguing that the euro zone cannot use the EU treaty institutions — the European Commission and the European Court of Justice. European Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn told Reuters most of the practical measures to strengthen budget enforcement could be implemented immediately under a set of rules known as the “six-pack” agreed in October. Euro zone finance ministers may hold an extra meeting before the end of the year to try to nail down details of the agreement before their winter break, diplomats said. The euro area faces the next potential crunch point in mid-January when Italy, which has a debt mountain of 1.9 billion euros or 120 percent of its annual output, has to start issuing tends of billions of euros in bonds towards a 2012 total of 340 billion euros needed to roll over maturing debt. Michael Leister, rate strategist with German bank WestLB in Duesseldorf, said the summit outcome had done little to restore confidence in the absence of stronger central bank action. “The question is will this help to stabilize sentiment? I don’t believe so, given that those comments from (ECB President Mario) Draghi ruling out a bazooka during the ECB conference are still weighing on spreads,” he said. (Additional reporting by Alexandra Za in Milan, Keith Weir and Sudip Kar-Gupta in London,; Writing by Paul Taylor, editing by Mike Peacock) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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IMF: Eurozone Agrement Only Partial Solution To Debt Crisis

December 11, 2011

TEL AVIV (Tova Cohen and Ari Rabinovitch) – An agreement reached by European countries for deeper economic integration was a step in the right direction but not a complete solution for the euro zone’s debt crisis, International Monetary Fund (IMF) chief economist Olivier Blanchard said on Sunday. “I’m actually more optimistic than I was a month ago, I think there has been progress,” Blanchard told the Globes business conference in Tel Aviv. “What happened last week is important: it’s part of the solution, but it’s not the solution.” He did not say what further steps were needed. European leaders agreed in Brussels on Friday to draft a new treaty for deeper euro zone economic integration, although Britain, the region’s third-largest economy, refused to join the 17 euro states and nine other EU countries in the fiscal union. Asked whether diverse statements from policymakers in Europe were causing volatility in markets, Blanchard said: “A lot of the volatility is coming from statements from Europe, showing the range of opinions and inability to get to a logical decision process.” EU leaders also agreed euro zone states and others should provide up to 200 billion euros ($270 billion) in bilateral loans to the IMF to help tackle the crisis, with 150 billion euros coming from countries in the euro currency. “The commitment to give us 200 billion euros makes a major difference in the sense that we can now go out and talk to other countries and say, ‘the Europeans have given us money, can you help?,” Blanchard said. “Whether this gives us the whole bazooka or not, I hope so.” Asked by Reuters on the sidelines of the conference whether Britain’s decision to isolate itself was right for its economy, he said: “I think that’s an issue for the Europeans to decide.” Adding a tone of skepticism regarding the treaty’s chances of success, Jim O’Neill, chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, said the most important thing that happened this week is not “this bungled European deal,” but the release of data that showed a slowing trend of growth in China, the world’s number two economy. “The problem in Europe, this isn’t really a debt crisis, it’s a crisis about the structure of leadership … Europe needs to organize itself properly and show proper leadership,” he said. “Everything around the world is being driven by some idiotic statement from some policymaker in the EU.” But he added that now might be the best time in 20 years to invest in Europe, saying, “Never let a good crisis go to waste.” O’Neill and Blanchard had diverging forecasts for growth in the United States next year. “I think 2012, in the end, will not be as good as 2011,” IMF’s Blanchard said. “Part of it is that 2011 came out a bit better than expected. I’m not sure this will be repeated.” O’Neill disagreed, saying he was optimistic on the U.S. economy and thinks growth will exceed 3 percent this quarter. “I think that corporate America is in an exceptionally competitive position,” he said. (Reporting by Tova Cohen and Ari Rabinovitch; Editing by David Hulmes) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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U.S. Worried About IMF Loans To Europe

December 10, 2011

WASHINGTON (Lesley Wroughton) – The prospect of European heavyweights like Italy or Spain turning to the IMF for rescue loans is worrying the United States and other nations that fear they could suffer losses on funds they have extended to the IMF. The International Monetary Fund cannot be expected to step in as a substitute for a stronger commitment by Europe which needs to assume the brunt of any losses on emergency loans, a senior US official said on Friday. Despite the International Monetary Fund’s stable record – no borrower has ever defaulted on an IMF loan and no country has ever lost money lending to the IMF – there are concerns about the IMF’s growing exposure to the euro zone. That exposure could take a quantum leap if Italy and Spain need bailouts, a level of assistance that would almost certainly dwarf the loans already approved for Greece, Ireland and Portugal in deals engineered with the European Union. Emerging markets, which are contemplating lending more money to the IMF — which couples monetary assistance with tough conditions that seek to ensure a country does not default — have also raised concerns in the IMF about the risks to the fund’s capital, officials from emerging nations told Reuters. A crucial European Union summit ended on Friday with a historic agreement to draft a new treaty for deeper integration in the euro zone in an effort to rein in a debt crisis that started in Greece two years ago and has continued to spread. Worries about the IMF’s risk are also brewing among congressional lawmakers. Four U.S. lawmakers who met with IMF chief Christine Lagarde this week expressed unease over the risk the fund would take on with a bigger role in Europe. A request for a big IMF loan for Italy or Spain would put the United States, which holds veto power over most IMF lending decisions, in an uncomfortable spot. The American public is still stung by the U.S. government’s big bailouts for banks during the 2007-09 financial crisis and fears that mounting U.S. debts imperil the nation’s future. With President Barack Obama facing a tough battle for re-election in November, the White House is not keen to appear as Europe’s savior, and the administration’s message to Europe has consistently been: Put more of your own money on the line. Indeed, Republican lawmakers are seeking to yank a $108 billion loan the United States approved for the IMF in 2009, a move that would undercut Washington’s ability to influence the conditions attached to IMF loans. “If the United States wants to help Europe find a way out of its current debt crisis, we must be a strong, world economic leader, not merely the lender of last resort,” Republican Senator Jim DeMint wrote in The Wall Street Journal on Friday. “Members of the Obama administration must focus all of their efforts on strengthening the U.S. economy and balancing our budget, rather than on continuing to borrow from China to pay for Europe’s out-of-control debts,” he added. DeMint said he would seek to force another vote to stop U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner from supporting more European bailouts. The Senate voted 55-44 in June against a proposal by DeMint to repeal IMF loan authority. Domenico Lombardi, a former IMF board official now at the Brookings Institution in Washington, said even if the U.S. Congress rescinded the loan, it would not prevent the IMF from lending to Europe. He said the international community has a stake in ensuring the euro zone crisis does not spread further. PREFERRED CREDITOR The IMF enjoys an understanding among its members that borrowing nations will always pay the IMF back ahead of private creditors. However, the scale of borrowing troubled euro zone countries might need raises the specter that one of the nation’s could default on an IMF loan. The IMF has about $380 billion available for lending, a figure outstripped by Italy and Spain’s debt refinancing needs. Italy needs to roll over 340 billion euros (290.5 billion pounds) in debt next year, while Spain needs to refinance 120 billion euros. “The problem with some of these countries now is you’re getting to a point where (debt) is large enough that defaulting on the IMF is attractive enough if you want to reduce your debt,” said Raghuram Rajan, a former IMF chief economist now at the University of Chicago’s Booth School. “I’m not saying the euro area will act at cross purposes with the fund. But when it comes to writing down the debt, will the euro area respect the (preferred) status of the IMF?” European leaders agreed at a summit on Friday to provide 150 billion euros in bilateral loans to the IMF to tackle the crisis, with another 50 billion euros coming from non-European countries. National central banks in the euro zone would pump the capital into the IMF. The funds would not count as a contribution toward Europe’s IMF quotas, which determine its voting power in the fund. WHOSE MONEY IS THIS ANYWAY? There are two ways of channeling the money to the IMF, either through the fund’s general resources or a so-called IMF-administered account. Any lending from the IMF’s general resources would spread the risk across the entire IMF membership. In an administered account, the countries contributing would take the losses in the case of default. Thus far, Europe has indicated it is legally easier for its funds to be part of general resources. When it comes to additional resources to battle the euro zone debt crisis, the United States prefers the second option, which would put most of the risk on Europe and none on the United States. The Obama administration has argued for months that Europe needs to put more capital on the line. “The key point is that official funding must also bear losses if necessary,” Rajan wrote in a recent column. “Consequently, if support is channeled through the IMF, the fund will need a guarantee from the euro zone that it will be indemnified in case of a (debt) restructuring.” Mario Blejer, a former Argentine central bank governor, argues that Europe should take care of its own and bear the full risk of any default. “The IMF’s seniority is an unwritten principle, sustained in a delicate equilibrium, and high-volume lending is testing the limit,” Blejer and Eduardo Levy Yeyati, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, wrote recently. “From this perspective, the proposal to use the IMF as a conduit for ECB resources — thereby circumventing restrictions imposed by European Union’s treaties — while providing the ECB with preferred-creditor status, would exacerbate the Fund’s exposure to risky borrowers,” Blejer and Yeyati said. “This arrangement could be seen as an unwarranted abuse of Fund seniority that, in addition, unfairly frees the ECB from the need to impose its own conditionality on one of its members.” ($1 = 0.7482 euros) (Editing by Tim Ahmann, Leslie Adler and Andrew Hay) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. 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Michael Farr: The Core of the Economic Debate

December 8, 2011

In Europe and the United States, debates over deficits, austerity, and intervention are being conducted in several languages, but they share the same essential elements. Moreover, the debates all pose fundamental questions that cut to the core of government’s role in any society. What is a government’s responsibility for the economy? What are the limits of a central bank? How much influence should a government have over its central bank? And how do those limits (such as they are) affect the currency and price levels across the economy? It may seem that these questions are as simple as ‘Am I my brother’s keeper?’ But the consequences of these largely notional arguments will determine the course of generational financial stability and direction. John Mauldin shares the following excerpt in this week’s missive. These are the essential debate points. (I am a faithful reader of Mauldin and commend his complimentary weekly analysis to you. Here is a link: www.JohnMauldin.com ). “If we apply this distinction to what money is, those who believe that money is a tool which belongs to the political sphere and can be manipulated to meet political goals, justify their destruction of money by an ethic of responsibility (fighting unemployment, creating economic growth, etc). For what it is worth, let’s call them Keynesians. On the ethic of conviction, we have the Bundesbank and the German population (but not so much the German political system) who say that money is a common good which does not belong to the state, and that the economy has to adapt to this reality, and not the other way around. Let us call them the Austrians.” The lines of debate are drawn clearly around the world. Regretably these discussions grow more heated at times of crisis, and decision makers risk impulsive reactions. So will the Keynesians or Austrians prevail? In many ways we feel this is a bit moot in many countries where the enormity of the debt, and therefore the debt service, precludes any solution that is not in part monetization. That is to say that some destruction of currency will occur. Monetization of debt is another way to suggest inflation. The idea is that if my debt represents 20% of my outstanding currency, I can reduce my debt to 10% by doubling the amount of my currency. Twice as much currency available to purchase the same amount of goods and services will drive up the prices for those goods and services. Linear reactions don’t really happen in economics, but for the purposes of discussion, imagine that you are an investor in the bonds of a country that doubles it currency. While the amount of principal and interest you ultimately receive will remain unchanged, the prices of bread and milk have doubled and therefore your purchasing power is eviscerated. You lose out because the payments you receive are not adjusted higher for inflation. Finally, there is the issue of moral hazard. Countries like Greece, which have borrowed and contracted to repay, are being excused from billions of dollars of obligations. They are being supported by the good standing of other European nations that may have to bear the burden of Greece’s responsibilities. This sort of thing has happened many times in recent years. Culpability has yet again been separated from consequence, and it strikes us as the vilest virulence. The world has gone through times like this before and lived to tell the tale. It will again this time. Some companies are positioned strongly to both endure and thrive through this storm. We have many of them in our portfolios and firmly believe they will leave us in good stead. No matter how these global debates and questions are resolved, market winds have been ferocious, and we don’t see that abating anytime soon. Hang in there, Peace, Michael

