north-korea

Who Are The 1 Percent?

by Melissa Jeltsen on January 15, 2012

Huffington Post…

KINGS POINT, N.Y. — Adam Katz is happy to talk to reporters when he is promoting his business, a charter flight company based on Long Island called Talon Air. But when the subject was his position as one of America’s top earners, he balked. Seated at a desk fashioned from a jet fuel cell, wearing a button-down shirt with the company logo, he considered the public relations benefits and found them lacking: “It’s not very popular to be in the 1 percent these days, is it?”

Read more from the original source:
Who Are The 1 Percent?

Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

{ 0 comments }

Huffington Post…

Zuccotti Park may be emptied and the Wall Street no longer occupied, but the anger of the 99% hasn’t abated one iota as they watched CEOs cash in on the recovery and hedge funds make money hand over fist whether the market is going up or down. This shouldn’t be a surprise. The fact is, because of the structure of their compensation, CEOs are rewarded for share price volatility not share price performance. And hedge funds make big money on the volatility that CEOs are incented to produce. So while the volatility of the past five years has devastated the lives, savings and pensions of vast numbers of the 99%, it has served CEOs and hedge fund managers very well indeed. To understand the perverse structures, let’s compare the compensation of two hypothetical CEOs, Bill and Sally, appointed on Jan. 1, 2007 and retired five years later on Dec. 31, 2011. The average US large company CEO has a compensation package of approximately $10 million/year made up half of salary/bonuses and half of stock-based compensation, so that is what we awarded Bill and Sally. Typically, the stock compensation is awarded annually on Jan. 1 of each year. If it is in the form of restricted stock, it vests as of retirement. If it is in the form of stock options, they typically must be exercised at the time of retirement. So that is how we structured their stock-based compensation. It was a wild ride during Bill’s and Sally’s time. The S&P 500 (which accounts for 75% of US market capitalization) was 1,416 when they took over, shot up to an all-time high of 1,565 on Oct. 9, 2007, then plummeted in the fall of 2008 and bottomed out on March 9, 2009 at 676, then rose to the close of 2011, finishing at 1,258 — 80% of that all-time high. CEO Bill managed the company as if it was a proxy for the stock market; its stock followed the S&P500 exactly with the huge ups and downs. On January 1, 2007, his stock price was $100/share, making the share price at the beginning of 2008-2011: $102, $66, $80, and $90, respectively. When he retired, the price was $89. So in five years, he took his shareholders on a wild ride and ended up losing 11% of the investment of the shareholders who stuck with him the whole time. CEO Sally was able to buck the market trend. She managed carefully and proactively and somehow kept the stock stable at $100/share from 2007 through to the end of 2011. So against the backdrop of five wild years in the market, she avoided giving shareholders scary ups and downs and left them with their investment whole — 11% better than the market performance and 11% better than Bill. Who is the more valuable CEO? Whose compensation should be higher? Should it be Bill, whose shareholders experienced massive volatility and a net loss of 11% over the period? Or should it be Sally, who avoided ups and down, protected investors’ capital and ended up 11% higher than Bill? The answer, of course, is obvious — Sally with both better returns and lower volatility. She should have made a hell of a lot more. But that is not the way it works out in crazy America. Over the period, Bill made $57M in compensation to Sally’s $50M if their stock-based compensation was in stock options; $51M versus $50M if it was restricted stock. It seems impossible: how could the valuations end up there when Sally’s stock was 11% higher on the day the stock-based compensation was valued? It is primarily because of the huge value of Bill’s stock-based compensation given to him on Jan. 1, 2009 when his stock price was languishing at $66. Therein lays the fundamental problem eating away at the core of American capitalism — and generating anguish of the 99%. American CEOs are paid to generate volatility — so they did just great over the last five years while the 99% took it in the teeth. And that wasn’t some kind of accident — it is inherent in the current system. The 99% would love nothing more than slow and steady growth, but that is not what maximizes incentive compensation for corporate executives. As far as CEO compensation goes, under the current stock-based compensation model, it is unambiguously better to have your stock plummet and then partly recover than to have the stock price stay steady over the same period. In fact, the most bloody-minded and self-interested CEO would be wise to drive its stock down immediately after taking over — and blaming the prior administration for all the problems found — and then get the stock back to the initial level. The CEO will make a small fortune doing that — while shareholders make nothing — and it is a lot easier than producing stock price increases from the initial level. Though they wouldn’t want to admit it, the crash of 2008 wasn’t all that bad for the vast majority of big-company CEOs. With the exception of those few CEOs who were sacked, most had terrific air cover: “Our stock may be down 50% but so is everybody else. Really, I’m doing well, all things considered.” Even better, CEOs got tranches of stock grants at super-low prices — in some cases lots of them to keep the CEOs from being depressed that their existing options were “so far underwater.” As the market dragged their stock prices up with everyone else’s, these CEOs made out like, well, bandits. Stock-based compensation has produced a volatility machine and that volatility is wrecking the American economy, while it makes CEOs and hedge fund managers rich. The crash of 2008 wasn’t a rogue event and it will happen again as long as our rogue system of executive compensation stays intact.

Read more:
Roger Martin: What CEOs and Hedge Funds Don’t Want the 99% to Understand

Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

{ 0 comments }

Bright Spots vs. Dark Clouds: Obama Seeks Right Tone On Economic Recovery

January 1, 2012

WASHINGTON — Bullish yet wary, President Barack Obama is highlighting recent economic bright spots while taking care not to overstate a recovery that still has not put millions back to work. His Republican rivals, in the face of late-arriving economic good news, are making slight adjustments themselves, arguing that Obama’s policies have been a drag on a recovery that could have taken hold sooner. The competing rhetoric reflects the positive indicators in areas ranging from retail sales and housing to unemployment and falling gas prices. All this has pushed up consumer confidence, a potential barometer of political attitudes. Even Congress and Obama managed to agree on a two-month payroll tax cut extension before leaving Washington for the holidays. But the economic signs could prove fleeting, as they were in the early spring when economist also detected upticks in activity only to watch them tumble. These new indicators may hold more promise. But a looming European debt crisis is casting a pall. No one is more aware of that risk than Obama. “We’ve got an economy that is showing some positive signs; we’ve seen many consecutive months of private sector job growth,” Obama said last week before departing for Christmas in Hawaii. “But it’s not happening as fast as it needs to.” For Obama, the danger is in promoting an economy that while, slowly recovering, has yet to reflect reality for millions of Americans, or in highlighting positive signs only to see them falter in 2012. For David Axelrod, the Obama campaign’s top political adviser, visions of a European financial meltdown are what keep him awake at night. “I think the American economy is gaining strength, I don’t think many would argue that point,” he said. “The imponderable is not about that, it’s really about these externalities and particularly Europe. Especially now that we’ve passed this threshold on the payroll tax cut and assuming that the Republicans in Congress don’t want to rerun that battle, the one big thing on the horizon is Europe.” Indeed, as the year ends on an up note, leading economists surveyed by The Associated Press expect the economy will grow slightly faster in 2012 – about 2.4 percent compared with the less than 2 percent annual growth that the economy is expected to register by the end of this year. But underscoring the political challenges facing Obama, these same economists don’t expect unemployment to drop much in a year from November’s 8.6 percent rate. The public’s economic outlook is improving. An Associated Press-GfK poll in December found that 37 percent of those questioned expect improvement in the economy in the coming year. It was the first time since May that the sentiment significantly outweighed the share saying the economy would get worse in the next year. This modestly rosy scenario is contingent on keeping any financial disruptions in Europe contained to the other side of the Atlantic. Obama has pressing European leaders, particularly German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, to act swiftly to avoid a wholesale debt crisis from taking hold. But Obama has few tools other than persuasion with which to influence an outcome. In a trend the Obama camp is sure to watch, the public is holding Obama more accountable for the economy. The AP-GfK poll found that the percentage who says Obama deserves little or no blame for the economy’s sluggishness has declined from 43 percent in October to 36 percent now. Republicans are watching, too. After months of asserting that conditions under Obama have worsened, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney this past acknowledged signs of improvement, but gave Obama no credit. “I think the economy’s getting better. I sure hope so,” Romney told CNN on Wednesday. “There’s never been a time when our economy has not recovered from recession. We will recover, but it will not be thanks to the president’s policies. It will be in spite of the president’s policies.” Republican pollster Wes Anderson, a veteran of congressional and presidential contests, says the first quarter of 2012 could lay down crucial markers that could affect the election results. “If the uptick in economic indicators that we’ve seen here this month continues into the next month at the same general pace, it will be an interesting race and it will be very close, and there will be an opportunity for Obama to win,” he said. “If economic conditions deteriorate at all, I think he’s done. “If they pick up significantly in the first quarter – I don’t know what that is, but something that is tangible for middle-class America – he probably gets re-elected,” Anderson said. The White House is ready to have the president maintain a high economic profile, showcasing his bailout of the auto industry as a concrete example of an administration policy that saved job. Beyond that, Obama’s team wants to portray the president as a champion of the middle class. “The battle is really over the long term because the Republicans have a fundamental theory that we can cut our way to prosperity – cut taxes for the wealthy, cut regulations, especially for Wall Street, and the economy will flourish,” Axelrod said. “We’ve tested that theory and it failed. Badly.” “This notion that he’s been there, we should fire him and we should go back to what we were doing before the crisis is not a very strong argument,” Axelrod said. “And obviously to the degree that the economy improves it becomes less of an argument.” Still, even economists friendly to the administration see contradictory signals in the end-of-year upswing. On the positive side, the number of people applying for unemployment benefits has dropped to the lowest level since April 2008. At the same time, November’s dip in unemployment from 9 percent to 8.6 percent was partly the result of frustrated workers leaving the labor force and no longer looking to be hired. The private sector is hiring, but states, school districts and local municipalities are shedding jobs. Also, despite an increase in consumer spending, Americans are not seeing real income growth. “For every positive indicator, there is an indicator on the other side that’s worrisome,” said Jared Bernstein, former chief economist to Vice President Joe Biden who’s now with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics whose data is often cited by Democrats and Republicans, said that for all the encouraging signs, the economy still faces drags. That includes deficit reduction measures that helped reduce the debt in the long term but could cost the economy 1 percentage point in growth next year. Washington politics poses its own challenges. “I don’t think 2012 is going to be a break out year for the economy,” he said. “It is an election year and there is going to be a fair amount of political acrimony back and forth. People in business are already on edge. It doesn’t take a lot for them to remain anxious and nervous.”

Read the full article →

Office Cleaners, Building Owners Get To Yes

December 31, 2011

New York office cleaners and building owners reached a tentative four-year labor agreement late Friday, averting a potential New Year’s Day strike. The agreement, which covers more than 22,000 New York City office cleaners represented by the Service Employees International Union Local 32BJ, will give the cleaners a nearly 6 percent wage increase over the life of the contract. Each worker will also receive cash bonuses totally $1,100. The contract, which union members must ratify, maintains employer-paid family health care coverage. “The new contract is not just an important victory for office cleaners and their families, but for our economy and our city,” said Hector Figueroa, secretary-treasurer of SEIU Local 32BJ, in a statement. “In these tough times the workers who keep New York City’s corporate offices and landmark buildings clean and well maintained have stood up for the good middle class jobs our economy and our city needs.” Building owners had sought to create a two-tier wage system under which new hires would never earn as much as current union members. They also wanted to eliminate a system of automatic employee contributions to the union’s political fund. Neither proposal is part of the union’s final agreement with building owners, said Kwame Patterson, a spokesman with SEIU Local 32BJ. Unionized building workers clean and maintain about 1,500 buildings in New York, including landmarks such as Rockefeller Center, the MetLife Building, the Empire State Building, the Chrysler Building, Grand Central Station, the Port Authority and the Time Warner Center, along with educational institutions such as New York University and The New School. New York building cleaners had threatened to establish picket lines in major cities around the country and had collected pledges from unionized cleaners elsewhere and other organized labor not to cross those picket lines. Such tactics would have expanded the effects of a potential strike beyond New York City, left thousands of buildings without needed staff and involved at least 100,000 workers. “We are pleased to have reached a tentative agreement with the union that protects workers’ wages and benefits, and provides crucial cost-savings to building owners, who have been battered in this deep recession,” said Howard Rothschild, president of the Realty Advisory Board on Labor Relations, the group negotiating on behalf of building owners with the union. In the last three months, Local 32BJ has reached new, multi-year contracts for more than 50,000 workers in Connecticut, New Jersey and Virginia. In 2012, SEIU is set to renegotiate contracts for another 155,000 cleaners across the United States. With more than 120,000 members, including 70,000 in New York state, SEIU Local 32BJ is the largest property-service workers union in the country and the largest private-sector union in the state.

Read the full article →

Union Blasts TSA Officials As ‘Arrogant,’ ‘Autocratic’

December 20, 2011

WASHINGTON — The labor union representing workers for the Transportation Security Administration blasted the agency’s top leaders Tuesday, describing their approach to labor relations as “arrogant,” “top-down” and “autocratic” as the two sides try to settle on their first contract. “I think I understand the same frustration the flying public has shown to TSA management,” said John Gage, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, which won an election to represent TSA officers this summer. “We think there should be a house-cleaning.” Speaking at a press conference at the AFL-CIO, Gage accused TSA head and Obama appointee John Pistole of refusing to give workers a fair system for settling disciplinary disputes. Gage said that rather than give workers a grievance process adjudicated by an impartial third party, the agency has instead offered only to institute grievance processes that are overseen by TSA itself, tilting the scales in management’s favor. He went so far as compare the TSA proposals to the anti-worker measures brought forth by Republicans in Ohio and Wisconsin this year. “These folks, it seems, know very little about labor relations,” said Gage, describing a third-party grievance process as fundamental. “[Pistole] has set up a company policy that makes us a company union. We won’t be a company union.” “TSA is committed to ensuring that all employees are given full due process rights and looks forward to continued discussions with AFGE related to these important issues,” a TSA spokesman said in email. Overseen by the Department of Homeland Security, the TSA had been a non-union workforce since its inception after 9-11, until Pistole authorized a union vote earlier this year. Though a government-employee union like the AFGE cannot bargain directly over wages, it can negotiate over certain workplace processes like the pay-raise and grievance systems. The union and the agency have been negotiating unsuccessfully for about six months, and the sides don’t appear close to an agreement. Gage accused the agency of trying to set up a grievance process that would conceal low morale among workers and dysfunction among management. “Don’t think this is about homeland security,” he said. “It’s about hiding a management structure that’s incompetent.” Union advocates have long described a TSA officer’s job as low-paying and thankless. The roughly 45,000 officers tend to start out around $28,000 in salary and max out around $36,000, according to several TSA workers who were at the AFL-CIO on Tuesday. And due to the sometimes invasive searches they’re tasked with carrying out, the agents are often the target of public anger. Many travelers bristled earlier this year when the agency announced that travelers would have the option of undergoing either a full-body scan or physical pat-down from a TSA officer. “It’s very stressful, and we’re on the front lines,” one pro-union security officer previously told HuffPost . “A lot of people think it’s a brand new agency, but it’s not. We need to move on and improve the system.” This article has been updated to include a comment from a TSA spokesman.

Read the full article →

Scott Brown: House GOP Would Rather Play Politics Than Find Solutions

December 20, 2011

Sen. Scott Brown (R- Mass.) denounced House Republicans for rejecting a payroll tax cut deal on Tuesday, and accused his colleagues of putting politics before the needs of American families. “It angers me that House Republicans would rather continue playing politics than find solutions,” Brown said in a statement released shortly after the House voted to block the bipartisan bill. “Their actions will hurt American families and be detrimental to our fragile economy. We are Americans first; now is not the time for drawing lines in the sand.” The Senate bill would have prevented the payroll tax cut from expiring on January 1, 2012 by ensuring a two-month extension. Republicans in the House opposed to the bill argued in favor of a year-long extension or no extension at all, claiming that approving a bill for just two months would create uncertainty. Brown’s criticism followed harsh comments he made on Monday, when he called the GOP’s refusal to compromise “irresponsible and wrong.” Brown — who is up for re-election in 2012 — is preparing for what will likely be a challenging race against Democratic Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren. A recent poll spelled good news for Warren, showing her leading Brown 49 to 42 .

Read the full article →

Bernie Bulkin: About Leadership: Speaking From a Text

December 19, 2011

‘But in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground.’ ‘That government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.’ — Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. It might appear that nothing is easier than having a speech all typed out in front of you, and getting up to read it. In fact, it is probably the most difficult way to give an effective speech. The written word and the spoken word are very different. Just try listening to a talking book read by a professional reader, especially a non-fiction work, and think about how you concentrate on that compared to listening to a really good speaker. The difference is clear. When we are giving a good speech, we use rhetoric. Churchill and Lincoln were great practitioners of this. Just listen to some of their speeches and you will see how effectively they hook you in. But if you read this stuff in a book you would think it phony and over-inflated. By contrast, there are people who write speeches as if they were student essays, with complex sentences that could be followed by a reader but are incomprehensible to a listener. So when you sit down to write a speech, you have to be writing for speaking, not writing for reading. You have to hear it in your own voice. We are each of us different in how we speak, how loud or how soft, how comfortable we are with flourishes and alliteration, what words or phrases we like, what makes us cringe. And this needs to be at very front of mind when writing a speech. Now we come to a little problem. Executives often don’t write their own speeches. In many companies there are individuals whose job it is to at least get the first draft, or even the final version of a speech ready. So how can you get the voice right in that situation? Well, it is easy to see when it goes wrong. I rather see this with speeches given by Ministers in the UK Government. Ministers give a lot of speeches, and accept a lot of speaking engagements, especially in London. I have heard many speeches which have all the right points and sentiments in them, but they were written for the minister by a civil servant, and because of the press of time only looked at in the car going over from the office to the speaking location. The result: A flat delivery, sounding every bit like what it is, someone else’s words being read out with insufficient preparation. This approach can never be made to work; I don’t care how talented you are. Here is what does work for a speech written by someone else: First, sit down with the speech writer a couple of weeks in advance. Talk through the points together, so that she can hear them from you in your own words. If the writer is any good, they will come prepared with ideas for talking points, and the discussion of those will sharpen what is going to be said. Step two is to read through a draft, say a week in advance, and as you read it make changes to put in or eliminate phrases. As you are doing this, think about saying the words yourself, just as I have discussed in the essay, Speaking from Notes. Then move to a final draft. And finally you need to make time to read through the whole thing before giving the speech, again making changes in the final draft. The whole process is one of getting it more and more into your own voice. I keep making changes to speeches I have written myself right up until the last few minutes before I have to go up to the podium. Indeed, I am often surprised about how frequently awkward wording creeps into the written speech. While I am reading through, my pen is putting in prominent commas and other punctuation to help me with my phrasing, timing and breathing. Now for the delivery. A good speech needs to be delivered with emotion, with passion, like you actually believe what you are talking about. And I hope that you do! Otherwise it is junk, it will sound like junk, and the audience will put it in that place in their brain where they store other junk. About Leadership : About Leadership is a series of 52 columns on corporate leadership — essential skills, leading teams, managing your career, the strategic and business practices to make a company and its leader distinctive from competitors. These columns will be of interest to people leading small and medium sized companies today, many of whom have not had much formal training in management skills and techniques; for the many people in big companies who aspire to senior management; and for anyone who thinks: Give me a hint, how can I do this better?

Read the full article →

Jeff Connaughton: Obama and the Rule of Law

December 19, 2011

Long silent and now contradictory, President Obama needs to deliver a clarifying speech about our financial markets and the rule of law. Speaking in Kansas on December 6, he said, “Too often, we’ve seen Wall Street firms violating major anti-fraud laws because the penalties are too weak and there’s no price for being a repeat offender.” Just five days later on 60 Minutes , he said, “Some of the least ethical behavior on Wall Street wasn’t illegal.” Which is it? Have there been no prosecutions because Wall Street acted legally (albeit unethically)? Or did Wall Street repeatedly violate major anti-fraud laws (and should thus find itself in the dock)? The President is confusing “legal” with “difficult to prosecute successfully.” The Justice Department’s repeated decisions not to risk losing at trial against Wall Street executives don’t make these person’s actions legal. (If a district attorney can’t prove the actual thief stole your wallet, that doesn’t make stealing legal. It simply means that, regrettably, a malefactor goes unpunished.) As Securities and Exchange Commission Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said in Senate testimony in 2009, Wall Street perpetrators “are smart people who understand that they are crossing the line” and “are plotting their defense at the same time they’re committing their crime.” Moreover, the President is misleading us when he says that Wall Street firms violate anti-fraud law because the penalties are too weak. Repeat financial fraudsters don’t pay relatively paltry — and therefore painless — penalties because of statutory caps on such penalties. Rather, regulatory officials, appointed by Obama, negotiated these comparatively trifling fines. This week, the F.D.I.C. settled a suit against Washington Mutual officials for just $64 million, an amount that will be covered mostly by insurance policies WaMu took out on behalf of executives, who themselves will pay just $400,000. And recently a federal judge rejected the S.E.C.’s latest settlement with Citigroup, an action even the Wall Street Journal called “a rebuke of the cozy relationship between regulators and the regulated that too often leaves justice as an orphan.” The Obama Justice Department hasn’t tried a single Wall Street executive in a criminal court. Against a handful, it decided to let the S.E.C. bring civil charges of fraud, which are easier to prove. So if defendants’ wrists are merely being slapped by the S.E.C. instead of cuffed by the Justice Department, Obama has only his appointees to blame. For three important reasons, the President needs to explain why the Justice Department has filed away its investigations of big banks and Wall Street firms without indicting anyone. First, American confidence in the system is deeply shaken. Second, it strains credulity for millions of Americans — and has impelled thousands of them to occupy public places in protest — that no banking or insurance executive deserves criminal prosecution for the actions that brought on the financial crisis. Third, by failing to prosecute a single high-profile Wall Street actor today, the Administration is failing to deter financial fraud tomorrow. The jury is out (alas, only metaphorically) on whether Wall Street practices that accompanied the financial crisis amounted to criminal fraud. Some legal commentators have concluded that the causes of the crisis were systemic and not the result of malfeasance or conspiracy. The debate about whether practices were illegal or simply unethical will never be resolved because only a jury can render a verdict after weighing the evidence, presented by opposing counsel, for each element of an alleged crime. That said, independent fact-finders like the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, the Senate Permanent Committee on Investigations, and the bankruptcy examiner for Lehman Brothers have compiled compelling evidence of what, to many, certainly looks like fraud. But did the Justice Department’s senior leadership even make targeting high-level fraud a top priority? Did it plan, staff, fund, and direct a thorough, probing investigation of each of the primary potential defendants? While I was working in the Senate, conversations I had with Justice Department officials led me to believe that it didn’t. As the New York Times and New Yorker have reported, the Department’s leadership never organized or supported strike-force teams of bank regulators, F.B.I. agents, and federal prosecutors for each of the potential primary defendants and ignored past lessons about how to crack financial fraud. When Senator Ted Kaufman (D-DE) and I met privately with Department officials in September 2009, one of them explained they were dependent on investigators to bring them cases (which typified, I believed, their passive approach). And, for their part, the investigators were receiving no help from bank regulatory agencies (in the 1990s, successful prosecutions after the savings-and-loan scandal hinged on referrals from the responsible supervising agencies, which provided key roadmaps for F.B.I. investigations). The Justice Department, F.B.I., and bank regulatory agencies failed to design a prosecutorial strategy that would’ve indicted and perhaps convicted many top executives who knew that their banks were selling fraudulent securities that bundled together thousands of largely bad loans. These loans, known in the industry as stated-income loans and (more glibly and more accurately) as liar loans, were issued without verifying the borrowers’ income. A former executive in charge of fraud investigations at mortgage lender Countrywide Financial told 60 Minutes that mortgage fraud at her firm was “systemic,” but federal investigators never contacted her. The U.S. attorney in Los Angeles has already declined to prosecute Countrywide executives. The Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations found that approximately 90 percent of WaMu’s home-equity loans were stated-income loans, creating, in the words of Treasury Department Inspector General Eric Thorson, a “target rich environment for fraud.” Yet the U.S. Attorney in Seattle decided not to indict anyone at WaMu. Failure to disclose material information is another form of potential fraud. Merrill Lynch, for example, understated its risky mortgage holdings by hundreds of billions of dollars. Executives at Lehman Brothers assured investors in the summer of 2008 that the company was sound, even though the bankruptcy examiner later concluded that Lehman had engaged in “actionable balance-sheet manipulation.” Yes, with financial fraud, criminal intent is difficult to prove, especially when a defendant relied on professional advice from accountants and lawyers (and in some cases may even have been acting with the knowledge of the bank’s regulator, who was apparently more concerned about the bank’s financial soundness than about full disclosure to investors). But we shouldn’t outsource the interpretation of fraud laws to a potential defendant’s accountant and lawyers. And why haven’t prosecutors used provisions in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which put in place tough criminal sanctions in the wake of Enron and other cases of massive corporate frauds? In the absence of an aggressive, targeted effort by the Justice Department, we’ll never know whether crimes may have been proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Why didn’t this happen? I wish I knew. At the Senate oversight hearings, Justice Department officials assured the Judiciary Committee that every lead was being pursued and every rock turned over. Doubtless they’ll continue to claim this. Yet in Ron Suskind’s book, Confidence Men , he quotes Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner as saying, “The confidence in the system is so fragile still… a disclosure of a fraud… could result in a run, just like Lehman.” The Obama Administration is pushing hard for a 50-state settlement with the major banks for their fraudulent foreclosure practices, even though several state attorneys general have rejected this approach because, in their view, it would shield too much wrongdoing. Regrettably, Obama’s top officials and lawyers seem more eager to restore the financial sector to health than establish criminal accountability among the executives who were in charge. In 1986, speaking about the failure of another president’s Justice Department to vigorously prosecute white-collar crime, former Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and current Vice President Joseph Biden said that “people believe that our system of law and those who manage it have failed, and may not even have tried, to deal effectively with unethical and possibly illegal misconduct in high places.” Until this president stops calling Wall Street’s deleterious actions “not illegal,” he’s failing to deter — and therefore effectively encouraging — future financial fraud. And until he gives a clear and full explanation of the inadequate response of his Justice Department and S.E.C., he and his appointees are helping to undermine the public’s faith in equal justice under the law. Jeff Connaughton is the former chief of staff to former U.S. Senator Ted Kaufman (D-DE), who chaired two Senate Judiciary Committee oversight hearings on financial fraud prosecutions in 2009 and 2010.