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EU Leaders Seek Agreement On Rescue Plan With Euro’s Future At Stake

December 4, 2011

PARIS (Paul Taylor) – The euro faces a decisive week as European Union leaders, urged on anxiously by the United States, seek agreement on a convincing rescue plan that has eluded them for two years. Despite short-term market optimism about a possible deal to tackle Europe’s sovereign debt crisis and underpin the survival of the single currency, the outcome is far from certain as the EU gears up for a summit in Brussels on Thursday and Friday. “This week, the stable future of the euro and thus the economic recovery in Europe and employment are at stake,” EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn told Reuters. “This calls for a convincing package of measures from the European Council (summit).” Portuguese Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho went further. “We have to find a response” to the crisis, he told the daily Publico. “If we don’t, clearly that could represent the end of the European Union.” If all goes according to plans being hatched in Berlin and Paris, the EU will have taken a step towards fiscal union by Friday night, agreeing on a treaty change to anchor coercive budget discipline for the 17-nation currency area. The European Central Bank will have cut interest rates on Thursday to counter a looming recession and taken new measures to provide longer-term funding for Europe’s teetering banks. And new prime ministers in Italy, Greece and Spain will have demonstrated their commitment to tough austerity measures and structural economic reforms to tackle their debt problems and restore investor confidence. World financial markets rallied last week on the prospect of such a masterplan after ECB chief Mario Draghi signalled that in response to a new “fiscal compact” in the euro zone, the central bank could act more decisively to fight the crisis. A convincing show of political determination to stand behind the euro and surmount the crisis through closer euro zone integration could prompt the ECB to do more to support Italian and Spanish bonds, cementing that reversal of market sentiment. “It all comes down to what the ECB does, and whether political leaders produce a sufficiently convincing plan to give the ECB a basis to intervene,” a senior EU government source said, speaking on condition of anonymity to respect the independence of the central bank. However, if the 27-nation EU is unable to agree, or settles for another half-measure after months of dithering, the flight from euro zone bond markets may accelerate, confidence may ebb further and the crisis could become acute in January, when Italy has to start a massive refinancing campaign. The chief executives of leading Dutch multinationals published a joint newspaper ad warning it was now “one minute to midnight” for the euro zone. “There is almost 1,000 billion euros in refinancing that needs to be done next year, while the risk premium on interest rates is increasing strongly. That means that it will be almost impossible for many countries to refinance. That indicates how urgent it is to take measures now,” Frans van Houten, CEO of electronics giant Philips told TV programme Buitenhof. MERKEL PERMISSIVE? Underlining Washington’s vital interest in averting a euro zone meltdown, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner will visit Frankfurt, Berlin, Paris, Marseille and Milan from Tuesday — his fourth trip to Europe since early September — to urge key European officials to take decisive action. Sources close to German Chancellor Angela Merkel say she is prepared, despite hostility from the German Bundesbank, to see the ECB step up buying of troubled states’ bonds as a short-term bridging measure until stricter budget controls take hold. But things may not go entirely according to plan. Merkel visits French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Paris on Monday to outline joint proposals on economic governance, but Berlin and Paris still have significant differences about how the euro zone would control national budgets. Merkel wants to empower the executive European Commission to veto national budget plans that breach EU limits before they go to parliament, with automatic sanctions for deficit sinners and the possibility to take serial offenders to the European Court of Justice for punishment. Sarkozy, struggling to win re-election next May, wants euro zone leaders to have the final say, with no new supranational powers for EU institutions. Several other governments, notably Britain, Ireland and the Netherlands, do not want treaty change at all because of the domestic political risks. Some fear it would be hard if they have to win public backing in referendums. European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, who chairs the crucial end-of-week summit in Brussels, will present options for stricter budget control without touching the treaty, as well as steps that would require amendments, aides said. European Parliament President Jerzy Buzek warned last Friday that treaty change could be divisive and “dangerous.” But diplomats say it is a political must for Merkel. Veteran former German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, 92, urged Germans on Sunday to soothe growing fears of German dominance in Europe and help rescue debt-stricken euro zone partners, warning that Berlin faced isolation otherwise. For British Prime Minister David Cameron, the choice is between enraging eurosceptics at home by letting treaty change go ahead without winning a return of key powers to London, or seeing the 17 euro zone states reach a separate agreement outside the treaty that could cement a two-speed Europe. SHORT-CIRCUIT Germany and France want to short-circuit the complex treaty amendment procedure by wrapping the new budget procedures into a single amended protocol 14 on the euro zone. They hope to avoid a parliamentary convention and spare most, if not all, countries the need for a referendum on ratification. That has outraged some lawmakers who say the EU’s major powers are sidelining national parliamentary budget sovereignty without any democratic accountability. In their defence, Paris and Berlin argue the debt crisis is an emergency that requires swift executive action to avert disaster, and that member states already signed up to the budget rules in the 1992 Maastricht Treaty. New Prime Minister Mario Monti brought forward to Sunday a cabinet meeting to approve rigorous austerity measures and economic reforms designed to save Rome from requiring the next international bailout. And bailed-out Ireland will be presenting an eye-watering 2012 austerity budget. Italy has become the centre of the debt crisis since yields on its 10-year bonds shot up above 7 percent, levels at which Greece, Ireland and Portugal were forced to seek EU/IMF help. Government sources say Monti’s mix of cuts and tax rises will total some 20 billion euros ($27 billion) over two years. About half will go to reduce the deficit and balance the budget by 2013 despite an economic downturn and rising borrowing costs. The rest will free up resources to try to regenerate Italy’s recession-bound economy. On Tuesday, the Greek parliament is due to give final approval to a draconian 2012 austerity budget that is a condition for a second bailout package still under negotiation with private creditors, euro zone governments and the IMF. On Wednesday and Thursday, centre-right leaders who control most EU governments meet in Marseille, France. That will provide the platform for incoming Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to outline his commitment to radical budget cuts and economic reforms to restore Madrid’s parlous public finances. It will also give “Merkozy” — as the Franco-German leadership team has become known — a last chance to lobby reticent partners, with Geithner in the wings, to accept treaty change as a crucial part of the long-term plan to secure the euro before the summit starts with a dinner on Thursday evening. (Additional reporting by Madeline Chambers and Andreas Rinke in Berlin, Catherine Hornby in Rome and Gilbert Kreijger in the Netherlands; Writing by Paul Taylor, Editing by Mark Trevelyan) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Jeff Cimbalo: Democracy Not in Store for Eurozone Members

December 1, 2011

The past two weeks have seen a dizzying array of proposals from virtually every organ of the EU claiming that they can make the eurozone more efficient, durable, and solvent. If you noticed that no one is saying that they will make the eurozone more democratic, you’re not the only one . And the most anti-democratic organ which is being set up is a permanent bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism (EMS) . The ESM will not only be a permanent bailout fund, it will have the ability to raise funds from member states without democratic accountability, while also making it impossible to leave the eurozone if the rest don’t want you to. The ESM is intended to replace the current bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility. The ESM was signed in July of this year and is expected to be ratified sometime in 2013 by the signatories. It purports to enshrine for all time the various legal inadequacies of the EFSF. The ESM will raise 700 billion euro from eurozone members in pro-rata shares by GDP. The Board of Governors is made up of finance ministers of countries that do and do not get bailed out as well as who does and does not get punished for not paying their share, and vote mostly by qualified majority. Member state contributions are mandatory, the obligation to pay enforceable in the European Court of Justice. Contributions can be raised without limit if the Board of Governors agrees. All future members of the euro must sign on to the ESM. Ominously, these obligations are to be permanent. “ESM Members hereby irrevocably and unconditionally undertake to provide their contribution to the authorised capital stock” (Article 8(4)) and to “pay,” not guarantee, certain capital calls voted on by simple majority within seven days (Article 9(3)). This provision does not seem to fit with the manifest ability of member states to leave the Union and the euro simultaneously. If the obligation already undertaken is really irrevocable, what contributing country would ever leave the eurozone if it could? The practical effect of such arrangements is that the eurozone configuration of the Council of Ministers (or Council of the European Union) has just increased its powers grandly without a vote as the treaties call for. It’s the member states paying in that lose, both by the creation of another huge bureaucracy inside the Union not all have agreed to, and in the knowledge that the Union can effectively now tax them directly, redistribute the money the way finance ministers alone see fit, and call it a bailout. The document takes power away from national legislatures. Imagine if all finance ministers agree to raise the total subscription amounts from 700 billion to 1 trillion euro. Each country would have seven days to pay. No legislation will be needed to relieve a member state of its money, so the legislature and accordingly the citizenry are without recourse to decide whether to keep its money. An aggrieved national population, assuming it is even made aware of the transfer, has only one arrow in the quiver: replace the government in the next election. This is a very blunt instrument indeed given it would be only one of many issues upon which an election could turn. Thus heads of state, and of course their finance ministers, have little to fear by giving away their people’s money by this method. Further, the ESM, though founded during a crisis, is not an emergency provision. Maybe France and Germany will amend the treaties over the next couple of years to backfill the glaring impropriety of the origin and substance of the ESM to make it seem more legitimately wrought. But if this is the state of things to come in December, democracy is in for as rough a ride in Europe as national pocketbooks.

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Italian Borrowing Rates Surge, As Pressure Mounts For Reforms