Read the full article →

A Local Legend Lost

December 19, 2011

Warren Hellman, San Francisco’s beloved, banjo-picking billionaire, died Sunday night after a long battle with leukemia. He was 77. A local legend, Hellman was best known as the founder and force behind the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival , the weekend of free music — completely funded by the financier — that takes over Golden Gate Park each autumn and draws big-name acts ranging from Emmylou Harris to Broken Social Scene. But Hellman’s legacy extends far deeper into the fabric of the city than the three days of joy he sponsored each September in the park. He spent his life giving to the causes he cared most deeply about. Since building his fortune in finance, first as the youngest partner in the now-defunct Lehman Brothers investment bank’s history (at age 28) and later as co-founder of the private equity firm Hellman & Friedman, Hellman donated almost everything he had to his passion projects and political causes throughout San Francisco. According to the San Francisco Chronicle , the investor often joked that he had little interest in collecting expensive cars or art. “What does move me is the philanthropic stuff,” he told Forbes magazine in 2006 . “Giving really does move me.” In addition to creating and maintaining one of the city’s most cherished festivals, Hellman funded the San Francisco Free Clinic, built an underground parking garage in Golden Gate Park to help keep the DeYoung Museum intact after the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, spearheaded a major pension reform effort during the November elections and co-founded online local news website The Bay Citizen . “Warren was San Francisco, and his passion for the city ran deep,” longtime friend Phil Bronstein, the former Chronicle editor, told The Bay Citizen . “His philanthropy and quiet leadership were unparalleled.” And San Francisco recently had a chance to show its gratitude. Last Thursday, the city’s Recreation and Parks Commission unanimously voted to rename Golden Gate Park’s Speedway Meadow , the nucleus of Hardly Strictly, to “Hellman Hollow.” “I can’t think of another citizen of San Francisco that has done more for the city or had the City as his highest priority on almost everything he has ever done,” Mark Buell, chairman of the commission, told the San Francisco Examiner . A budding banjo player himself, Hellman performed at nearly every iteration of Hardly Strictly with his band, The Wronglers, writing songs about the various causes and issues that made him tick. Unconventional to the core, the lifelong Republican supported labor unions, was known for his rugged, frayed wardrobe and attended Burning Man the year he turned 70. He even postponed chemotherapy treatments in order to appear onstage with The Wronglers during this year’s Hardly Strictly festival. Good-spirited until the very end, Hellman would more recently joke that he had changed his name to Luke Emia, according to The Bay Citizen . And festival fans need not fret: Hardly Strictly will continue in Hellman’s wake for many years to come. The financier created an endowment fund for the explicit purpose of funding the event “after I croak.” “Yes, the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival will go on!” his daughter, Patricia Hellman Gibbs, confirmed to the Chronicle on Sunday. Public services will be held in Hellman’s honor on Wednesday at San Francisco’s Congregation Emanu-El. According to his family, a community celebration of his life will take place in the following weeks. The family has requested that instead of sending flowers, mourners pay their respects by making donations to the San Francisco Free Clinic , The Bay Citizen , and the San Francisco School Alliance . Take a look at a video of Hellman playing with The Wronglers during 2009′s Hardly Strictly festival below, and click over to The Bay Citizen for more comprehensive coverage and celebration of his life.

Read the full article →

Scott Brown: Don’t Pay For Payroll Tax Cuts

November 30, 2011

WASHINGTON — Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) may have gotten a dose of populism for his showdown against Elizabeth Warren — or maybe he prefers helping people who have jobs to aiding the unemployed. Brown declared Tuesday that he favors extending a payroll tax cut without finding a way to make up for the lost revenue, while last year he opposed extending unemployment benefits unless Congress offset the $56 billion cost. It’s a position that puts him at odds with both his own leadership and with Democrats, and comes as he’s facing a tough election challenge from the popular former consumer watchdog, Warren. Democrats have proposed a 3.1 percent cut in payroll taxes that would cost about $255 billion. They would pay for it with a surtax on earnings above $1 million. Brown’s Republican leaders said Tuesday that they would back extending the cut enacted last year if, this time, it is offset. “We need to be paying for a measure like this that’s temporary,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said. “And I think in the end we will pay for it. We’ll offer an alternative to the one that’s being proposed in the Senate.” But Brown saw no reason to go with the Democrats’ plan to tax the rich or with McConnell’s to find the cash elsewhere, noting that Congress did not pay for last year’s break. “It wasn’t paid for before, so why is it paid for now?” Brown told several reporters Tuesday. “Through economic activity, it’ll pay for itself. I think we need to get it out there, get the money in people’s hands.” Brown had a different take when it came to extending emergency unemployment benefits last December for people who were running out, and cast the deciding vote against an extension. “I have complete and total sympathy and understanding, and I want to help,” Brown said according to a Boston Globe account of his vote. “More than anybody here, I want to help. But to just keep throwing money that’s not paid for at a problem … makes no sense to me.” Unemployment benefits were ultimately extended after President Obama cut a deal with Republicans to also extend the Bush-era tax cuts for two more years.

Read the full article →

Dan Solin: Their Confidence Is Killing Your Returns

November 30, 2011

What do these well known financial celebrities have in common: Jim Cramer, Larry Kudlow, Jeff Macke, Joe Kernan and Dylan Ratigan? They are all extremely confident. There is little personal vulnerability in their presentations. They provide their views on the economy, attempt to pick stock “winners”, engage in marking timing predictions and anoint the next hot mutual fund managers unequivocally and with self-assurance. Many brokers and advisors, who engage in the same activity, share this trait of uber confidence. Here’s a typical example I recently encountered. At the request of a prospective client, I proposed a risk adjusted portfolio, consisting of low management fee, passively managed stock and bond funds. I tilted the portfolio towards small and value stocks, consistent with the research of Eugene Fama and Kenneth French. Their research explained the relationship between risk and return for stocks. It is known as the Fama-French three-factor model. Distilled to its essence, the Fama-French three-factor model holds that a portfolio tilted toward small and value stocks (which increases risk) has a higher expected return than a portfolio without this tilt, over the long term. You can read more about the Fama-French three factor model here . In my recent book, The Smartest Portfolio You’ll Ever Own , I recommended portfolios of index and exchange traded funds at different risk levels that investors could implement themselves. These portfolios are based on the research of Fama and French. My prospective client showed my recommendations to a friend who is a well-known financial advisor. He derided them as “possibly” suitable for those who wanted to preserve wealth, but not to grow it. In order to grow wealth, he advised retaining his firm because of its ability to time the markets and “customize an individually tailored portfolio of stocks and bonds.” The research supporting my recommended portfolio is extensive and is summarized in the bibliography to my book. His advisor friend provided no research validating his approach to investing, but he made up for the lack of data with his air of infallibility and aura of expertise. I often wonder why so many investors ignore the overwhelming data indicating that capturing market returns in a globally diversified portfolio of low management fee index funds in a suitable asset allocation is likely to outperform stock picking, manager picking and market timing — the daily grist of many brokers and advisors. If you have limited time for research on this subject, take a look at the “Standard & Poor’s Indices Versus Active” reports, which you can find here . The answer to this riddle may have nothing to do with a battle over data, and everything to do with the perception of confidence. Don Moore, of Carnegie Mellon University, conducted research showing that we are inclined to accept advice from a confident source, even if the track record of that source is unworthy of our trust. Another study is even more troublesome. It found those receiving “expert” advice essentially “switched off” their brains (as measured by an MRI). The subjects would have been better off ignoring the advice of the “experts” and making their own decisions, but their brains went “dormant” when confronted with “expert” advice. Keep this research in mind the next time you are exposed to the oh-so-confident opinions of financial experts. You would likely be better off independently looking at the data and making your own decision. Dan Solin is a Senior Vice-President of Index Funds Advisors (ifa.com). He is the author of the New York Times best sellers The Smartest Investment Book You’ll Ever Read, The Smartest 401(k) Book You’ll Ever Read, and The Smartest Retirement Book You’ll Ever Read. His new book, The Smartest Portfolio You’ll Ever Own, was released in September, 2011.The views set forth in this blog are the opinions of the author alone and may not represent the views of any firm or entity with whom he is affiliated. The data, information, and content on this blog are for information, education, and non-commercial purposes only. Returns from index funds do not represent the performance of any investment advisory firm. The information on this blog does not involve the rendering of personalized investment advice and is limited to the dissemination of opinions on investing. No reader should construe these opinions as an offer of advisory services. Readers who require investment advice should retain the services of a competent investment professional. The information on this blog is not an offer to buy or sell, or a solicitation of any offer to buy or sell any securities or class of securities mentioned herein. Furthermore, the information on this blog should not be construed as an offer of advisory services. Please note that the author does not recommend specific securities nor is he responsible for comments made by persons posting on this blog.

Read the full article →

What You Need To Know About Facebook’s Privacy Settlement

November 30, 2011

NEW YORK — On Facebook, people talk about births and deaths. They share party shots, ultrasound scans and deliver news about serious illnesses in a way that was unimaginable just a few years ago. Facebook doesn’t want that openness to end, which is why the company has been trying to put its privacy problems behind it. But a big settlement with the Federal Trade Commission is once again putting this thorny issue front and center for the world’s biggest online social network. On Tuesday, Facebook agreed to settle federal charges that it violated users’ privacy by getting people to share more information than they agreed to when they signed up to the site. As part of a settlement, Facebook will allow independent auditors to review its privacy practices for the next two years. It also agreed to get approval from users before changing how the company handles their data. Here are some common questions and answers about Facebook’s privacy practices and what they mean for users. _ Why is Facebook constantly pushing people to share things? Even before it became a big business making billions in advertising revenue, Facebook’s purpose has always been to let people “connect and share” – its motto – with their friends, families and acquaintances. Over the years, as it grew from an online network open only to college students to one with more than 800 million users, the company has pushed the envelope, encouraging people to share more photos, updates, links, and music. Some of the latest apps are let people automatically share news articles they read or music they are listening to. Facebook’s view is that people want to share more and that the company is giving people the platform to do so. Says CEO Mark Zuckerberg in a blog post Tuesday: “We made it easy for people to feel comfortable sharing things about their real lives.” _ So this isn’t all about making money? Facebook, which is expected to go public next year in what could be one of the biggest IPOs in history, makes the bulk of its revenue from online advertising targeted to its users. The ads users see are based on things they share on the site. Research firm eMarketer estimates that Facebook will bring in $3.8 billion in worldwide ad revenue this year and $5.8 billion in 2012. As a privately held company focused on building up its technology, Facebook has not made profits its outright goal. Rather, the company has cultivated an “if we build it, they will come” ethos. The more time people spend on its site and the more information they share about themselves, the better companies can target their ads. The more users Facebook attracts, the more people will see the ads so the more it can charge advertisers. However, as a public company with profit-seeking shareholders to answer to, Facebook’s goals could change. _ How does Facebook use the information people share to make money? Facebook, like Google and other companies that rely on advertising, targets ads to people based on their interests. Businesses can pick who they want to show their ads to – by location, age, hobbies and other things they share on Facebook. For example, a bridal magazine can target a promotion to women who’ve gotten engaged in the past six months. A soft drink company can show its ads to people who say they “like” a rival soft drink. Advertisers can narrow their target audience further by limiting the same pitch to football fans who live on the West Coast. People are more likely to click on ads that are relevant to them, making Facebook a virtual treasure trove of targeted advertising. _ Facebook says it has already addressed a lot of the issues raised in the FTC settlement. Are there things it didn’t address? Privacy advocates praised the settlement but many say more needs to be done to protect people’s private information. The nonprofit Consumers Union said it “sends a strong message to companies that they must live up to the privacy promises made to consumers.” Chris Conley, technology and civil liberties fellow at the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California said Facebook should do more to address outside applications’ access to users’ information. “There are settings for sharing information with third-party apps, but they are counter-intuitive,” he said. For example, an app your friend installs could have access to your information even if you do not install the app yourself. Though it’s possible to opt out of sharing some of your information with your friends’ apps, many people don’t know to do this because they are not aware that the sharing is happening in the first place. There’s also the issue of online tracking. Facebook (along with Google and companies that advertise online) tracks people’s activity around the Web. Facebook, Conley notes, tracks your activity on the Web even if you are not logged on to Facebook at the time. If you visit a page that has a “like” button, Facebook knows you visited the page even if you do not click “Like.” For its part, Facebook says it does not use the information it collects to create profiles about people’s browsing habits and it does not sell the data to anyone. But Conley said the challenge is that while this may be what Facebook is doing with it today, there could be others – law enforcement agencies, divorce attorneys, data miners – who would be very interested in where someone has been on the Web.

Read the full article →

Dean Garfield: Stop Scapegoating Tech

November 29, 2011

The Washington Post ‘s article “Cloud Centers Bring High-tech Flash, but Not Many Jobs to Beaten-down Towns” is simply sophomoric silliness masquerading as sophisticated news. The article weaves together a series of anecdotes to paint a picture that conveniently supports its premise: technology and the resulting productivity growth is a source of unemployment — particularly in the manufacturing sector. The inconvenient truth is that the facts contradict this story. Those who have spent time studying the issue, including a definitive report from the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), conclude that “more rapid productivity growth leads to higher rather than lower employment in manufacturing.” The NBER study has been supported by economists at the Federal Reserve who write that, “a positive technology shock leads to a reduction in the unemployment rate that persists for several years, and likewise by the OECD in a definitive review of the studies on productivity and employment, Jobs Study: Facts, Analysis, Strategy. That report concluded that, technology “generally destroys lower wage, lower productivity jobs, while it creates jobs that are more productive, high-skill and better paid. Historically, the income-generating effects of new technologies have proved more powerful than the labor-displacing effects: technological progress has been accompanied not only by higher output and productivity, but also by higher overall employment.” It is true that for individual companies or industries, technology and higher productivity growth may lead to a loss of jobs. For example, there was a significant decline in employment in the typewriter manufacturing industry following the advent of the personal computer, but the spin-off benefits — employment and otherwise — from the PC industry are beyond dispute. We are saddened by the slow job creation in the U.S. but it is against our best interest to scapegoat the technology sector. The cause of lower employment over the last decade, including in the manufacturing sector, is not technology and higher productivity growth in the United States. Rather, the source is likely to be higher productivity growth, and more pronounced price declines, among foreign manufacturers that compete with U.S. companies. In China in particular, productivity has been rising and costs have been declining more rapidly than in the United States — particularly in industries such as consumer electronics and apparel, where China did not compete with the United States two decades ago. It is this loss of U.S. global competitiveness that is principal cause of anemic job growth. What the U.S. economy needs to restore job growth is a commitment to a national action plan focused on driving growth and creating jobs through making investments in basic research, science education, and R&D; enforcing our trade agreements and boosting our exports; lowering effective corporate tax rates; improving physical and digital infrastructure; and embracing the power of technology (particularly IT) to transform and to make more efficient entire sectors of the economy. The evidence is clear: technology is part of the job creation solution, not part of the problem. For more on this, look for the Information Technology Industry Foundation’s upcoming report on “America’s Competitiveness Crisis and the Anemic Job Recovery.”

Read the full article →

Australia’s Qantas grounds planes as staff strike

September 20, 2011

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia’s Qantas Airways canceled or delayed more than 50 flights on Tuesday after around 4,000 ground staff walked off the job as an industrial dispute over pay and the airline’s plans to expand in Asia escalated. Qantas said it expected more than 6,000 passengers to be affected during the day but many had been notified of the changes, avoiding scenes of chaos at Australian airports. Flights were on average delayed by around 15 minutes and schedules were expected to return to normal in most major Australian cities by lunchtime, a Qantas spokesman told Reuters. The Transport Workers Union, which represents baggage handlers and catering staff, said many airport staff had been locked out of the workplace since early Tuesday morning. The strike was triggered by a dispute over pay and conditions and in opposition to planned domestic job cuts as the airline expands in Asia. Qantas had not been notified of plans for further strikes at this stage, the airline spokesman said. (Reporting by Michael Smith; Editing by Balazs Koranyi)

Read the full article →

S&P cuts Italy ratings one notch, outlook negative

September 20, 2011

By Wayne Cole and James Mackenzie (Reuters) – Standard and Poor’s cut its unsolicited ratings on Italy by one notch on Monday, warning of a deteriorating growth outlook and damaging political uncertainty, in a move that took markets by surprise and added to pressure on the debt-stressed euro zone. S&P’s downgraded its unsolicited ratings on Italy to A/A-1 from A+/A-1+ and kept its outlook on negative, sending the euro more than half a cent lower against the dollar. The agency, which put Italy on review for downgrade in May, said that the outlook for growth was worsening and there was little sign that Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s fractious center-right government could respond effectively. Under mounting pressure to cut its 1.9 trillion euro debt pile, the government pushed a 59.8 billion euro austerity plan through parliament last week, pledging to balance the budget by 2013. But there has been little confidence that the much-revised package of tax hikes and spending cuts, agreed only after repeated chopping and changing, will do anything to address Italy’s underlying problem of persistent stagnant growth. “We believe the reduced pace of Italy’s economic activity to date will make the government’s revised fiscal targets difficult to achieve,” S&P’s said in a statement. “Furthermore, what we view as the Italian government’s tentative policy response to recent market pressures suggests continuing future political uncertainty about the means of addressing Italy’s economic challenges,” it said. Berlusconi’s coalition has been plagued by infighting and policy disagreements and the prime minister himself has been battling a widening prostitution scandal which has distracted the government and badly damaged his personal credibility. On Monday, Italian sources said the government was preparing to cut its growth forecast to 0.7 percent in 2011 from a previous forecast of 1.1 percent and cut the 2012 forecast to “1 percent or below.” SURPRISE MOVE Italy, the euro zone’s third largest economy, has been dragged to the center of the debt crisis over the past three months as concern has grown over a debt burden equal to some 120 percent of gross domestic product. But the move from S&P came as a surprise as the market had thought Moody’s was more likely to downgrade Italy first. Moody’s last week said it would take another month to decide on its action. “Was it anticipated tonight? No. But again is it really shocking given what yields have done?” said James Paulsen, Chief Investment Strategist, Wells Capital Management. Only the European Central Bank, which has been buying Italian bonds to prop up the market, has kept Rome’s borrowing costs from spiraling out of control, but yields have crept back up steadily since the ECB stepped into the market in August. On Monday, yields on Italian 10 year bonds stood at 5.59 percent, within sight of the levels above 6 percent they reached just before the ECB intervention. The intervention has caused growing strain within the central bank, causing Chief Economist Juergen Stark to announce his resignation and prompting open opposition from the Bundesbank. The S&P downgrade, which came as Greece struggles to meet demands from lenders for yet more austerity measures, underlined the mounting seriousness of the euro zone crisis, which has seen global markets hammered. “It’s just more of the same negative news,” said Stephen Roberts, a senior economist at Nomura in Sydney. “It only adds to the contagion risk over Greece and has encouraged the flight to safety in markets here,” he added, pointing to a sharp fall in the Australian dollar on the news. The Aussie dollar is influenced by expectations for commodity prices and so sensitive to the outlook for global demand. S&P 500 futures also dropped 0.7 percent and early hopes for a bounce in Asian shares on Tuesday looked to be still-born now. European stocks had already slid on Monday, while yields on Italian and Spanish bonds rose sharply on fears of a Greek default, compounded by the failure of EU finance ministers to agree new steps to resolve Europe’s debt crisis at weekend talks. International lenders told Greece on Monday it must shrink its public sector and improve tax collection to avoid running out of money within weeks as investors spooked by political setbacks in Europe dumped risky euro zone assets. (Reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney and James Mackenzie in Rome; Additional reporting by Daniel Bases and Burton Frierson in New York; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)