November 28, 2011

MILAN — Italy’s borrowing rates skyrocketed at a bond auction Monday for the second straight business day, as pressure mounted on the eurozone’s third-largest economy to come up with quick reforms to keep the euro from breaking up. The interest rate Italy had to pay to get investors to part with their cash for 12 years soared to 7.20 percent, a full 2.7 percentage points higher than the last similar auction. In the auction, Italy raised euro567 million ($750 million). While there were enough bids to cover the maximum sought of euro750 million ($1 billion), the high borrowing rates persuaded the Italian Treasury to stick closer to the lower end of its planned issuance range. Premier Mario Monti is under enormous pressure to convince markets that his new technocratic government has a strategy to get a grip on its debts and balance the budget by 2013. He is expected to announce additional austerity measures later this week. A bigger test will come Tuesday, when Italy plans to auction up to euro8 billion ($10.6 billion) in debt of three varying maturities, including the benchmark 10-year issues. Last Friday, Italy had to pay sharply higher rates in a pair of auctions, stoking renewed fears that the country is heading toward a potentially devastating debt spiral that could bankrupt the country and potentially bring down the euro. Driving market fears is the knowledge that Italy is too big for Europe to bail out, and must refinanceeuro200 billion ($267 billion) by the end of April alone. The bond yields also reflect grim economic data that suggest Italy will be in a recession no later than the first quarter of 2012. The OECD on Monday forecast Italian growth a 0.7 percent of GDP in 2011, followed by a contraction of 0.5 percent next year. That’s a sharp cut in previous forecasts of 1.1 percent growth in 2011 and 1.6 percent growth in 2012. Italian business confidence improved somewhat in November, to 94.4, after hitting a 21-month low of 94.2 last month. Despite the increase, “it remains very low and alongside other industry-related indicators signal that the economy is facing serious headwinds,” said Raj Badiani, an economic analyst at IHS Global Insight. Earlier Monday, the International Monetary Fund denied reports that it’s readying a rescue fund for Italy. The Italian daily La Stampa reported that the IMF was preparing a euro600 billion ($794 billion) bailout fund for Italy, which is struggling to manage its enormous public debt of euro1.9 trillion, or nearly 120 percent of GDP. But an IMF spokesman said there are “no discussions with Italian authorities on a program for IMF financing.” And EU spokesman Amadeu Altafaj Tardio also said there have been no such discussion with the European Union. Italy’s banking association, ABI, on Monday inaugurated its first sovereign debt day, during which customers could buy Italian bonds on the secondary market without paying commission. The goal is to create trust in Italian debt – about half of which is in Italian hands – rather than directly influencing borrowing costs. ABI said it was too early to gauge a response to the promotion announced just Friday, but one bank in Rome said it had three or four takers. Customers can save euro2 to euro4 euros on every euro1,000 invested. Another is planned for the Dec. 12 auction. “This initiative seems to be positive, but it probably is just a drop in the ocean, because people are very cautious and are waiting to see what will happen,” said Giuseppe di Bartolomeo, outside a bank in central Rome. Monti was appointed earlier this month to replace Silvio Berlusconi, whose fractious conservative coalition squabbled for months over measures to inject growth into the flagging Italian economy. Monti has pledged a two-track strategy: urgent austerity measures followed by deeper reforms that will be painful for voters to accept. They include revamps of the pension system, doing away with a class of privileged closed professions that discourage competition, cutting political costs, simplifying bureaucracy and selling off state assets. Monti must obtain approval for the measures from the same Parliament that hamstrung Berlusconi. To make the new austerity more palatable, Monti intends to balance sacrifices from the various political camps – and has promised a spending review of political costs starting with the premier’s office. _____ Don Melvin contributed from Brussels.

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OECD: Policy Makers Should Be Prepared To ‘Face The Worst’ From Debt Crisis

November 28, 2011

PARIS — The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said Monday policy makers around the world must “be prepared to face the worst,” as the economic impact of Europe’s debt crisis threatens to spread around the developed world. The Paris-based OECD said in its latest Economic Outlook that continued failure by EU leaders to stem the debt crisis that has spread from Greece to much-bigger Italy “could massively escalate economic disruption” and end in “highly devastating outcomes.” The half-yearly update also recommended urgently boosting the EU bailout fund and called on Europe’s central bank to do more to stem the crisis. “The ECB has the means to provide a credible measure to avoid further contagion in the sovereign bond markets,” the OECD’s chief economist Carlo Padoan said. “And if you ask me if that is the lender of last resort function, I would say yes.” Many think the ECB is the only institution capable of calming frayed market nerves and Merkel’s continued dismissal of a greater ECB role knocked market sentiment and stocks all round Europe fell again after a morning rebound. Potentially, the ECB has unlimited financial firepower through its ability to print money. However, Germany finds the idea of monetizing debts unappealing, warning that it lets the more profligate countries off the hook for their bad practices. In addition, it conjures up bad memories of hyperinflation in Germany in the 1920s. Padoan also upped the pressure on Europe to implement the Greek debt restructuring agreed to by EU leaders in October, saying that further delay could render the plan “insufficient,” just as an earlier plan unveiled in July turned out to be. The OECD now forecasts the eurozone economy to be in a six-month recession lasting through the first quarter of 2012, followed by a slow recovery that will leave the 17-nation bloc with only 0.2 percent growth next year. Padoan warned however that a combination of factors including continued fiscal gridlock in the U.S. and a sovereign debt default or bank failure in Europe could result in a “downside scenario” that sees the eurozone shrink by 2 percent next year and even more in 2013. The OECD expects the U.S. to grow by 2 percent next year and 2.5 percent in 2013, while the Japanese economy is forecast to grow 2 percent next year and 1.6 percent in 2013. (This version CORRECTS title of Padoan in fourth paragraph.)

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Jared Bernstein: What’s the Risk From a Country Leaving the Eurozone?

November 28, 2011

The more we learn about this one, the better. No one knows the likelihood of, say, Greece, to pull an example out of the air, pulling out of the Eurozone and reverting to the drachma. I’d guess not, but the potential is obviously real and growing. What would happen if a country broke away? Well, the problem is all in the transition. Contracts between creditors (lenders) and debtors (borrowers), including everything from bonds to cheese deliveries, have to be renegotiated, and done so at the value the world decides to assign to the new currency, e.g., the ND (“new drachma”). And one can imagine that assignment will not be flattering to the dropout country. Bank runs are a worry — those holding euros in Greek banks will be assigned the new value in “NDs,” and account holders will want to avoid that devaluation. As weaker economies dropout, their currencies will fall relative to those of stronger ones, like the US dollar or the euro, as currency markets once again can vote on an individual country’s currency, as opposed to that of a currency block. This could help them adjust through exports, but we’re probably not talking about gentle devaluation here; we’re talking systemic shock. Basically, the transition is by definition a huge devaluation event. You leave the currency union because you can’t achieve solvency within it, and once you’re free, the world casts judgment by revaluing your currency in ways that reflect the conditions of your exit. Any support you enjoyed from being a weaker player of a stronger team vanishes. These realities are why I suspect the Eurozone remains intact. But I wouldn’t bet more than an ND or two on it. This post originally appeared at Jared Bernstein’s On The Economy blog.

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And The Latest European Country To Be Downgraded Is..

November 24, 2011

LISBON, Portugal – International ratings agency Fitch has downgraded Portugal’s debt to junk status due to its high debts and poor economic prospects. Fitch said Thursday it is downgrading Portugal one notch, to BB+ from BBB-. The agency said it took the measure because of Portugal’s “large fiscal imbalances, high indebtedness across all sectors, and adverse macroeconomic outlook.” The move is another blow to Portugal’s efforts to restore its fiscal health after taking a €78 billion ($104 billion) bailout earlier this year to avoid bankruptcy. The government is cutting spending and hiking taxes — measures which triggered a general strike Thursday.

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Preeti Vissa: Little Help for Homeowners, Big Bonuses at Fannie and Freddie

November 22, 2011

Why are top executives at government-backed mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac getting millions in bonuses while struggling homeowners get little or no help? I’ve written before about the need for principal reduction to help homeowners fighting to keep their homes. Not only would this aid millions of Americans caught in difficult circumstances they didn’t create, it would shore up the weak housing market and boost the whole economy. I’m hardly alone: a large collection of financial experts and officials, including California Attorney General Kamala Harris and a large group of members of Congress have called for principal reduction. Fannie and Freddie — bailed out by taxpayers to the tune of $169 billion — back a large percentage of those troubled mortgages and would need to sign off. But the federal agency that oversees them, the Federal Housing Finance Administration, has refused to go along. This festering problem got renewed attention recently when the House Financial Services Committee approved a bill by a vote of 52 to 4 that would cap executive pay at Fannie and Freddie — a rare bit of bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill. How big are the paychecks going to top Fannie and Freddie executives? Big. Really, really big . Since the agencies went into conservatorship, Fannie and Freddie’s top six executives have received $35 million in compensation, including millions in bonuses, even as borrowers struggled to keep their homes and got no meaningful relief. At the Financial Services Committee hearing, acting FHFA honcho Edward DeMarco stoutly defended both the seven-figure executive pay and his agency’s refusal to recognize financial reality and write down the principal of troubled loans to values that are realistic. Amazingly, he did this just days after Fannie and Freddie asked for another $7.8 billion from taxpayers to cover last quarter’s losses. A message to Director Ed DeMarco: look out your window. This is exactly the sort of thing the Occupy Wall Street protesters are upset about, and they’re right. That’s why Kamala Harris recently called for DeMarco to “step aside” if he refuses to rethink his policies, saying, “It has become clear to me that the only way to keep distressed California homeowners in their homes is through meaningful principal reduction.” What Harris said applies in every state where recession-battered homeowners, many of whom owe more than they will ever be able to sell their homes for, are trying to keep a roof over their heads. We know what needs to be done, and FHFA should lead, follow, or at least get out of the way. And, if only for PR purposes, they might want to rethink those salaries and bonuses before the full Congress does it for them.

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Margaret Heffernan: Put Shorts on the Board

November 21, 2011

For the first time in my life, I got to teach a law school class last month. I was the guest of Frank Partnoy one of the best business writers I know. What’s great about Partnoy is that he’s worked on Wall Street, knows the law, understands economics — he even explained (or tried to explain) derivatives to Senators — and pulls no punches when it comes to criticizing the lax oversight of our financial institutions by Washington and by corporate boards. Partnoy’s a fierce and independent thinker , unconstrained by deference or ignorance. The first hour of his University of San Diego class was devoted to reviewing the law around corporate governance. What is required of a board director? What are directors indemnified against? What is their responsibility? The second hour was mine and I spent it discussing how what the law proposes is not what, in fact, occurs. Boards are biased, too like-minded, made up of friends who are typically cronies uncomfortable with conflict. Worse still, in most of our leading corporations today, the positions of Chairman and CEO are held by the same person. This breaks all the basic rules of corporate governance, reduces the power of directors and is the single greatest cause of a lack of debate, challenge and constructive conflict within a board. And yet vast companies — Exxon, Chevron, Procter & Gamble, GE, General Motors , in fact more than half of the Fortune 24 — persist in this most obvious abuse. All of these companies whine endlessly and publicly about the onus of Sarbanes-Oxley and now Dodd-Frank but they don’t take even the simplest step towards better governance. If you’re hoping your investments will fund your old age, you should care mightily that they’re so poorly overseen. Our students seemed to relish this clash of theory and practice but afterwards Partnoy and I worried about how bad governance can be improved. That the law and reality scarcely meet may be entertaining but for investors, large and small, it can be devastating. Give the Small Shareholder a Seat “There are two things you could do,” Partnoy proposed. “First: reserve one board seat for a small shareholder. This would need to be someone pretty tough, prepared to ask questions, hold their ground and not be easily swayed or impressed.” A strong-minded private shareholder should ask hard questions, unconcerned to be part of the club and unwilling to be blindsided by jargon and ideology. Asking blunt common sense questions should generate clear, jargon-free answers. If it doesn’t, everyone will know there’s a problem. At least, that would be the intention. Seat the Shorts His second proposal was even more startling: “Put a short seller on the board.” Shorts make their money looking for flaws. They’re forensic ferrets, skilled at probing strategies and numbers to find risk and exposure. It was, of course, short sellers who spotted Enron’s implausibility and short sellers who saw that the banks were taking on too much risk. More shocking than Partnoy’s suggestions, though, is the response he’s had to this one. Nobody will countenance having a short seller on the board. Why? Because, they say, board members shouldn’t be exposed to deep scrutiny and challenge of a kind that shorts do so well (and so profitably.) It might scare them too much. Corporate leaders are afraid of the questions they might be asked and lack confidence in their ability to provide competent or satisfactory answers. That’s a pretty troubling admission. My argument in Partnoy’s class was that much corporate governance is feeble, ritualistic and can’t work because it flies against everything we know about individual neuroscience and group psychology. The only meaningful counterpoise to that has to be a culture of challenge, debate and healthy conflict done well in the interest of shareholders. But if the leaders of organizations can’t or won’t countenance this, we’re in bigger trouble than I thought.