Read the full article →

UBS faces dual attack in parliament after trading loss

September 19, 2011

By Emma Thomasson and Edward Taylor ZURICH (Reuters) – The Swiss parliament piled pressure on the nation’s biggest banks on Monday in the wake of UBS AG’s $2.3 billion loss from rogue trading, as a center-left party pushed for a ban on risky investment banking and a plan to raise capital requirements passed the lower house. Social Democrat lawmaker Susanne Leutenegger Oberholzer narrowly failed to get enough support for her proposal to reopen debate on tough new capital measures for UBS and Credit Suisse so that a ban on investment banking could be added. The plan to force the banks to hold more capital than under global rules so that they can be shielded from future crises was passed, and the Social Democrats have the option of bringing a separate piece of legislation on the proposed ban. “What the latest debacle of UBS in London shows is that regulation must go further as fast as possible. Investment banking must be banned for systemically-important banks and proprietary trading must be massively limited,” the party said in a statement. UBS has kicked off an internal investigation into the catastrophic failure of its risk systems that led to the equity trading loss, which was discovered last week. UBS said its board of directors had set up a committee chaired by independent director David Sidwell, former chief financial officer at Morgan Stanley, to conduct a probe into the trades and the bank’s control systems. “External expectations are that the investigation should take weeks and not months,” a UBS insider told Reuters. “The internal investigation will be coordinating with the regulators on their probe.” London trader Kweku Adoboli was charged on Friday with fraud and false accounting dating back to 2008. CAPITAL HIT UBS said on Sunday it remains one of the world’s best capitalized banks, even though the $2.3 billion loss had set it back in its efforts to build up its capital to meet new regulatory requirements. In Britain, where similar reforms to separate risky investment banking from commercial banking are in the works, Business Secretary Vince Cable said the UBS scandal illustrated the need for change. “If there were any doubts about the need for radical reform, the UBS rogue trader has dispelled them,” Cable told delegates at his Liberal Democrat party’s conference. The Swiss parliament rejected the bid to reopen the debate so that an investment banking ban could be discussed by 55 to 42 with six abstentions. The loss is a heavy blow to the reputation of Switzerland’s biggest bank, which had just started to recover after its near collapse during the financial crisis and a damaging U.S. investigation into its aiding wealthy Americans to dodge taxes. Chief Executive Oswald Gruebel, brought out of retirement in 2009 to turn the bank around, said the alleged fraud would have consequences for strategy and possibly also for himself. The UBS source said there was no indication that others were involved in the affair, and the global synthetic equities team in which Adoboli worked was still operating, but added that members of the team would have to stop trading while answering questions as part of the investigation. UBS shares closed down 1.9 percent at 10.07 francs, but still outperformed a 3.4 percent slide on the European banking stocks index, as traders noted the stock had already fallen sharply after last week’s news. ANGRY BANKERS UBS is now widely expected by analysts to speed up an overhaul of its investment bank that had been planned for announcement on November 17, though big shareholders have signaled they could wait until that date while the bank completes its internal investigation, according to the inside source. An investment manager whose company holds shares in UBS said he had detected anger within UBS’s private banking operations at the turn of events. “I talked to several senior private bankers, and one told me how he spent last week with compliance arguing about a 1,500-franc accounting difference … And then some junior investment banking trader loses 2 billion. “It creates serious ill will among their clients. So internally there will be some momentum to resize IB.” Along with Gruebel, Carsten Kengeter, head of the investment banking unit, may be in the firing line. “We estimate that the investment banking chief Carsten Kengeter … will be sacrificed after this scandal,” said analyst Dirk Becker at broker Kepler.

Read the full article →

Mark Cuban: The ‘Most Patriotic Thing’ The Rich Can Do Is Pay ‘Lots Of Taxes’

September 19, 2011

Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks, said wealthy Americans should pay “lots of taxes” in a post on his blog on Monday. Titled ” The Most Patriotic Thing You Can Do ,” the post told readers that wealthy Americans should “do something positive” with their money by hiring, training and paying employees and spending money on rent, equipment and services. “I don’t care what anyone says. Being rich is a good thing,” Cuban wrote. “Not just in the obvious sense of benefiting you and your family, but in the broader sense. Profits are not a zero sum game. The more you make the more of a financial impact you can have.” Cuban — who has a net worth of $2.5 billion — encouraged his readers to “get out there and make a boatload of money” and “enjoy the shit out your money” knowing that making more and paying higher taxes would help others. So be Patriotic. Go out there and get rich. Get so obnoxiously rich that when that tax bill comes , your first thought will be to choke on how big a check you have to write. Your 2nd thought will be “what a great problem to have”, and your 3rd should be a recognition that in paying your taxes you are helping to support millions of Americans that are not as fortunate as you. Cuban’s post came in the wake of Rep. John Fleming’s (R-La.) suggestion that he couldn’t afford a tax hike because he had only “maybe $400,000 left over” from his $6.3 million in business profits. Fleming said that he opposed Obama’s plan to tax the wealthy during an appearance on MSNBC.

Read the full article →

Lande Yoosuf: How I Became an Entrepreneur Earlier Than I Thought

September 19, 2011

While I sat behind the register at my hotel gift shop job to earn money during college, I secretly went through the pages of different publications that discussed economics, job market, politics and the career advancement of women. Thinking far ahead, I saw myself as an entrepreneur later on in my life featured in between the pages — I thought I would need more money, resources and clout on my side in order to own a business. When I graduated from college, I was oblivious to the intensity of the rat race that existed in the entertainment industry. Disappointment crept in because it was very apparent that I would need more than “hard work” to get to the next level — I needed a sound strategy. I aggressively networked and sought out mentors, hoping they would expose me to business endeavors that served as great homework. I worked extensively without pay at different startups for several years. I worked with online publications, talent managers, television producers and non-profit organizations that all had established relationships with the entertainment industry. Witnessing and helping others execute their visions was something I did with great vigor for a while — that stamina helped me realize that a lot can be done with a limited budget or assets. I often received compliments from colleagues and superiors that observed my leadership qualities. But I still did not execute anything of my own to prove my true capabilities as a leader. An opportunity to start a business partnership presented itself, which made me feel more comfortable in establishing a company. Having power in numbers was a great way to accumulate resources. Some of the most valuable tools used included pro bono legal services, business centers, libraries and websites that offered a plethora of information about launching on a shoestring budget. I was shocked to learn about the vast number of grants available to women and minority entrepreneurs. My mentors from past opportunities offered insight on what strengths they felt I could contribute to this venture. There was definitely a learning curve on my end but I managed to pull a lot off quite a bit for the team. In addition to my individual reflections, the experience was invaluable in teaching me about teamwork, leadership and how to build a sustainable, profitable brand. Surprisingly, my day job as a Casting Producer was a major motivator in finally pushing me to establish a company. I was offered a part-time casting assignment and saw it as a prime opportunity to create One Scribe Media. Those brief part-time jobs cultivated a list of clients that dramatically influenced my company’s credibility. Having those relationships in combination with the background information over the years finally helped me to develop the courage to start a business — and way before I initially thought it would happen. The additional income was a welcomed plus too! Making my company a priority was challenging decision that was more than worth it. I know my ideas are good enough — the amount of support I receive made me realize that it was not about age or resources that prevented me from taking a leap of faith. It was my lack of confidence and preparedness. As I continue to develop more self-awareness and maturity, my list of professional beliefs will grow exponentially. In the interim, here are some things I can share: Brevity beats impeccable presentation. Just get your work out there and make content king if you have very little money. When your product lacks response, pay attention to that information. Find out how you can achieve your mission while engaging your audience. Stay ahead of the curve with technology and marketing. It’s your company’s lifeline. Listen to criticism, but it isn’t gospel. Take it in small doses, thank the person for their time and sleep on whatever they tell you for a few days. Don’t let unhappy people advise you, regardless of their intentions. Negativity is contagious. Listen To Your Gut . This is incredibly important. We often know what the best decisions are instinctively but ignore those thoughts in fear of taking on unpopular ideas. But unpopular ideas are usually the ones that take you to the next level. Make sure your motivations are founded on sound values . When you have bad intentions, it is more apparent than you think. Look presentable but comfortable. Brand your appearance, even if you do not want to be the “face” of the operation. It will help you to be recognized when networking. Read any and everything. Embrace your inner geek. I was surprised when I realized how much my interest in politics peaked my business instincts. Politics drives the economy and vice versa. It’s always good to know what industries are in demand so you can find unique ways to implement it into your brand strategy. Get a mentor. You are not above anyone’s advice, regardless of age. Talk to random elders in your family or in the street. They give the best advice because of their life experience. Egos are lame. Be honest with yourself about past mistakes, and then move on so everyone else around you can move on too. Have a life. Date, get a hobby, travel, exercise, and develop an identity outside of your profession. It will inspire great ideas. And Most Important of All Be persistent and patient. Everyone’s journey is different so don’t focus on what everyone is doing, worry about how you can accomplish your goals. Ambition is channeled through “tunnel vision” for a reason!

Read the full article →

Europe Shares Suffer Worst Monthly Loss Since Lehman Brothers Collapse

August 31, 2011

LONDON (Dominic Lau) – European shares suffered their biggest monthly loss in August since Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008, with German stocks posting their worst drop in nine years, as worries over slowing growth and the euro zone debt crisis spooked investors. The sharp falls, which wiped more than $750 billion off share values, came in high volumes. Trading turnover in August, which is usually low with many fund managers and traders on holiday, was the highest in almost three years. The sell-off was sparked by an escalation in the euro zone sovereign debt crisis, fears the United Statescould be heading for a recession and the loss of the world’s biggest economy’s triple-A debt rating. In response, investors sought shelter in safe-haven assets such as gold and U.S. and German government bonds, or even just cash. “This month’s performance has been very bad, on the back of a mix of fundamental elements coming in such a short span that the effect on the market was devastating,” Franklin Pichard, director at Barclays France, said. “Political cacophony on both sides of the Atlantic, credit downgrades, doubts about banks’ balance sheets, fears of a repeat of the credit crunch of 2008… coupled with a number of profit warnings. All this has prompted investors to cut their weighting on equities, in favor of cash,” he said. The latest Reuters monthly asset allocation poll showed cash holdings in Europe leapt to 10.4 percent in August from 6.8 percent last month, while asset managers sharply cut equity holdings. “Economic growth is slowing down, with scant hopes of regaining strength any time soon, as governments in developed countries push for budget austerity,” said Giordano Lombardo, Group chief investment officer at Pioneer Investments. “Most of Europe feels the heat of the sovereign debt crisis… We believe volatility will settle down somewhat, otherwise our asset allocation will cut risky assets.” The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index of leading European shares lost 11 percent this month, its biggest monthly percentage drop since October 2008 after the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers. The benchmark has fallen 14 percent so far in 2011, far outstripping a 2.7 percent drop in the U.S. S&P 500 index. UNDERPERFORMANCE “European stocks have been seriously underperforming U.S. shares this year, with a risk premium linked to the region’s debt trouble, but also as if a U.S. recession had been priced in here but not on Wall Street,” said Catherine Garrigues, senior equity portfolio manager at Allianz GI Investments Europe, which has around $178 billion under management. Germany’s DAX index, which outperformed other major European markets in the first seven months of the year, was down 19 percent in August, its worst monthly fall since September 2002, as investors reassessed the impact of slowing global growth on German exporters. That compared with an 11 percent fall in France’s CAC 40. Some dealers ascribed part of the underperformance of the German blue chip index to a ban on short selling of financial stocks introduced by France, Spain, Italy and Belgium on August 12. Investors use the DAX and DAX derivatives as proxies to bet on falls in the broader European market. However, expectations that the Federal Reserve may step in next month with another stimulus package to boost the U.S. economy have stabilized markets and may help stop the outflow from equities. September tends to be weakest month for equities, with an average monthly drop of 0.7 percent for theMSCI world index between 1971 and 2010. December, by contrast, has seen the biggest gains, with stocks rising 2.2 percent on average. (Additional reporting by Natsuko Waki and Luke Jeffs in London, Blaise Robinson in Paris,; graphics by Scott Barber and Vincent Flasseur; editing by Nigel Stephenson) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

Ian Fletcher: How China Stiffs Its Own Creditors

May 23, 2011

I examined in a previous article the ethical case for America repudiating its financial obligations to China. While considering this tempting possibility–which makes for a better bargaining position if nothing else–we should recall the fact that China has, in fact, repudiated its own financial obligations to other nations. The key here is that the formerly (and still nominally) communist government in Beijing refused, upon taking control of the country in 1949, to honor the debts incurred by the previous government, the Nationalists of Chiang Kai-shek. That previous government, like all governments, had a substantial public debt, and just like the U.S. today, much of it was owed to foreigners. The amount at stake? As these unpaid obligations have been accumulating for over sixty years now, it is now estimated to come to about $260 billion, mostly bonds. ( Source ) This repudiation didn’t exactly come as a surprise. At the time, the new government was sincerely communist, and these debts were regarded as the debts of an evil capitalist regime. Furthermore, they were owed to evil capitalists abroad, and if refusing to pay them caused financial hardship or chaos overseas, so much the better. Unfortunately, international law doesn’t work that way. If nations were permitted to repudiate their debts due to ideological differences with the previous government, we could wipe out our national debt every time Republicans replaced Democrats in Washington, or vice versa. Indeed, this is why debts are considered “national” debts in the first place: they are obligations of the nation itself, not of any particular group of politicians who happen to be ruling it at a given moment. The flip side of this principle is, of course, that not only liabilities but also assets carry over from one regime to the next. This includes everything from the typewriters in the nation’s embassy in Ruritania to the national territory itself. (And, of course, it includes the money owed to the nation by foreigners.) Beijing should remember that its claim to the territories of Tibet and Taiwan are based (however dubiously in Tibet’s case) upon historical claims predating the Communists’ seizure of power. But are those who repudiate history entitled to base claims upon it? Hmm… No nation is entitled to have things both ways. Either the People’s Republic of China is the successor state to Nationalist China, in which case it must honor the latter’s debts, or it isn’t, in which case it is not the legitimate government of the country, and we might as well go back to the curious era (1949-71) in which we regarded Taipei as the legitimate government of all China. China is not, of course, the only nation to have welched on its international debts. Russia did it in 1917, Cuba in 1961, and North Korea in 1964. Conversely, any number of nations have gone through wrenching ideological transitions without repudiating their debts. For example, South Africa’s government continues to honor the debts incurred by the apartheid state that preceded it. When the communist government of Russia fell in 1991, there followed a flurry of claims on its successor, which were worked out in various (not entirely satisfactory) ways. There were partial settlements of some of China’s foreign debts in 1979, but this did not include the aforementioned $260 in bonds. In 1987, the British did a deal with China concerning their share of the outstanding obligations, but this deal did not cover non-UK citizens. But in 2006, the Chinese Ministry of Finance formally informed the U.S. government that it was not willing to repay the rest of China’s outstanding obligations. China’s debt repudiation has not, as one might imagine, receded into ancient history. On July 17, 2008, the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation and Trade of the House Committee on Foreign Relations held hearings on the matter. So it remains a quiet but live issue. Bondholders seem to have long memories. Distressingly, there is also another very contemporary angle to this issue. The very same credit ratings agencies that approved billions of bad mortgage securities stand accused of complicity in China’s attempt to run from its financial past. There is a formal legal complaint outstanding with the U.S. Department of Justice antitrust division (viewable here ) accusing these agencies of colluding with each other and Beijing to do this. The significance for the present day is that they stand accused of overstating the reliability of contemporary Chinese debt by, among other things, ignoring the government’s past unreliability. (As we saw in the Asian Crisis of 1998, these agencies are quite capable of mis-rating governments.) Given the scale of sovereign borrowing by the world’s second-largest economy, this may not remain an abstract problem forever.

Read the full article →

Crisis Of Conscience: Lobbyist For Bahrain, Yemen Loses Top Execs

March 24, 2011

This story has been updated NEW YORK — One of Washington’s best-known lobbying and public relations firms has been upended in the wake of the turmoil in the Middle East due in part to its representation of some of the region’s autocratic governments. In the last two months, more than a third of the partners at Qorvis have left the firm to start their own lobby shops, partly because of the firm’s work on behalf of such clients as Yemen, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and the Central African nation of Equatorial Guinea, say former employees. “I just have trouble working with despotic dictators killing their own people,” a former Qorvis insider tells The Huffington Post. “People don’t want to be seen representing all these countries — you take a look at the State Department’s list of human rights violators and some of our clients were on there.” The governments of Bahrain and Yemen, which have been condemned by the United Nations for their brutal crackdowns that resulted in dozens of protesters killed and hundreds injured, are both represented by Qorvis through a subcontract to British public relations giant Bell Pottinger . Saudi Arabia, which last week sent troops to assist in riot control in Bahrain and has long been cited for its poor human rights record , is a longtime client of the firm. And Equatorial Guinea, an oil-rich dictatorship considered one of the most corrupt and undemocratic regimes in the world, likewise pays Qorvis to burnish its reputation. Several former Qorvis staffers blamed the firm’s current management for cultivating such “black hat” clients, noting that much of that business came about through the firm’s partnership with Bell Pottinger, the United Kingdom’s largest public relations firm, which took heat for representing Sri Lanka during that South Asian country’s brutal crackdown on rebel groups during the last two years. “They have zero conscience in what they do,” says the first former insider, referring to Bell Pottinger. A spokesperson for Bell Pottinger did not return calls for comment. Such “black hat” countries pay well — Equatorial Guinea pays Qorvis $55,000 per month and Saudi Arabian initially paid Qorvis $14 million per year back in 2002 to polish its reputation in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, though in recent years the latter contract has been much less lucrative. “These scumbags will pay whatever you want,” says the former insider. “You can charge retainers that are huge.” The firm’s founder and CEO, Michael Petruzello, says that such complaints are “ridiculous” and disingenuous, asserting that the firm’s work with international clients preceded the tenure of departing partners and that no one complained about it. “If they had a problem with it, it would have been discussed,” he said. He adds that most of those former partners worked at Qorvis for six to seven years and that they left primarily to start their own businesses, which is very common in the hothouse world of D.C.-based lobbying and public relations outfits. The principals who departed include Kelley McCormick (who left in early March for Gibraltar Associates), Don Goldberg, Michael Quint and Jason Siegel (who resigned in February to start a new firm, Bluetext), and Maura Corbett , who left in November to launch the Glen Echo Group. Petruzello defends the firm’s work on behalf of countries with troubled reputations, explaining that the firm’s international clients represent only 20 percent of its business (which primarily consists of large corporate clients such as Cisco and Sprint). “The reason they hire Qorvis and others is that they have a narrative they feel is not being heard — and they want a chance to be heard in the court of public opinion.” He adds that he’s proud of the work the firm has done for Bahrain, for example, explaining that every Secretary of the Navy has said that there is no stronger ally of the United States than the island nation, which hosts the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet. And Petruzello, who quickly named four new principals in recent weeks , insists that the firm “has the strongest leadership team in [its] 10-year history.” Among them are former State Department staffer Greg Lagana and former Washington Times editor Seam Dealey, who are handling a new $92,000 litigation communications contract with Cairo-based EZZ Industries. That company’s owner, Egyptian business tycoon Ahmed Ezz, a friend of the Mubarak family, was arrested amid the unrest in that country. Qorvis’s role is to promote “a transparent judicial system in Egypt,” reports O’Dwyer’s. It’s not the first time that Qorvis has witnessed a mass exodus due in some part to its unsavory clients. After Qorvis was retained by Saudi Arabia several months after 9/11, the contract attracted controversy and a Justice Department probe of the firm for its involvement in a radio ad campaign that burnished the image of the country, leading three top principals (Bernie Merrit, Jim Weber and Judy Smith) to leave the firm . Weber and Merritt, who run their own firm, did not return calls for comment. One of the methods used by Qorvis and other firms is online reputation management — through its Geo-Political Solutions (GPS) division , the firm uses ‘”black arts” by creating fake blogs and websites that link back to positive content, “to make sure that no one online comes across the bad stuff,” says the former insider. Other techniques include the use of social media, including Facebook, YouTube and Twitter. Recently, Qorvis helped frame the kingdom’s crackdown on protests by highlighting statements made by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in which she emphasized America’s commitment to Bahrain and affirmed its “sovereign right” to invite security forces from other countries. Clinton’s comment that the government is “on the wrong track,” however, was omitted, notes the Sunlight Foundation’s Paul Blumenthal . The firm’s work for Equatorial Guinea, whose strongman Teodoro Obiang has been accused by the UN Commission on Human Rights of directly overseeing the torture of his opponents, includes sending out news releases about the country’s support for animal conservation and a native daughter being named Michigan “Teacher of the Year.” In a lengthy Harper ‘s profile of Obiang and his son, Qorvis principal Matthew J. Lauer defended the country, saying, “No one is saying there are no problems, but it’s not North Korea,” but declined to respond to questions about claims of corruption and money laundering by U.S. investigators. Other high-powered firms operate in the Mideast — Patton Boggs, which owns a percentage of Qorvis and which recently made headlines when President Obama sent one of the firm’s lawyers , Frank Wisner, to negotiate with Egypt’s recently-ousted former president Hosni Mubarak, has long worked with Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Qorvis and Patton Boggs were both subpoenaed in 2002 by the House Committee on Government Reform , which was investigating reports of American children kidnapped and held in Saudi Arabia. The Livingston Group, founded by former Louisiana Rep. Robert L. Livingston, was paid $2.4 million to represent Libya in 2008 and 2009. And the Washington Media Group ended its $420,000 contract to enhance the image of Tunisia in January after images of the country’s brutal crackdown on protesters made headlines around the world. The United Arab Emirates was the second-biggest foreign lobbying client , paying $5.3 million to DLA Piper and other firms in 2009 to help get more access to U.S. nuclear technology, among other issues. And former Wall Street Journal reporter Christopher Cooper was recently hired for $20,000 a month by Bahrain’s envoy to the U.S. government to help get the administration and members of Congress behind the Crown Prince’s idea of a national dialogue, says Cooper. Envoy Abdul Latif Zayani, Bahrain’s former chief of police, is a familiar presence in military and diplomatic circles and was once a classmate of Joint Chiefs Chairman Mike Mullen. The region is attractive to lobbying firms due to the lucrative contracts but it can also present challenges. “If you get associated with somebody who turns out to be a Gaddafy kind of person, you’re not in the company of one of the nice people of the world and that could harm your reputation,” says Howard Marlowe, president of the American League of Lobbyists. “And in the lobbying world, your reputation is everything.” “Most of us are not guns for hire — we would like to be able to wake up in the morning and look in the mirror and feel that we are not associated with child molesters, wife beaters. And to do work that meets our own test of ethics and conscience,” he added. Making sure to emphasize that he was not referring to the Qorvis situation, he called on lobbyists to follow their conscience. “It’s a commendable thing for a lobbyist to have their own set of ethics — if I’m doing something that I’m uncomfortable with, then I need to get out of it.” Correction: A previous version of this story erroneously reported that legendary publicist Judy Smith died last year based on an incorrect online report. I sincerely regret the error.

Read the full article →

Ian Fletcher: Holy Cow! A Real Debate About Free Trade in the NY Times!