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The Economic Battlefield Of The NBA Lockout

November 21, 2011

By David Berri of Freakonomics With the NBA away, sports fans are looking for something to satisfy their need to watch teams strive for victory. Well, why not take a look at the teams competing in the lockout? Okay, maybe this is a contest only a sports economist could love. But while it may not appeal to everyone, the labor dispute is still best thought of as a contest between two teams. The first team is the NBA owners. The owners are the dominant buyer in the world market for elite basketball talent, so they have substantial monopsony power. In the other corner are the players, who are currently trying to disband their union. This union gave the players monopoly power in the sale of elite basketball talent (more specifically, in helping to determine the conditions under which individual players would sell their services). When a monopsony meets a monopoly on the economic battlefield, the outcome is determined by bargaining. And in that case, bargaining power – or what we call leverage – means everything. Read the entire post at Freakonomics. Or more here: – Paying People to Quit: What Law Schools Can Learn From Zappos – One More Time: Most Notable Quote of 2011 – Turkey Sex: The Way It’s Done Now

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Investor Files Lawsuit Against Scandal-Ridden Company

November 16, 2011

A U.S. investor sued Japan’s Olympus Corp, accusing the scandal-hit company of making false statements about its finances and intentionally hiding losses from investors. Lloyd Graham, who owns 55 American Depository Receipts of Olympus, filed a securities lawsuit against the company Monday, seeking to recover investment losses. The lawsuit seeks class-action status to represent all investors who bought Olympus ADRs in the five years leading up to Nov. 7. A spokesman for Olympus America did not immediately return a call for comment. Japan’s securities watchdog and authorities in Japan, the United States and Britain are probing the 92-year-old company, which admitted last week it hid investment losses for two decades using funds linked to takeover deals. The lawsuit also names as defendants Shuichi Takayama, the company’s current president, as well as Michael Woodford, who was fired as chief executive in October and then became a whistle blower. The court papers also named Tsuyoshi Kikukawa, who resigned as president on Oct. 26, as a defendant. The lawsuit was filed in federal court for Pennsylvania’s Eastern District, which covers Center Valleynear Allentown where Olympus has its U.S. headquarters. The Olympus scandal may not prompt the flurry of securities lawsuits that usually quickly follow accusations of cover-ups and misleading statements by companies. For one thing, Olympus primary stock listing is in Tokyo. Recent court rulings have limited U.S. investors’ ability to sue in U.S. courts over purchases of securities on foreign exchanges. In addition, the company’s ADRs only account for about 1 percent of the company’s float and no one investor has holdings of more than $1 million, according to BNY Mellon Depositary Receipts. This makes it unlikely that ADR investors could collectively seek a big recovery by suing. That has not stopped others from trying to get involved. At least four other law firms in the United States put out press releases encouraging potential plaintiffs to contact them. The case is Lloyd Graham v Olympus Corp et al, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania, No. 11-7103. (Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; additional reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Andre Grenon) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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U.S. Companies Feeling The Pain From European Crisis

November 13, 2011

NEW YORK — The tremors from Europe’s financial upheaval have reached U.S. shores, rattling consumers and companies. The consequences have been limited so far. Yet the United States and Europe are so closely linked that any slowdown across the Atlantic is felt here. U.S. makers of cars, solar panels, drugs, clothes and computer equipment have all reported effects from Europe’s turmoil. Worries that Europe’s crisis could worsen and spread are spooking investors and consumers just as the holiday shopping season nears. Some fear U.S. consumers could rein in spending. Europe’s sputtering growth is already dragging on some U.S. companies’ profits and could further slow the U.S. economy. The crisis “seems to be coming to a head right at the time the U.S. economy is at its most vulnerable,” said Mark Vitner, an economist at Wells Fargo. It’s affecting companies like Marlin Steel Wire Products, a 34-employee business based in Baltimore that’s been seeking a $4 million contract from a German manufacturer for an industrial steel wire project. Marlin’s CEO, Drew Greenblatt, says the German firm is in “pause mode” because of Europe’s turmoil. The German company had promised the order by early November. Marlin’s overall sales are growing briskly. But sales to Europe have been sinking. “If they were ordering like they customarily do, we would have hired more guys,” Greenblatt said. The European Union is the No. 1 U.S. trading partner. Nearly $475 billion in goods crossed between the regions in the first nine months of 2011. About 14 percent of revenue for the 500 biggest U.S. companies – roughly $1.3 trillion – comes from Europe. The U.S. economy is especially vulnerable to the European crisis because it’s growing so weakly and facing other risks, such as weak hiring, stagnant pay, high energy costs, a wide trade deficit and potentially steep government spending cuts. “It won’t take much to tip us into another recession,” said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State University, Channel Islands. “If Europe gets into any deeper trouble, it will take us and the rest of the world down, too.” The European Union said last week that the region could slip into a “deep and prolonged recession” next year. The Eurozone is expected to grow just 0.5 percent in 2012. That’s far below the 1.8 percent growth predicted in the spring. Wells Fargo estimates that the U.S. economy will grow 2.1 percent next year, 0.4 percentage point lower because of Europe’s slowdown. Goldman Sachs thinks the region’s slowdown could shave a full percentage point off U.S. growth. Even if Europe doesn’t fall into a downturn, its turmoil is affecting U.S companies and consumers in several ways: _ Stock-market gyrations unsettle consumers and make them more cautious about spending. _ U.S. companies with big European operations are suffering from lower sales, prices and profits. _ Banks worldwide are cutting lending and hoarding cash to create more cushion for potentially deep losses on their holdings of Greek, Italian and other government debt. U.S. and overseas banks are keeping about $1.57 trillion in reserves at the Federal Reserve – a jump of nearly $580 billion in the past year. _ Uncertainty about how much damage Europe could cause is making corporations reluctant to spend their piles of cash to hire and invest. Not every U.S. company is hurting in Europe, of course. McDonald’s Corp., Kraft Foods Inc., Sara Lee Corp. and Oracle Corp. recently reported strong results there. But General Motors Co.’s third-quarter profit fell 15 percent, due mainly to slower sales and higher costs in Europe. “Things have clearly deteriorated,” GM Chief Financial Officer Dan Ammann told investors last week. Jeff Fettig, CEO of Whirlpool, said late last month that with demand tumbling in parts of Europe, the company plans to lay off 5,000 workers in North America and Europe. First Solar, based in Phoenix, is postponing plans to finish building a solar panel factory in Vietnam because of a worldwide glut in panels. The glut has been caused by falling demand in Europe, the world’s biggest solar market. Falling prices caused by the glut have sent share prices of established solar panel makers such as First Solar and SunPower tumbling. They’ve also forced some solar companies such as Solyndra into bankruptcy protection. Abercrombie & Fitch Co.’s struggles in Europe caused its share price to plummet. Nike Inc. said its last quarterly revenue rose in every region it operates in except Western Europe. Cisco expects growth in the area to slip about 5 percent during the next three months. “Europe, we think, is going to be a challenge for us for this next quarter,” Cisco CEO John Chambers told analysts Wednesday. Smaller businesses are being affected, too. Wine exports are suffering because of poor consumer sentiment in Europe and because a weak euro is making U.S. wine costlier by comparison. The European Union accounts for about 38 percent of U.S. wine industry exports. For banks, the crisis is different, and scarier. They hold debt of European governments and companies that could lose value if the crisis worsens. The big fear is that big U.S. and European banks would become so worried about each other’s ability to cover losses that they’d stop lending to each other. The result could be diminished confidence that would freeze lending and shock the global economy. Last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told soldiers and their families in Texas that Europe posed a “significant risk” to the U.S. economy. Europe’s troubles have been weighing on U.S. stock markets for months. David Hensley, a global economist at JPMorgan Chase, noted that falling stock prices make consumers feel less wealthy and cause some to cut back on spending. That, in turn, slows U.S. growth. The unease is growing right as the holiday shopping season – which accounts for up to 40 percent of retailers’ annual sales – is about to start. “The retail industry is hyper-sensitive to any sort of national or international crisis that affects consumer confidence,” said Brian Dodge of the Retail Leaders Industry Association. “Consumers read the news.” ___ Rugaber reported from Washington, Liedtke from San Francisco. AP Business Writers Tom Krisher in Detroit, Sarah Skidmore in Portland, Ore., and Martin Crutsinger in Washington contributed to this report. Jonathan Fahey can be reached at . http://twitter.com/JonathanFahey

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How Is The European Debt Crisis Affecting Your Business?

November 11, 2011

Main Street can feel pretty far away from, say, the piazzas of Rome and the platias of Athens. But the recent political and economic turmoil in Italy, Greece and elsewhere across Europe has shaken global markets — and the aftershocks are eventually felt right back here at home. For better or worse — and there are cases to be made for both — the world is indeed becoming flatter and more interconnected. Which is great during boom times, providing a huge potential market that simply wasn’t possible to reach just a generation ago. Problem is, in the financial markets and beyond, trouble can spread much more quickly as a result. Entrepreneurs in general are wise to keep a close eye on global news and trends, even if they still do all of their business in the good ol’ US of A, because the reality is that at least something in your supply chain inevitably comes from somewhere else these days. And for entrepreneurs that already do direct business overseas in some capacity, you’re probably already feeling it. From revised investment strategies to a drop in customer demand, the members of our Board of Directors are doing just that. So we asked them to weigh in the unfolding crises in Europe — and what it means for their businesses.

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Greek Prime Minister Launches Efforts To Form Coalition

November 5, 2011

ATHENS, Greece — Greece’s prime minister launched efforts to form a coalition government to run the country for the next four months, arguing Saturday the move is vital to securing a mammoth new debt deal and demonstrating commitment to remaining in the eurozone. George Papandreou won an early morning confidence vote in the Socialist-led parliament on a pledge that he was willing to step aside and form a cross-party caretaker government. But it remains unclear whether the main opposition conservatives and other parties will take part in the talks and drop a demand for an immediate general election. Hours after winning the vote, Papandreou met with President Karolos Papoulias. “Cooperation is necessary to guarantee – for Greece and for our partners – that we can honor our commitments,” Papandreou said at the start of Saturday’s hourlong meeting. “I am concerned that a lack of cooperation could trouble how our partners see our will and desire to remain in the central core of the European Union and the euro,” he said. Papandreou, midway through his four-year term, was forced into the move by his austerity-weary Socialist party after he abandoned a disastrous proposal to hold a referendum on a new European debt deal. The idea was quickly scrapped this week after throwing world markets into renewed turmoil and drawing an angry reaction from European leaders. Frustrated with Greece’s protracted political disagreements, the country’s creditors have threatened to withhold the next critical euro8 billion ($11 billion) loan installment until the new debt deal is formally approved in Greece. Greece is surviving on a euro110 billion ($150 billion) rescue-loan program from eurozone partners and the International Monetary Fund. It is currently finalizing a second mammoth deal: to receive an additional euro130 billion ($179 billion) in loans and bank support, with banks agreeing to cancel 50 percent of their Greek debt. “My immediate aim is to do everything I can to create a broad cooperation government … I am not tied to my post,” Papandreou said. “Cooperation is required for the country. We must not go to elections at this moment because it would have catastrophic consequences for the Greek economy and the livelihoods of Greek citizens,” he said. “The (new debt) agreement is very significant and will relieve much of the burden on the Greek citizen.” Socialist party officials insisted any new government would need until late February to secure the second deal, warning that a snap poll could scuttle it. They insisted Saturday that Papandreou’s offer to step aside was sincere, and called on Antonis Samaras, leader of the conservative New Democracy party, to urgently reconsider his party’s position. “If Mr. Samaras were willing to back a new government, the prime minister would resign today,” Yiannis Magriotis, a deputy public works minister, told private Skai television. Prominent political analyst Ilias Nicolacopoulos argued it would be difficult for Samaras to avoid the coalition talks altogether – even if he remains reluctant to share power with Papandreou. “There will be a tough game of poker – all of last week was a poker game – to determine what type of government can be formed,” he told AP television. ___ Theodora Tongas in Athens contributed to this report.

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G20 Branded ‘A Failure’ With Greek Crisis Showing No Signs Of Ending

November 5, 2011

The G20 Summit in Cannes has largely been branded a failure by political pundits, with David Cameron warning the continued uncertainty surrounding the bailouts for Greece and the wider Eurozone risks damaging the British economy. UK ministers have used interviews to warn growth is likely to remain sluggish following the breakup of talks in France. A communique issued by the heads of government following the talks describes the G20 summit as “successful”, but the claim was almost immediately rubbished by Britain’s prime minister, who warned the problems within the Eurozone hadn’t been fixed. David Cameron told reporters: “This is having a chilling effect on our economy. Every day that it goes on unresolved is a day that’s not good for our economic prospects.” The only political relief for Cameron is he now has a good explanation when the growth figures for the final quarter of 2011 come in. Most analysts predict that the modest gains seen over the summer will be wiped out. Expect the narrative now coming from Downing Street of the Eurozone crisis providing a “chilling effect” on the UK economy to be expanded. The heads of government hoped the Greek political crisis would have moved towards a resolution last night but instead prime minister George Papandreou survived a confidence motion at the parliament in Athens . He has suggested he could now become the head of a government of national unity, but the fractious nature of Greek politics makes this unlikely. The main opposition party says they won’t enter into government with him , prompting speculation that Papandreou will have to resign anyway in the next few days. Although the UK has signalled it is ready to increase its IMF contributions, how much those payments might be – and where that money might be needed – remains unclear. The Italian government has been told the IMF will be monitoring its austerity agenda closely, amid fears Italy could be the first major European economy to come under the kind of pressure that has afflicted Ireland, Portugal and Greece. One British official told The Guardian of their frustration : “We cannot have the Italians meeting in crisis every three days. We need some action.” David Cameron has confirmed that any rise in British IMF contributions won’t require a Commons vote because the money will fall within potential funds already agreed on in June – that vote saw a significant Tory rebellion, although by no means as large as the one seen a fortnight ago on the EU referendum motion. But many Tories are disturbed by the idea of Britain putting more money into the IMF. Tory 1922 Committee Secretary Mark Pritchard told HuffPost UK yesterday that the limited measures agreed at the G20 amounted to “a back-door bailout in all but name.” In an interview with The Daily Telegraph employment minister Chris Grayling signalled support for the Euro rebel Tory MPs, saying, “I understand where our colleagues were coming from,” and suggested that whatever happens within the Eurozone will require “significant renegotiation” of Britain’s place within the EU.

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Greek Prime Minister Survives Critical Confidence Vote

November 5, 2011

ATHENS, Greece — Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou survived a confidence vote early Saturday, calming a vicious revolt in his Socialist party with an emotional pledge to step aside if necessary and seek a cross-party government lasting four months to safeguard a new European debt agreement. Papandreou won the critical parliamentary confidence motion 153-145 after a week of drama in Athens that horrified Greece’s European partners, spooked global markets and overshadowed the Group of 20 summit in the French resort of Cannes. The threat of a Greek default or exit from the common euro currency has worsened the continent’s debt crisis, which is already struggling under bailouts for Greece, Ireland and Portugal. Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos, who warned that the debt-ridden country still faced “mortal danger,” said the new government would last until the end of February. But conservative opposition leader Antonis Samaras demanded immediate elections. He did not say whether he would join coalition talks, due to be formally launched later Saturday when Papandreou meets the country’s president. “The masks have fallen,” Samaras said. “Mr. Papandreou has rejected our proposals in their entirety. The responsibility he bears is huge. The only solution is elections.” Midway through its four-year term, Papandreou’s government came under threat after his disastrous bid this week to hold a referendum on a major new European debt agreement. The idea was swiftly scrapped Thursday after an angry response from markets and European leaders who said any popular vote in Greece would determine whether the country would keep its cherished euro membership. They also vowed to withhold a critical euro8 billion installment of loans from an existing bailout deal that Greece needs urgently to stave off an imminent and catastrophic default. Papandreou’s shock referendum gamble, and the hostile international response, horrified many of his own party stalwarts. It prompted an open rebellion with senior socialists saying they would only back the confidence vote if he pledged to seek a cross-party coalition with a mandate to secure the new debt deal and the disbursement next bailout loan installment. Struggling to face down the revolt, Papandreou insisted his only priority was to save the country. He insisted he was not concerned with retaining the premiership, but warned that elections now would have been “catastrophic,” jeopardizing Greece’s continued bailout funding, the new debt deal and the country’s euro membership. He sought the vote of confidence “to safeguard a steady course for the country – with no power vacuum, without being dragged to election,” he said. “We must proceed in an organized way. And regardless of developments, the country must be governed tomorrow without turbulence.” Several thousands supporters of Greece’s Communist Party protested outside parliament just ahead of Friday’s vote to demand elections, in a rally that ended peacefully. Government officials said they were not deterred by an initial hostile response by opposition parties to the coalition offer. “We will keep inviting (Samaras), and re-inviting him, again and again until we have a result,” Agriculture Minister Costas Skandalidis said. After seeing nearly two years of harsh austerity measures that spurred crippling strikes, violent demonstrations and street attacks against his lawmakers, Papandreou insisted the burden of painful reform could not be carried without help from opposition parties. “We, the Socialist party deputies, carried the cross of reform … But one group in Parliament is not enough,” he said. “This great task requires sincere and broad support.” Greece has been surviving since May 2010 on a first euro110 billion bailout. But its financial crisis was so severe that a second rescue was needed as the country remained locked out of international bond markets by sky-high interest rates and facing an unsustainable national debt increase. The new European deal, agreed on Oct. 27 after marathon negotiations, would give Greece an additional euro130 billion ($179 billion) in rescue loans and bank support. It would also see banks write off 50 percent of Greek debt, worth some euro100 billion ($138 billion). The goal is to reduce Greece’s debts to the point where the country is able to handle its finances without relying on constant bailouts. In return for bailout money, Greece was forced to embark on a punishing program of tax hikes and cuts in pensions and salaries that sent Papandreou’s popularity plummeting and his majority in parliament whittled down from a comfortable 10 seats to just two. ____ Associated Press writers Demetris Nellas and Nicholas Paphitis in Athens contributed to this report.

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Papandreou Survives No-Confidence Vote

November 4, 2011

George Papandreou has survived the crucial no-confidence vote on his leadership. Members of the Greek parliament returned a result of 153 to 145. The prime minister needed 151 votes to survive. The eurozone bailout package now looks certain to be passed. Tomorrow, Papandreou will meet the Greek President and request to form a coalition government. The result will raise a sigh of relief across the eurozone, particularly with the leaders at the G20 summit in Cannes, France. Had the prime minister lost the vote, Greece would have publically defaulted throwing the beleaguered eurozone project into further chaos. The much-needed tranche of bailout cash will now be paid to Greek treasury.

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Report: Greek Prime Minister Agrees To Step Down

November 3, 2011

ATHENS/CANNES, France (Reuters) – Intense European pressure forced debt-stricken Greece to seek political consensus on a new bailout plan instead of holding a referendum after EU leaders raised the prospect of a Greek exit from the euro to preserve the single currency. Fast-moving events in Athens overshadowed the first day of a summit of the Group of 20 major economies on the French Riviera on Thursday, with anxious world leaders urging Europe to act to stop contagion from its sovereign debt crisis. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou bowed to cabinet rebels and agreed to step down and make way for a negotiated coalition government if his Socialists back him in a confidence vote on Friday, government sources told Reuters. “He was told that he must leave calmly in order to save his (PASOK) party,” one source said on condition of anonymity. “He agreed to step down. It was very civilized, with no acrimony.” Papandreou, son and grandson of left-wing prime ministers, hinted he was ready to quit for the sake of national unity, telling parliament he was not wedded to his job. G20 leaders meeting in Cannes discussed increasing the International Monetary Fund’s resources and building a financial firewall to protect vulnerable euro zone economies Italy and Spain from a possible Greek default. Papandreou said his call this week for a referendum, which sparked panic on global financial markets and infuriated European partners, “was never a purpose in itself”, and he would be happy if the vote were not held. Papandreou told PASOK lawmakers he had agreed to talks with the center-right opposition on a transitional government to implement a new EU/IMF bailout program agreed last week, and pave the way for early elections. At a bruising meeting in Cannes on Wednesday night, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned him that Athens would not receive a cent more in aid until it met its commitments to the euro zone. Greece was due to get a vital 8 billion euro installment this month and says it will run out of money in mid-December if it does not get the loan. Despite the turmoil in Athens and uncertainty over the euro zone, European stock markets and the euro rallied in volatile trading as the likelihood grew that Greece would not hold the highly risky referendum. The European Central Bank also provided a surprise boost by cutting interest rates by 25 points to 1.25 percent and saying its policy of buying euro zone government bonds would continue for now with limited scope to support its monetary policy. The leaders of China, Russia and the United States pressed the Europeans to move more swiftly to contain the debt crisis, with Washington urging Germany to relent and let the ECB play a greater role in financial firefighting, G20 sources said. “Europe should aid itself. The European Union has everything for that today — the political authority, the financial resources and the backing of many countries,” Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said the leaders had discussed contingency plans if Greece were to leave the euro zone, “but my expectation is that cooler heads will prevail and the package will be accepted (by Greece)”. ITALY NEXT Italy was next in the euro zone firing line, facing fierce pressure to make good on long delayed economic reforms. European G20 leaders along with U.S. President Barack Obama, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde and new ECB President Mario Draghi met on the sidelines to press Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi for a timetable for key labor market, pension and privatization measures, EU sources said. Berlusconi failed to win agreement from his divided center-right cabinet for the reforms just before flying to Cannes. A draft plan agreed with the G20 on Thursday includes a commitment by Italy to get its budget deficit “near balance” by 2013 and to rapidly reduce its debt-to-GDP ratio, sources told Reuters. That is less ambitious than Italy’s promise only last month to balance its budget in 2013. EU leaders are concerned that if Italy cannot get its finances in order, the economy — the eurozone’s third largest — could go the way of Greece, Ireland and Portugal in needing a bailout from the EU. GREECE REVOLT In Athens, Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos led the revolt against Papandreou, saying Greece’s euro membership was a historic achievement and “cannot depend on a referendum”. Dissident PASOK lawmakers called for a temporary national unity government, which some suggested could be led by former ECB vice-president Lucas Papademos. Signaling for the first time a will to compromise, opposition leader Antonis Samaras called for a transitional government to lead Greece to early elections within weeks and said parliament should first ratify last week’s 130 billion euro ($178 billion) bailout deal. European Union leaders have long called for national unity in support of painful austerity measures required to cut the country’s crippling debt, expected to reach 160 percent of gross domestic product this year. Sarkozy told a news conference the tough message delivered by France and Germany to Greece’s political class was starting to bear fruit. “Things are progressing,” he said, welcoming Samaras’ support for the bailout plan. Euro area leaders talked openly of a possible Greek exit from the 17-nation currency area, seeking to maximize pressure on Athens and preserve the euro in case of a “no” vote. Merkel repeated that the stability of the euro had priority for Germany over Greece’s euro membership, touching a popular nerve at home. Germany’s best selling Bild newspaper railed against Greece and demanded it be ejected from the euro. A telephone poll found 86 percent of Germans want Greece out of the currency. The chairman of euro zone finance ministers, Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, said policymakers were working on possible scenarios for a Greek exit. The specter of a possible hard Greek default and euro exit hung over the G20 summit, highlighting Europe’s frailty and divisions just when Sarkozy had hoped to showcase his leadership of the world’s major economies. The summit had been meant to focus on reforms of the global monetary system and steps to rein in speculative capital flows and regulate commodities markets, but the shockwaves from Greece upended the talks. Obama said Europe had taken some important steps toward a comprehensive solution to its debt crisis but now needed to flesh out and implement the plan quickly. A disorderly Greek default would reverberate across the euro zone, engulfing big economies like Italy and Spain, and potentially plunging the global economy into a recession. CREDIT LINES? Euro zone finance ministers are working to accelerate implementation of an anti-crisis package agreed on October 27. That plan, which includes debt relief for Greece, a recapitalization of European banks and a leveraging of the bloc’s rescue fund, was meant to stem the two-year old crisis before Papandreou’s referendum call cast the bloc into turmoil. Officials said the meeting focused on speeding up the creation of a firewall to protect other vulnerable euro zone states from the fallout from Greece. The risk premium on Italian bonds over safe-haven German Bunds has hit euro-lifetime highs this week, despite European Central Bank buying of its bonds. Spain had to pay its highest yield since 2008 at a bond auction on Thursday. The G20 is considering an IMF proposal to create a new short-term line of credit to help countries that are facing economic shocks beyond their control, a G20 official familiar with the talks said. British finance minister George Osborne said leaders discussed increasing the global lender’s resources, which China strongly backed, and he had heard no dissenting voices. (Additional reporting by Lefteris Papadimas in Athens, David Ljungren, Abhijit Neogy, Giselda Vagnoni, Catherine Bremer, Gernot Heller, Daniel Flynn, Luke Baker, Gui Qing Koh and Alexei Anischuk in Cannes; Writing by Paul Taylor; Editing by Janet McBride) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Another Reporter Arrested At Occupy Protest