March 23, 2011

Despite being one of the most pressing policy choices facing America, and despite having been one of the biggest controversies in the last, oh, 400 years of economic history, free trade rarely gets a real debate in this country. For the most part, its superiority is just assumed, and the word “protectionist” is treated like, say, “fascist”: something just obviously, axiomatically bad and requiring no serious thought. So it is gratifying to see economist Uwe Reinhardt of the New York Times and Princeton University attempt to engage in a real debate on the issue. He is a free trader. Which is what makes it so interesting that a good look at what he has to say actually reveals a lot about what’s wrong with free trade. (I apologize in advance to Prof. Reinhardt if I have misunderstood anything he said.) For example, he writes: Public discussions on foreign trade sometimes convey the impression that China and the rest of the world make everything, as the United States sits idly by, importing their stuff and going to hell in a handbasket, to use the vernacular. .. Goods and services produced here still represent the great bulk of gross domestic product in the United States. (Original here .) Technically, he is correct. Well over 80% of what America consumes is produced in America. Unfortunately… this metric is totally irrelevant to whether free trade is good for us or not. It doesn’t prove a thing either way. (Anyone who thinks it does is welcome to write me and explain why.) What does have logical traction here? This: as I’ve argued in several articles of my own, the U.S. trade deficit shows an America that is consuming more than it produces. This is a problem because it means that over time, we must either sink into debt or sell off existing assets in order to keep running this giant bar tab with the rest of the world. Therefore, because free trade–or America practicing it while our major trading partners practice mercantilism –arguably causes this trade deficit to happen, free trade is doing us harm. Over time, it leaves us poorer than we would be if we obtained reciprocity under some kind of managed-trade regime. Bottom line: even if “Everything in made in China now!” is a myth, we’ve still got a big problem. Next up, let’s try this assertion by the good professor: After all, imagine what life would be like in the United States in the absence of foreign trade, with all products we use daily made domestically–many would be far more expensive than they currently are, and many would be likely to be of inferior quality to those now available. (Original here .) Talk about a straw man! I don’t know of a single protectionist in the United States who literally proposes to abolish imports entirely. That strange philosophy is found only in places like North Korea, which does (at least pretend to) ban imports on grounds of its ideology of juché or self-reliance. Bottom line: trade and free trade are not the same thing, and one can certainly oppose the latter without opposing the former. Now let’s look at an assertion that doesn’t constitute a falsehood on the professor’s part per se , but does expose a big falsehood that free traders spout all the time. Discussing what to do about people who are harmed by free trade, he writes: A far better approach would be to have in place a solid, general economic safety net that helps all families whose economic base is disrupted through forces beyond their control, whether such disruptions originate in foreign trade or domestic developments. (Original here .) The problem here is all the libertarians and small-government types who like free trade because they think it means the absence of government interference in our lives. This is an appealing philosophy and not without merit, but they’re wrong in the case of free trade. As Prof. Reinhardt notes, even if free trade is a good thing, it’s not a small-government policy. To function, even as free traders like him assert it should, it needs big government to step in and clean up the various messes it makes. Bottom line? Free trade isn’t economic freedom, it’s laissez faire on life support from big government. (Wall Street, didn’t we see this movie before?) Prof. Reinhardt deserves a tip of the hat for being honest about this fact. He has a similar (true, but tending to debunk his own side) point here: Whether a fellow American gains from a trade or someone in Shanghai does not make any difference to most economists, nor does it matter to them where the losers from global competition live, in America or elsewhere. (Original here .) This should be a real tip-off for ordinary voters not to trust most economists. If they don’t care who wins and who loses from trade, why should we heed their advice on the subject or let them advise our government? The issue here isn’t that economists ought to be America First nationalists . That’s a matter of political opinion, and they’re entitled to whatever ideological leanings they fancy. Instead, the issue is twofold: First, granted, it is indeed arbitrary from the point of view of pure economic science whether a given policy is good for America or Timbuktu. But it’s equally “arbitrary” that I’m me and you’re you! I don’t balance my checkbook for my own financial benefit because of some ideological conviction that I’m special; I do it because I’m me, just as you do. (And just as I must assume most of these oh-so-cosmopolitan economists do.) Second: it is really easy to use the nation-agnostic objectivity of pure economics to slide into the argument that we somehow shouldn’t care about national economic well-being. But that doesn’t follow. From the point of view of pure economics, internationalism is just as much an arbitrary ideological assumption as nationalism. Just because biology can’t take sides between diseases and the people that diseases kill, doesn’t mean medicine can’t. Indeed, medicine is crazy if it doesn’t. So while we can all thank Prof. Reinhardt for opening up some needed public debate about free trade, he’s dreaming if he thinks it’s settled in favor of free trade.

Read the full article →

Ian Fletcher: Free Trade Isn’t Helping World Poverty

March 19, 2011

The propaganda for free trade tells us that not only is it the master key to our own prosperity, but also the master key to lifting the world’s poor out of poverty. So if we don’t support free trade, we’re in for a guilt trip like the one that used to make us stick quarters into UNICEF boxes. Unfortunately, free trade just doesn’t work as a global anti-poverty strategy. The spreading Third World affluence one sees in TV commercials only means that the thin upper crust of Western-style consumers is now more widespread than ever before. But having more affluent people in the Third World is not the same as the Third World as a whole nearing the living standards of the First. This is actually not a terribly big secret, and is fairly well known to the people who promote free trade. For a start, the World Bank standard for poverty is $2 a day, so “moving people out of poverty” can merely consist in moving people from $1.99 a day to $2.01 a day. In one major study, there were only two nations in which the average beneficiary jumped from less than $1.88 to more than $2.13: Pakistan and Thailand. Every other nation was making minor jumps in between. The developing world’s gains from trade liberalization (insofar as there are any) are concentrated in a relatively small group of nations, due to the fact that only a few developing nations have economies that are actually capable of taking advantage of freer trade to any meaningful extent. Although it depends a bit on the model, China, India, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Vietnam, and Turkey generally take the lion’s share. This list sounds impressive, but it actually leaves out most Third World nations. Dirt-poor nations like Haiti aren’t even on the radar. Even nations one notch up the scale, like Bolivia, barely figure. So forget helping starving children in Africa this way. They’re not even in the game of international trade–let alone winners of it. Like it or not, this is perfectly logical, as increased access to the ruthlessly competitive global marketplace (which is all free trade provides) benefits only nations whose industries have something to sell which foreign trade barriers are currently keeping out . Their industries must both be strong enough to be globally competitive and have pent-up potential due to trade barriers abroad, a fairly rare combination. As a result, the most desperately impoverished nations, which have few or no internationally competitive industries, have basically nothing to gain from freer trade. What progress against poverty has occurred in the world in recent decades has not been due to free trade, but due to the embrace of mercantilism and industrial policy by some poor nations. (This is, of course, the same way nations like the U.S. and England became prosperous hundreds of years ago.) According to the World Bank, the entire net global decline in the number of people living in poverty since 1981 has been in mercantilist China, where free trade is spurned. Elsewhere, their numbers have grown. The story on global economic progress for poor nations in the last 30 years is roughly as follows: 1. China (one fifth of humanity) braked its population growth, made a quantum leap from agrarian Marxism to industrial mercantilism, and thrived–largely because the U.S. was so open to being the “designated driver” of its export-centered growth strategy during this period. 2. India (another fifth) sharply increased the capitalist share of its mixture of capitalism and Gandhian-Fabian socialism after 1991. It did reasonably well, but not as well as China and not well enough to reduce the absolute number of its people living in poverty, given unbraked population growth. 3. Latin America lost its way after the oil shocks of the 1970s, experienced the 1980s as an economic “lost decade,” and tried to implement the free market Washington Consensus in the 1990s. It didn’t get the promised results, so some nations responded with a pragmatic retreat from free market purism, others with a lurch to the left, the former showing results in the last five years or so. 4. The collapse of Communism left some nations (Cuba, North Korea) marooned in Marxist poverty, while others (Uzbekistan, Mongolia) discovered that the only thing worse than an intact communist economy is the wreckage of one. Much of Eastern Europe and the ex-USSR got burned by an overly abrupt transition to capitalism, then recovered at various speeds. 5. Sub-Saharan Africa spent much of this period in political chaos, with predictable economic results (except for South Africa and Botswana). Washington Consensus policies in the 1990s did not deliver, and the few recent bright spots have yet to deliver increased per capita income or lower unemployment. 6. Other poor countries followed patterns one through five to varying degrees, with corresponding outcomes. China is unquestionably the star here. But all its brutally efficient achievements in forcing up the living standards of its people from an extremely low base, it still has serious problems. Its growth miracle has been largely confined to the metropolitan areas of the country’s coastal provinces. Of the 800 million peasants left behind in agriculture, perhaps 400 million have seen their incomes stagnate or even decline. Over the last 30 years of greatly expanding free trade, most of the world’s poor nations have actually seen the gap between themselves and the rest of the world increase. As economist Dani Rodrik of Harvard summarizes the data: The income gap between these regions of the developing world and the industrial countries has been steadily rising. In 1980, 32 Sub-Saharan countries had an income per capita at purchasing power parity equal to 9.3 percent of the U.S. level, while 25 Latin American and Caribbean countries had an income equal to 26.3 percent of the U.S. average. By 2004, the numbers had dropped to 6.1 percent and 16.5 percent respectively for these two regions. This represents a drop of over 35 percent in relative per capita income. Today, because a few formerly poor nations are succeeding economically while most have been hit with economic decline, the world is splitting into a “twin peaks” income distribution, with a hollowing out of middle-income countries. A significant number of nations have gone backwards, and are now poorer than they were a generation ago. Most poor nations have high fertility, so population growth drags down their per capita income by a percentage point or two every year if economic growth does not outpace it. Contrary to impressions in the media, economic success is actually becoming more concentrated in the Western world, not less. According to one summary of the data by Syed Murshed of Erasmus University in Holland: Between 1960 and 2000 the Western share of rich countries has been increasing; to be affluent has almost become an exclusive Western prerogative–16 out of 19 non-Western nations who were rich in 1960 traversed into less affluent categories by 2000 (for example, Algeria, Angola, and Argentina). Against that, four Asian non-rich countries moved into the first group. Most non-Western rich nations in 1960 joined the second income group by 2000, and most non-Western upper-middle-income countries in 1960 had fallen into the second and third categories by 2000. Of 22 upper-middle-income nations in 1960, 20 had declined into the third and fourth income categories, among them the Democratic Republic of the Congo, also known recently as Zaire, and Ghana. Most nations in the third group in 1960 descended into the lowest income category by 2000. Only Botswana moved to the third group from the fourth category, while Egypt remains in the third category. We seem to inhabit a downwardly mobile world with a vanishing middle class ; by 2000 most countries were either rich or poor, in contrast to 1960 when most nations were in the middle-income groups. (Emphasis added.) This is no accident. Free trade tends to mean that the industrial sectors of developing nations either “make it to the big time” and become globally competitive, or else they get killed off entirely by imports, leaving nothing but agriculture and raw materials extraction, dead-end sectors which tend not to grow very fast. Free trade eliminates the protected middle ground for economies, like Mongolia or Peru, which don’t have globally competitive industrial sectors but were still better off having such sectors, albeit inefficient ones, than not having them at all. The productivity of modern industry is so much higher than peasant agriculture that it raises average income even if it is not globally competitive. Nations which open up their economies to (somewhat) free trade relatively late in their development, and continue to support domestic firms with industrial policy, are far more likely to retain medium and high technology industry, the key to their futures, than nations which embrace full-blown free trade and a laissez faire absence of industrial policy too early in their development. There are numerous documented cases in which trade liberalization simply killed off indigenous industries without supplying anything to replace them. To take some typical examples given by the International Forum on Globalization: Senegal experienced large job losses following liberalization in the late 1980s; by the early 1990s, employment cuts had eliminated one-third of all manufacturing jobs. The chemical, textile, shoe, and automobile assembly industries virtually collapsed in the Ivory Coast after tariffs were abruptly lowered by 40 percent in 1986. Similar problems have plagued liberalization attempts in Nigeria. In Sierra Leone, Zambia, Zaire, Uganda, Tanzania, and the Sudan, liberalization in the 1980s brought a tremendous surge in consumer imports and sharp cutbacks in foreign exchange available for purchases of intermediate inputs and capital goods, with devastating effects on industrial output and employment. In Ghana, liberalization caused industrial sector employment to plunge from 78,700 in 1987 to 28,000 in 1993. One unhappy corollary of this is the so-called Vanek-Reinert effect, in which the most advanced sectors of a primitive economy are the ones destroyed by a sudden transition to free trade. Once these sectors are gone, a nation can be locked in poverty indefinitely.