November 2, 2011

Another journalist has been arrested at an Occupy movement protest. Kristyna Wentz-Graff, a photographer for the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, was arrested on Wednesday during a rally near the University Of Wisconsin, the paper reported . Wetz-Graff was photographing other arrests taking place when she was grabbed by the police. The Journal-Sentinel said she texted the newsroom informing them she had been arrested. A number of other journalists have been arrested by police at Occupy protests around the country. A freelance writer for the New York Times was one of hundreds arrested at the Brooklyn Bridge in late September. Another reporter for an alternative Nashville newspaper actually filmed his own arrest .

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Foreclosure-Mocking Law Firm Issues Apologies For Costumes

November 2, 2011

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The head of a foreclosure law firm whose employees mocked victims of the mortgage crisis at a Halloween party last year apologized Wednesday to an outraged advocate for the homeless who said the firm showed “a disgusting lack of sensitivity.” Pictures from the Steven J. Baum law firm’s 2010 Halloween party turned up last week in The New York Times, which said it received them from an unidentified former employee. The pictures show people dressed to look homeless and a sign reading “Baum Estates” near part of the office decorated to resemble a row of foreclosed homes. Another picture features a tattered green tarp over what appears to be a hovel for the homeless. The Baum law firm in suburban Buffalo is one of the largest-volume mortgage foreclosure firms in New York. Last year, it handled nearly 40 percent of the 46,572 foreclosure actions brought in New York courts, the New York Law Journal reported in February. Amid an investigation by the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan, Baum agreed last month to pay $2 million and change its practices after admitting to errors in legal filings that it blamed on the high volume of mortgage defaults and foreclosures it handles. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman also is investigating the firm’s practices, a person familiar with the investigation said, speaking on condition of anonymity because active investigations are not discussed publicly. After denying to the Times that employees had mocked those who had lost their homes, the firm has in recent days acknowledged the costumes were inappropriate and apologized for last year’s Halloween party. The news comes as foreclosures continue to create a drag on the American economy and protests have erupted around the nation to protest what activists say is rampant corporate greed and influence on government that maintains a crippling disparity between rich and poor. “I again want to sincerely apologize for the inappropriate costumes worn by some of our employees at our Halloween Party in 2010. It was in extremely poor taste and I take full responsibility,” Steven J. Baum said in an emailed statement to The Associated Press on Wednesday. “I know people were extremely offended and people have every right to be upset with me and my firm.” Baum later met with Dale Zuchlewski, executive director of the Homeless Alliance of Western New York, who had sent a letter demanding an apology and offering to educate employees on the plight of the homeless. “Your firm and its employees profit at the misfortunes of others and are an active participant in making people homeless in the first place,” Zuchlewski wrote. “Allowing employees to participate in a company sponsored function such as this shows a disgusting lack of sensitivity. … Mocking others is a former of bullying that simply cannot be tolerated in our society.” After the meeting, Zuchlewski said Baum reported that he didn’t know about the party at one of the firm’s offices, but that he took responsibility. “He offered no excuses, apologized several times and has offered to have himself and his employees volunteer for homeless causes on a regular basis,” Zuchlewski said.

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Marc Ostrofsky: Sell Before You Buy: 10 Steps to a Successful "Reverse E-Commerce" Business

November 1, 2011

One of the most exciting opportunities posed by the Internet today is “reverse e-commerce.” You can “sell before you buy” with virtually no limits! And it could not be simpler. Here are 10 steps to get you started with a successful reverse e-commerce business of your own. 1. Go down to your own version of ” Harwin Street .” That’s a location in Houston, Texas, where importers sell large and small quantities of products at wholesale prices. Most cities have a Harwin Street. New York has Canal Street, Los Angeles has a few streets downtown, San Francisco has a handful of them in or around Chinatown. If your city doesn’t have a concentrated location for importers, check out your local flea market or a major city that has a shipping port where items flow into the United States. 2. Take some digital photos of 20, 30 or 50 products you think might sell well online. These could be watches, statues, automotive products or articles of clothing. This is a test to see what will sell. 3. Make sure to note the costs and how much inventory the importer or wholesaler has available. 4. Write advertising copy to accompany your photos to try and sell your newly found “virtual inventory.” 5. Post them on eBay or any other online sales outlet ( Craigslist , etsy , online classifieds,etc.). 6. See which products sell and which don’t. 7. Collect the money. 8. Fulfill the sale. 9. Repeat steps 4-7 for the products that sell. 10. Go back out and find more products to test for sale. Then, repeat the same process, often with the very same copy and photo you just used. Remember, the most successful sellers sell and resell and resell again — often from the very same photo. As long as there is inventory to sell, why not keep selling if the customers keep buying? You can also take a picture of something in your home, in a friend’s home, in a wholesaler’s warehouse, in a used car lot or from anyone who wants to sell more of what he’s already selling. The ideas are endless. CLICK TIP: Suppose your friend has a car for sale. Make an agreement, preferably in writing, that if you can sell his car you keep all the money above his asking price. Then take a picture of the car and sell it (with your profit or markup included) via the Internet. Your friend is happy because he has money for his car. The customer is happy because he got the car he wanted. You’re happy because you’re pocketing your profit. You can do this with any product, any supplier or any importer who has inventory he or she wants to move.

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Former U.K. Prime Minister On How To Escape Global Economic Downturn

October 20, 2011

The world’s major economies are increasingly vulnerable to falling into a global economic downturn unless they can swiftly coalesce to patch up a tattered European financial system and embrace policies aimed at generating vigorous growth, former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown warned during a meeting with HuffPost editors and reporters on Wednesday. Brown said that the world’s major economies need to agree to a global growth pact and international financial standards in order to escape from an avoidable but increasingly likely global economic downturn. “Global problems need global solutions,” Brown said. “If you can’t actually grow your economy, then the danger is that most of the action you take does not achieve the results that you intended it to achieve.” Europe is teetering on the edge of a financial crisis. If Greece defaults on its debt, then other troubled European countries would become more likely to default on their debt as interest rates rise, and European banks holding sovereign debt would be in danger of running out of cash and going bankrupt. As a result, U.S. banks could slash lending , and the American economy could shrink , according to some economists. While the euro zone has funneled loans to Greece to postpone a default, it has not taken action to restructure Greece’s debt, and its bailout fund amounts to only 440 billion euros — a fraction of the debt of the five European countries in danger of defaulting. A German finance ministry spokesman said on Wednesday that the size of the bailout fund will not be increased, according to Reuters. Brown, who was prime minister of Britain during the height of the financial crisis between 2007 and 2010, said that European political leaders need to take “radical action” to prevent a global economic downturn. In Brown’s view, world leaders never fully addressed the underlying fundamentals of the financial crisis and are now facing the same persistent problems — too many banks with too little cash on hand and a lack of knowledge about where money is flowing and how it puts the system at risk. Unless political leaders agree to international financial regulations, he said, major banks will continue to threaten to move elsewhere in a “race to the bottom.” Brown diagnosed the crisis in Europe primarily as a banking and economic growth crisis, dividing himself from northern European leaders who have characterized southern European countries as reckless spenders that now must face severe austerity measures. Greece’s economy has been shrinking since the announcement of austerity measures, and the country has become even less able to pay its debts as tax revenue drops. Conservative politicians in other European countries also have cut or refused to increase spending, and their economies are slowing in response. Even Germany, Europe’s largest economy, has seen its growth slow to a halt . Brown said that European banks are dramatically undercapitalized, putting them in danger of running out of cash and going bankrupt if investors demand their deposits at the same time. Brown’s solution is ensuring that the European Financial Stability Facility hold up to $3 trillion in order to bail out European banks if necessary. In addition to fixing its financial system, Brown said Europe also needs to grow its way out of its economic crisis. To ensure global economic growth, he said that world leaders need to agree on a mechanism that would allow emerging markets to consume more imports and developed economies to produce more exports so that both areas of the world can grow in sync. Brown’s comments come as the global recovery has hit a wall. The American economy grew at a rate of just 1.3 percent in the second quarter of this year, Europe’s economy has slowed to a crawl, and even China’s export-driven economy has slowed as demand for Chinese goods from other areas of the world has fallen. Brown also insisted that any international economic plan must include China. He proposed a mutually beneficial deal for the China and U.S. — China agreeing to increase its historically-low consumer spending and the U.S. agreeing to increase investment in order to ensure that its national economy will grow. Instead, American political leaders have increasingly blamed China for allegedly claiming American jobs in manufacturing and other areas, as well as keeping its currency artificially cheap compared to the dollar , allowing them to export more of their goods around the world. Brown warned that a repeat of protectionism from the Great Depression — in which countries retreated into their own “silos” and devised “self-defeating” solutions — would ensure a mutually assured economic downturn. He did not express much optimism as to whether European politicians would rise to the challenge of drafting a visionary global plan for economic growth. “Every time there’s a crisis, they take action that is too little and too late, and so the next time you have to deal with the next problem, it’s a bigger problem, and you have to take even more radical action,” Brown said. “You move from what was perhaps a manageable problem to a situation that has gone out of control because it hasn’t been dealt with adequately.”

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Moody’s Downgrades Spain On Corporate, Bank Debt

October 18, 2011

NEW YORK – Moody’s Investors Service Tuesday cut Spain’s sovereign ratings by two notches, saying high levels of debt in the Spanish banking and corporate sectors leave the country vulnerable to funding stress. Further downgrades of Spain’s rating are possible if the euro zone debt crisis escalates, Moody’s warned. The agency cut Spain’s government bond ratings to A1 from Aa2, concluding the review for a possible downgrade it had initiated at the end of July. The new rating has a negative outlook. (Reporting by Walter Brandimarte; Editing by James Dalgleish) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Robert Kuttner: Obama, Geithner, and the Next Financial Crisis

October 10, 2011

Over the past few weeks, President Obama has at last “pivoted,” in the widely used term, from emphasizing deficit reduction to focusing on jobs and taxation of millionaires. Spontaneous protest has done what the organized left failed to do; it has made Wall Street the appropriate target of diffuse economic frustrations. The labor movement has added its weight and institutional skills to these protests, and even President Obama has had some kind words for them. Fox News and the Republicans have been usefully flummoxed, since it is awfully hard to rise to the defense of the Wall Street banks that caused the financial collapse and to retain credibility with anyone, even the Tea Party base. But here comes the next phase of the financial crisis, and it will test President Obama’s leadership like nothing else. It will also make or break the faltering credibility of Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. In recent days, it has become clear that several large banks, most notably Bank of America, are teetering. Though the backlash against the giant bank’s proposed five-dollar-a-month charge for debit cards has gotten the headlines, this is the least of its problems. The profits from this new charge would be chump change measured against the bank’s chasms of losses, the legacy of its ill-advised purchases of Countrywide Financial and Merrill Lynch in 2008. Worried investors have driven Bank of America stock down to the range of 5 to 6 dollars a share. Bank of America’s books are still glutted with non-performing mortgage loans, and a grand solution to the mortgage crisis seems further away than ever. Meanwhile, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley with their large holdings of Greek government bonds are also in some jeopardy, which adds to the general crisis of confidence. The Federal Reserve has been throwing “liquidity,” otherwise known as nearly interest-free money, at the banks as necessary, to keep inter-bank markets from freezing up as they nearly did in 2008. As recently as three weeks ago, at a “Delivering Alpha” financial conference, Geithner assured his audience that despite the European crisis American banks were in great shape: Our financial system — because of the actions we took early in the crisis — is in a much stronger position to deal with these new risks than it was before this crisis. Much, much stronger position. Way ahead of the rest of the world in terms of making sure they have a stronger financial foundation to handle any type of shock. This has been Geithner’s strategy since the earliest days of the crisis: work with the Federal Reserve to throw money at the big banks, resist fundamental changes in their business model, and talk up their solvency even in the face of contrary evidence. Given the proprietary data that Geithner surely sees as Treasury Secretary, he must know that these words are wishful at best and downright deceptive at worst. If his assurances turn out to be so much baloney, then Geithner, President Obama’s re-election chances, and the economy could all be in big trouble. The fact is that European banks are functioning only because the European Central Bank in spite of its reluctance has been flooding the system with liquidity, and at least one U.S bank — Bank of America — is barely solvent and heavily reliant on the Fed. If events turn critical again and we face a repeat risk of the seizing up of financial markets as in the fall of 2008, the Obama administration’s rhetorical populist turn will be of no use. The president will need to make a fateful decision. Worst of all would be to let a large institution like Bank of America just fail. Outside of the hard-core Tea Party right, nobody supports this. The second worst policy would be to just keep throwing money at a zombie institution to keep up the pretense that it is solvent. We tried that policy in 2008 and 2009. It helped entrenched bankers keep their jobs and their outsized profits, but a wounded banking system continued to be a lead weight on the rest of the economy. So now President Obama, if faced with a repeat crisis of large banks, may get a do-over. In the spring of 2009, when the leading zombie bank was Citigroup, then chief economic adviser Larry Summers and Treasury Secretary Geithner took the position that they could not seize, clean out, and break up Citi because they lacked the legal authority or the tools to do it. It’s also clear from several accounts, including my own A Presidency in Peril and most recently Ron Suskind’s new book Confidence Men that Summers and Geithner did not want to do it. According to Suskind, Obama himself wanted to break-up of Citi as his preferred option, and Geithner slow-walked the president until the issue was moot. But the Dodd-Frank Act now gives the treasury secretary explicit authority to find that a large, systemically significant financial company is “in danger of default”; to designate the FDIC as receiver; and to seize, break up, and reorganize failing large banks. Though there is surely contingency planning for the collapse of a large bank, Geithner seems loathe to use his new authority. So, consider three possible scenarios in coming days or weeks. First scenario: the big banks, thanks to advances from the Federal Reserve, keep barely afloat. Geithner’s credibility survives, but the real economy continues to be a shambles. This is not exactly auspicious, either for economically frustrated Americans or for an incumbent president facing re-election. Second scenario: Investors keep fleeing Bank of America, the giant bank finds itself frozen out of short term lending markets as Lehman Brothers was, and the bank finally turns to the government for emergency aid. There is a new financial crisis in the headlines, and it falls in on President Obama and his Treasury Secretary, who was been reassuring everyone that all is well with the large banks. Third scenario: President Obama decides to get other opinions besides Geithner’s and to get out ahead of the crisis. If things turn critical, he directs his Treasury Secretary to seize the bank, as authorized by the Dodd-Frank Act. Obama tells the citizenry that the alternative was endless bailouts or a Lehman-style collapse (just imagine the right trying to defend either), and that this way those who caused the crisis will be appropriately removed from their suites and bonuses while the bank is returned to health so that the broad economy can prosper. Serious consideration of this last approach would take much more of a “pivot” on Obama’s part than we have seen to date. I recall, in reading biographies of Presidents Kennedy and Roosevelt, how both leaders sought multiple sources of advice. Kennedy would pick up the phone and speak to a relatively junior desk officer at the State Department to get his own information unfiltered by his gatekeepers. Roosevelt made sure he had direct access to multiple advisers who disagreed with each other. But Geithner has been astute at blocking access to the president for others who have different views, and Obama has been startlingly incurious and compliant. The man needs to get on the phone. It also happens that Bank of America is headquartered in Charlotte, North Caroline, site of the 2012 Democratic National Convention, and the bank is expected to be one of the convention’s top-tier corporate sponsors. Oh, my. Moving to resolve and break up the bank under Dodd-Frank, should it prove to be insolvent, would take uncharacteristic nerve. In September 2008, the financial collapse fell in on George W. Bush and won the election for Barack Obama. A repeat collapse, if handled badly, would fall in squarely on Obama. Populist rhetoric when angry people are in the streets demanding accountability for bankers is a start, but talk is cheap. If the banking mess turns critical again, we will see what this president has learned, and what he is made of. Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect and a senior fellow at Demos. His latest book is A Presidency in Peril.

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Booming German firms cast nervous eye to euro crisis

September 30, 2011

By Noah Barkin and Brian Rohan GOETTINGEN, Germany (Reuters) – The euro zone crisis looms like a dark cloud over Europe’s biggest economy, but Stephan Gais can’t see it. Not for now at least. The 55-year old chairman of Mahr, a classic German “Mittelstand” firm that makes measuring instruments for the auto, engineering and medical sectors, had his best month ever in August, pulling in 18 million euros worth of new orders. He expects revenues to push above the 200 million euro mark for the first time next year, nearly double what the company hauled in at the height of the global financial crisis in 2009, when demand for Mahr’s high-precision products dried up overnight. “We aren’t feeling it at all,” said Gais, a big man with a booming voice whose great-great-grandfather, Carl Mahr, founded the company in 1861. “Naturally we are worried about the turbulence on financial markets, because in the end, the strength of the economy is 50 percent psychology. You can’t underestimate psychology. But we are very optimistic heading into next year,” he told Reuters at the company’s headquarters in Goettingen, a university town in central Germany. Like Mahr, the German economy bounced back sharply from the deep crisis triggered by the bankruptcy of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers three years ago. But signs are mounting that the rebound could be short-lived. German growth ground to a virtual halt in the second quarter of 2011 and leading economic indicators are painting a worrying picture. Last week a survey of purchasing managers suggested the country’s private sector was teetering on the brink, with business activity growing at its weakest pace in more than two years. The threats to Europe’s economic engine are multiple. Growth is slowing in many of Germany’s top export markets as governments rein in spending to bring down high debt levels. Turbulence on financial markets has also made companies and consumers nervous. And the euro zone crisis is a growing danger, as talk of a Greek default builds and investors pile pressure on big economies like Italy and Spain. MIX OF OPTIMISM AND UNCERTAINTY Still, a more nuanced picture emerged from interviews that Reuters conducted with a half dozen or so manufacturers from the German Mittelstand — the small- and medium-sized businesses, often family-owned, that form the backbone of the economy and employ roughly two thirds of its workforce. Many of these firms said they had used the crisis of 2009 to streamline production, make their staff more flexible and accelerate a push into faster-growing emerging markets like China and India. They held on to key employees by making use of the government’s “Kurzarbeit” short-time working scheme — state subsidies which encouraged firms to keep workers on reduced hours. That helped them respond quickly when demand returned. Thanks to longstanding relationships with local, cooperative banks, the Volksbanken, Mittelstand firms say they still have access to loans crucial for investment despite rising pressure on lenders to rein in credit because of the euro zone crisis. Gais at Mahr, for example, said he would seal a 5-year, 45-million euro credit line with a group of banks this week at an interest rate of just 3.5 percent. State bank KfW forecast last week that business investment in Germany would rise 9 percent this year and by 4.5 percent in 2012, fueled by real interest rates that are near historically low levels. Coupled with the optimism, however, is growing frustration with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government and the sense that economic conditions could deteriorate rapidly, as they did after the Lehman collapse, if European leaders fail to act swiftly and decisively in countering their debt crisis. Merkel managed to staunch a rebellion in her center-right coalition on Thursday and secure parliamentary backing for an offer of more cash to back heavily indebted EU governments — but that alone will do little to shore up investors’ confidence. Michael Schneider of Hahn Automation, a 350-strong firm in the western state of Rhineland-Palatinate which builds custom robotics for factories, said the company’s order backlog would provide it with cushion through to mid-2012 and that it had encountered no problems getting funding. “But that could change quickly if things get worse in the euro zone periphery, or if banks get spooked into a credit crunch,” he said. Much depends on where firms get their revenues. Hahn is well placed because it relies heavily on Germany and exports to growing markets like eastern Europe, Turkey, Mexico and China. Less fortunate may be Aerzener Maschinenfabrik, a maker of twin-shaft rotary piston machines up the road from Mahr near Hamelin — the town of the legendary pied piper. The Aerzen firm has exposure to euro zone countries like Italy and Spain, where customers are holding back on making investments. “We are watching the euro crisis closely,” said Bernd Woehlken, a managing director at Aerzener. “We’re not seeing a direct impact, but we are seeing an indirect effect through delays in investment plans. The uncertainty is not good.” HOUSE OF CARDS Klaus Abberger, an economist at the Munich-based Ifo institute who oversees its monthly survey of 7,000 German firms, does not expect Germany to fall back into recession but says the economy could contract in the fourth quarter of the year. He says the biggest risks are a slowdown in the United States, Germany’s second biggest export market, and a deterioration of the euro zone crisis. Until now, investors have viewed Germany as a safe haven, pushing down interest rates for consumers and companies. Were the crisis to deepen however, for example through a Greek debt default that hit German banks, the country could lose its allure, with knock-on effects for the economy. Stephan Gais at Mahr believes the chief threat comes from Europe’s politicians themselves. He accused Merkel of adjusting her euro policy based on the latest opinion polls and polemics in the media, and savaged her coalition partners, the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP), whom he voted for in the 2009 election but now dismisses as a “total flop.” “They don’t have a plan for where they want to take Germany, where they want to take Europe,” Gais said. “I’m not at the point where I think we’ll relive what we experienced in 2009, the kind of recession we saw then. But one thing is clear — if Greece and Italy go bankrupt it will be much worse than Lehman Brothers. Then the house of cards will crumble,” he said. “It needs to be avoided at all costs and I’m hopeful the politicians can do it. In the end they need to make clear that they want Europe, that they want the euro, and how beneficial it has been for us.” (Editing by Alastair Macdonald)

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Europe Aiming To Ramp Up Crisis Fund As Other Nations Raise Alarm

September 25, 2011

WASHINGTON (Dan Flynn and Jan Strupczewski) – Europe is working to ramp up the firepower of its bailout fund, top officials said on Saturday, as the United States, China and other nations raised the alarm about its debt crisis hurting the world economy. Financial markets plunged last week on fears that Greece’s near-bankruptcy could spread to other euro zone countries, heaping pressure on European policymakers to prevent a repeat of the chaos that swept the world in 2007-2009. The European Union’s top economic official, Olli Rehn, said as soon as the region’s governments confirm new powers for their 440-billion-euro fund, known as the EFSF, attention will turn to how to get more impact from the existing money. “We need to find a mechanism where we can turn one euro in the EFSF into five, but there is no decision on how we could do that yet,” another senior European official said on condition of anonymity. The United States and other nations have urged Europe to leverage up the fund, possibly with support from the European Central Bank. But officials from the ECB and from Germany, the region’s paymaster, remained wary of using the central bank, which has a strict mandate to pursue low inflation. “We should not think of leveraging a public pot of funds as a free lunch,” said ECB Governing Council member Patrick Honohan. Nonetheless, arming the euro zone with a bigger warchest to lend to governments or shore up banks was the focus of top finance officials from around the globe who met in Washington for semiannual meetings of the International Monetary Fund. The sovereign debt crisis threatens to throw the euro zone into recession and has placed a troubling drag on an already slow U.S. economy. It could come to weigh on emerging economies too. “Brazil’s experience with past crises suggests you have to confront the problems in a fast, consistent manner,” said Brazilian central bank chief Alexandre Tombini. “The longer it takes, the higher the cost, the more contagion spreads. You have to act with overwhelming force.” The IMF’s steering committee said in a statement that the euro zone was committed to whatever was needed to resolve the single currency bloc’s crisis. It warned that the global economy had “entered a dangerous phase, calling for exceptional vigilance, coordination and readiness to take bold action” to cope with Europe’s financial stress and prevent it infecting others. European officials were scrambling to put in place a comprehensive crisis-fighting plan by the time leaders from the Group of 20 nations meet in France in early November. Greece is at the epicenter of the crisis but it has threatened to spread to several other euro zone countries. Italy, the third-biggest economy in the currency bloc, has also struggled to retain investor confidence, but Italian Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti said on Saturday its financial house was “in order.” U.S. Treasury chief Timothy Geithner, in his most explicit warnings to date, said the ECB should take a more central role in fighting the crisis. “The threat of cascading default, bank runs, and catastrophic risk must be taken off the table,” he said. CALMING NERVES Investors took some comfort on Friday from signs of new resolve by European officials, after nearly two years of what many saw as half-hearted action. “It is encouraging that … European officials are signaling a better appreciation of the depth and potential consequences of the crisis,” Mohamed el-Erian, co-chief investment officer of bond giant PIMCO, said on Saturday after further signals that Europe was bolstering its defenses. “Now they need to translate this into decisive actions underpinned by a common vision of what they want the euro zone to look like in five years time.” Some policymakers now talk openly of a possible Greek default and the need to move much more aggressively to prepare for it. “Decisions as to how to conclusively address the region’s problems cannot wait until the crisis gets more severe,” Geithner said. His warning was echoed by China’s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, who urged quick action to bring greater financial stability to the Europe. Canada’s central bank governor, Mark Carney, told Canadian radio that the euro area’s bailout fund should be more than doubled to “the neighborhood of a trillion euros.” BATTENING THE HATCHES A default by Greece could cause a domino effect in other highly indebted euro zone countries, putting at risk European banks which hold their debt. Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said Athens was determined not to default and would stay in the euro zone. “Greece will always be in the euro and Greece will never go bankrupt because this would be destructive for the euro zone and for many other countries beyond the euro zone,” he said. Athens is in tense talks with the IMF and European authorities to secure a new 8 billion-euro installment of its rescue package. In return, it has pledged deep austerity measures but negotiators are frustrated at what they say is Greece’s slow reform pace. A loan payment, however, is still expected to be made in October. The next installment is due in December. Venizelos was quoted by two newspapers on Friday as saying an orderly default with a 50 percent “haircut” for bondholders was one way to resolve the heavily indebted euro zone nation’s cash crunch. European banks have agreed to take a 21 percent loss on their Greek bonds in a restructuring deal. To battle the crisis, Geithner called for more cooperation between European policymakers — who set their own tax and fiscal policy — and their central bank. One option to increase the potency of the EFSF would be for the ECB to commit large amounts of funding, with the temporary bailout fund putting forward money to cover potential losses. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said he was open to the idea of leveraging Europe’s rescue fund but said that did not necessarily mean the ECB should provide the extra firepower. [ID:nS1E78N083] In another sign of new thinking by Europe, Schaeuble said Germany backed bringing forward the launch of the euro zone’s permanent rescue mechanism, which is currently scheduled for mid-2013. The new mechanism would give policymakers powers to impose losses on private bondholders in a default and could be leveraged more easily than the temporary version of the fund. Germany, as the strongest economy in Europe, needs to play a central role in any effort to curb a debt crisis, but public opinion there has turned against further big bailouts for fellow euro zone countries. Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Week Ahead: Housing and Consumer Confidence

September 23, 2011

Investors next week will review housing data and its close ally, consumer confidence . Plummeting home prices have taken their toll on consumer confidence as homeowners have reined in spending in proportion to the shrinking value of their house. Factory data is also on tap from three regional manufacturing surveys. Sales of new single-family homes in August is out Monday. The number has been stagnant at about 300,000 for several months and a boost is needed if the battered construction sector is to regain its footing. During the housing boom early last decade, a massive inventory glut of new homes was created in areas such as Las Vegas, Florida and areas of Southern California. Many of the homes were built on speculation, but no buyers ever materialized. The market is still trying to work through that glut and construction workers are suffering the consequences. The National Association of Realtors Pending Homes Sales Index for August is due Thursday. The influential S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index for July is due Tuesday. The U.S. housing woes are well documented and a revival of that sector is key to the overall economic recovery. But foreclosures are on the rise again, jumping 7% in August over July, according to housing research firm RealtyTrac, and default notices filed against delinquent homeowners rose 33% in August from the prior month. With foreclosures back on the rise and inventories glutted, home prices are expected to fall. The Wall Street Journal this week, citing a recent survey of 100 economists, said home prices, already down nearly 32% from their 2005 highs, are expected to drop another 2.5% this year and rise just 1.1% annually through 2015. All of these factors will weigh heavily on the Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index for September, also due Tuesday. Consumer spending makes up 70% of the U.S. economy, but most consumers are holding onto every dollar they can. The ripple effect has been devastating. The final reading of the Reuters/University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index for September is due Friday. The index currently stands at 57.8, the same level at the worst of the recent financial crisis. The Dallas Fed’s Texas Manufacturing Outlook is out Monday; the Richmond Fed Manufacturing Survey is due Tuesday; and the Kansas City Survey of Manufacturing on Thursday. A second revision of second quarter U.S. GDP is due Thursday, and a report on August personal income and spending is out Friday.

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Mohamed A. El-Erian: Time for a Smaller and Stronger Eurozone

September 17, 2011

The euro is central to Europe’s economic prosperity, financial stability and political harmony. Moreover, given America’s own set of economic challenges, a well-anchored euro is critical to placing an increasingly multi-polar world economy back on the path of high growth and job creation. The euro should, indeed must, be saved. And it can be saved provided Europe is willing to make hard structural and institutional decisions. Difficult choices are often avoided in favor of the “status quo.” This tends to be the path of least resistance. But there is no status quo in today’s Europe. Absent a change in approach, the crisis will continue to spread, fragmentation pressure will mount and the Euro will be even more vulnerable to policy mistakes and market accidents. The time has come for the eurozone — Germany and France in particular, but also Austria, Finland and the Netherlands — to decide how they would like European integration to evolve; and they need to do so quickly. They have two conceptual choices: restore stability to the current, heterogeneous zone; or opt for a smaller but stronger one. Neither option is easy, and both are very controversial. They involve substantial upfront costs and high likelihood of collateral damage and unintended consequences. Also, with implementation fraught with risks, they require an unsettling level of policy experimentation, innovation and responsiveness. Yet both options dominate the path currently pursued by Europe which, distressingly, involves a growing threat of an uncontrolled and disorderly fragmentation of the eurozone and the euro. Already, the hard-earned credibility of some key regional institutions has been exposed to excessive risk, including the European Central Bank, which is central to the longer-term well being of Europe. Most political visionaries would opt for the first approach — doing whatever it takes to maintain the current zone, and do so for as long as it takes. But there should be no doubts here. This is a very expensive proposition that involves widespread, multi-year cross-guarantees and subsidization. Yet it entails significant uncertainties, given that certain peripheral economies face not just a big debt crisis but also a deep-rooted growth crisis. Indeed, many economists would caution core European countries on such a big challenge. After all, the underlying problems go well beyond political disputes. They also involve difficult design and engineering challenges. Economists rightly point out that, under this first approach, the core economies could use their stronger balance sheet to assume the debt of the weak peripherals but, critically, there is little they can do to enable them to grow properly. With such considerable open-ended exposure, this is an expensive and risky path, both upfront and over time. This path should only be pursued if core countries have more than “assurances” that the weak peripheral economies are both able and willing to fundamentally change their economic governance, institutions and behavior. There must also be credible pre-commitment mechanisms. Unfortunately, these are very difficult to implement. Moreover, the social appetite for adjustment in some peripheral economies is understandably near exhaustion, complicated by the wrong perception that austerity is being “imposed” by “rich” neighbors. The alternative is for Europe to bite the bullet and opt for a smaller but stronger zone. Certain weak peripheral economies (Greece and, possibly, 1-2 others but, importantly, not Italy) would restructure their debt and take a sabbatical from the euro. In doing so, they would gain greater domestic policy flexibility to deal with both their debt and growth crises. Meanwhile, the remaining members of the zone would be able to proceed more rapidly towards a more complete and stronger economic union. This second path also involves significant costs and risks, especially given the high likelihood of upfront disruptions. Remember, there are no mechanisms for an orderly exit from the zone. Trade flows would be dislocated for a while. Also, it would become obvious that certain European banks face both capital shortfalls and asset quality problems. And, to add to the uncertainties, contagion winds would blow throughout the smaller zone. Yes, pursuing a smaller but stronger zone involves risks and costs, too. This is part of Europe’s unfortunate reality: At this stage, there are no easy and costless options to solve the region’s growing turmoil. Fortunately, this second approach has an important benefit, both in absolute terms and relative to other alternatives: it can put the zone on a firmer longer-term footing. Making this difficult choice would ensure that the underlying resilience and soundness of Europe, which are still considerable, are preserved and enhanced for many future generations. There is little time to waste. This post originally appeared in Handelsblatt.

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