Read the full article →

Video: Lankov Expects Another North Korean Attack in Few Months

February 28, 2011

Feb. 28 (Bloomberg) — Andrei Lankov, an associate professor at Kookmin University in Seoul, talks about tensions on the Korean Peninsula. North Korea threatened to take military action if the South continues to drop leaflets and other propaganda encouraging revolt, threatening a return of tension on the peninsula that roiled markets last year. Lankov speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

U.S. Point Man On Sanctions Leaving At Critical Time

January 24, 2011

The point man for the Obama administration’s financial wars on Iran, North Korea and al Qaeda, Stuart Levey, has decided to leave his senior U.S. Treasury Department post at what is turning out to be a particularly critical time. Mr. Levey’s departure will leave President Barack Obama without the principal architect of Washington’s economic-sanctions campaign against Tehran, just as that campaign is likely to be ramped up following the breakdown of talks among Iran, the U.S. and a bloc of global powers on Saturday.

Read the full article →

Video: South Koreans Rush to Join Marines After North’s Attack

December 22, 2010

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — Anger at North Korea’s killing of civilians in an artillery barrage last month has spurred applications to join South Korea’s Marine Corps. Almost 3,500 men are competing for 977 openings in the elite corps this month, a 37 percent increase on December last year, according to figures from the Military Manpower Administration. There were about 2,800 applicants for November’s monthly intake. Bloomberg’s Mike Firn reports from Seoul. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Baker Says China Must Show It Can Mediate Korea Conflict: Video

November 24, 2010

Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — Rodger Baker, vice president of strategic intelligence at Stratfor Global Intelligence, talks about the outlook for resolving tensions between North and South Korea after North Korea yesterday fired onto the island of Yeonpyeong. Four people were killed and 20 wounded, mostly soldiers. Baker speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Cha Calls U.S. Warship Deployment to Korea `Right Move’

November 24, 2010

Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — Victor Cha, who holds the Korea Chair at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, discusses the conflict between North and South Korea. The U.S. sent the USS George Washington aircraft carrier to take part in exercises off the Korean Peninsula in a show of strength after North Korea fired artillery onto South Korean soil for the first time in half a century. Cha speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Thomas Hubbard Says U.S. Right to Send Aircraft Carrier

November 24, 2010

Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — Thomas Hubbard, a former U.S. ambassador to South Korea, talks about the U.S. and Chinese reaction to the exchange of artillery fire between North Korea and South Korea. Hubbard speaks with Erik Schatzker and Lizzie O’Leary on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Obama Sends Aircraft Carrier After North Korea Attack

November 24, 2010

Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. sent the aircraft carrier George Washington to take part in exercises off the Korean Peninsula in a show of strength after North Korea fired artillery onto South Korean soil for the first time in half a century. President Barack Obama affirmed the U.S.’s support for South Korea in an interview with ABC’s Barbara Walters. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Former Ambassador Gregg Discusses N. Korea’s Leadership: Video

September 28, 2010

Sept. 28 (Bloomberg) — Donald Gregg, former U.S. ambassador to South Korea, talks about the outlook for North Korea’s leadership and diplomacy. North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il’s youngest son, Kim Jong-Un, has been appointed a general, the official Korean Central News Agency reported yesterday, a day before the Workers Party of Korea is to meet to choose “its supreme leadership body.” Gregg also discusses the sinking of a South Korean warship in March which killed 46 sailors. He speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Robert E. Scott: The Times gets it wrong: Ending currency manipulation would reduce U.S. trade deficits and create jobs

September 2, 2010

An op-ed published in The New York Times last week (August 23) claimed that revaluation of the Chinese yuan would “make barely a dent in America’s trade deficit.” This ludicrous assertion flies in the face of basic economic theory and our own economic history. The U.S. trade deficit with China displaced 2.4 million U.S. jobs between 2001 and 2008 alone. Treasury Secretary Geithner should identify China as a currency manipulator, and Congress should pass legislation that would authorize the president to impose substantial tariffs on Chinese goods if they fail to substantially revalue the yuan by the end of 2010. Currency manipulation by China and several other Asian nations makes their goods artificially cheap and makes U.S. exports artificially expensive in China and in world markets. Chinese foreign exchange reserves , the main instrument of currency manipulation, reached an unprecedented $2.5 trillion this past June. The Chinese yuan or renminbi (RMB) is estimated to be at least 35% to 40% undervalued, relative to the U.S. dollar. With no change in exchange rates and the growth of illegal subsidies and other unfair trade practices, it is no surprise that structural imbalances in trade and capital flows are resurfacing as the global economy recovers from the worst recession in 70 years. In ” The Yen’s Lesson for the Yuan ,” Joseph A. Massey and Lee M. Sands admit that getting tough with currency manipulators can work, as it did in August 1971, when President Nixon imposed an import surcharge and took the dollar off the gold standard. That December, Japan and nine other countries agreed to revalue their currencies. Yet the authors claim that revaluation did not work in that case because the U.S. trade deficit with Japan continued to rise for the next two decades, peaking in 2006. But this claim misses the point: global currency realignment is needed to reduce the U.S. global trade deficit, not necessarily the bi-lateral deficit with any particular country. And the United States has continuing trade problems with Japan (including cartels and non-tariff barriers to imports) that make it especially difficult to penetrate that market. Currency revaluation by our trading partners worked in both 1971 and 1985 (Nixon’s import surcharge and the Plaza Accord), as shown in graph below. Following Nixon’s import surcharge and the resulting revaluation in 1971 (shown with the first vertical bar), the U.S. current account deficit (the broadest measure of the U.S. trade deficit) was eliminated, resulting in a decade of roughly stable trade balances. These persisted through the first two oil crises of 1973 and 1979, and lasted until 1982, when Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volker’s tight money policies caused the dollar to soar in value. Again in 1985, the U.S. developed large trade deficits after the dollar strengthened against many of the same currencies. The House passed legislation to impose tariffs on imports from countries with large trade surpluses. The mere threat of a tariff persuaded the G-5 countries to enter into the Plaza Accord (the second vertical bar in the figure), which lowered the dollar and the trade deficit over the next two to three years. The current account deficit remained stable albeit at a lower level of about 1-2% of GDP. Then Asian currency crisis hit and dollar soared again. That bubble has never been fully corrected. Perhaps the strangest thing about Massey and Sands’ argument is that it stands basic economic theory on its head. Belief in the price mechanism is perhaps the most fundamental theorem in economics–changes in relative prices should change supply and demand for nearly all goods. The exchange rate is one of the broadest price mechanisms because it changes the prices of all goods between two or more countries. Yet the authors claim that the price of currency doesn’t matter. What is particularly surprising is that Massey and Sands are former U.S. trade negotiators with China, charged with negotiating lower Chinese tariffs and eliminating other barriers to U.S. exports. These negotiations can only be justified on the grounds that they will increase U.S. exports or market access in China. Their work as trade negotiators implies that small changes in the prices of a few products can increase exports, but their article claims that large changes in the relative prices of all imports and exports will not affect the trade balance. This makes absolutely no economic sense. Massey and Sands have substantial business interests in China. They direct Sierra Asia , a consulting firm that “has represented more than 50 major corporations in China from the U.S., Europe, and Japan,” who are “establishing and maintaining successful operations there.” Massey and Sands represented Sierra at a China business forum in Memphis last month sponsored by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and its local affiliate. Were the RMB to rise by 35% to 40%, to its fair market value, global corporations would have less interest in outsourcing production to China and Sierra Asia’s fees on such deals would decline. The op-ed by Massey and Sands is part of a larger campaign by the Times editorial page opposing efforts to get tough with China on currency manipulation. On August 15 they published an editorial on the ” Return of the Killer Trade Deficit ” which said that the United States needs to correct its longstanding trade deficit with the world. However, they claimed that moves to impose tariffs would be a “bad way to address the problem,” instead they call for jawboning rich countries to increase demand. They also argue that the United States should rebalance spending and saving. But the United States possesses no policy tool that can directly influence either demand in other countries or spending and saving in this country. But we can directly affect exchange rates, by imposing (or better yet, threatening to impose) import tariffs. Paul Krugman responded immediately to the Times editorial on his blog, where he said that China is practicing “a seriously predatory trade policy” and that we should confront the China currency “issue head on.” He noted that if it leads to trade conflict, “surplus countries [such as China] have a lot to lose from such conflict, while deficit countries may well end up gaining.” Krugman had previously called for the United States to threaten China with a 25% import surcharge if it refuses to revalue. I responded to the “Return of the Killer Trade Deficit” with an (unpublished) letter to the editor that summarized the history of U.S. currency interventions in 1971 and 1985. I have reviewed this history in several recent publications, including recent post on this blog, ” U.S. jobs depend on China revaluing its currency now .” The Times appears to view the currency manipulation problem as a foreign policy issue in which relations with countries like North Korea assume more importance than the economic damage being done to the United States by currency manipulation. It argued that we should take care to avoid conflicts with a country that is fast developing one of the largest economies in the world. However, Chinese currency manipulation is a disease that is eating away at the core of the U.S economy, and threatens the nascent global recover. Unchecked, it will lead to the development of new bubbles in the U.S., Chinese, and global economies. We need to demonstrate to China that we have the strength and resolve to address this issue directly. Once it is settled, the path will be cleared for much closer cooperation on the host of diplomatic issues that crowd our bi-lateral diplomatic agenda, from North Korea’s nuclear weapons to re-unification on the Peninsula, to weapons proliferation in Iran and China’s relations with rogue nation/states in Africa. Currency realignment works because it reduces unfair competition from imports in this market, and because it makes U.S. exports more competitive on world markets. A number of economists have estimated that ending currency manipulation by China and other countries can create at least 1 million jobs, increasing U.S. GDP and sustainable growth while helping to reduce both U.S. trade and budget deficits. As GDP rises (by 1% to 1.5% according to Krugman), wages and tax receipts will rise and spending on unemployment insurance and other forms of public assistance will decline. The United States also needs to rebuild U.S. manufacturing by investing in R&D, clean energy, infrastructure, and workforce development. We also need to put an end to illegal subsidies and other unfair trade practices by China and other countries. This will create domestic demand for manufactured goods, develop new products that we can sell to the rest of the world, and open those markets to goods made in America. Over the past decade, other high-wage, developed countries such as Germany have maintained large manufacturing sectors with rapidly growing exports and a growing trade surplus. We need to learn from those successful players as we rebuild world-class, competitive manufacturing industries. The first step is to create a level playing field by rebalancing exchange rates with China and other countries, and that won’t happen without the threat of tariffs or other import restraints from the United States. EPI is a non-profit think tank that receives the majority of its funding from foundation grants. It is also receives financial support from U.S. labor unions and industrial associations that would benefit from a rising yuan and a falling U.S. trade deficit.

Read the full article →

Video: U.S., South Korean Forces Begin Military Exercises: Video

July 25, 2010

July 26 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Zeb Eckert reports on joint naval exercises by the U.S. and South Korea that began yesterday off the eastern coast of the Korean Peninsula, maneuvers North Korea threatened to “counter.” The drills involve 20 vessels and 200 aircraft, including the USS George Washington, a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, and will be held until July 28. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Editorial: Victory for North Korea

July 10, 2010

Editorial: Victory for North Korea

Read the full article →

U.S. Says It Stands by South Korea Amid Push for Sanctions Against North

June 16, 2010

By Bomi Lim June 17 (Bloomberg) — U.S. envoy Kurt Campbell appeared alongside South Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung Hwan in Seoul today in a show of unity as the United Nations Security Council began discussing allegations North Korea torpedoed one of the South’s warships. “We are determined to show that our alliance is standing very firmly together during an absolutely critical period of time,” Campbell, the assistant secretary of state for East Asia, said at the beginning of talks with Yu. North Korea’s Ambassador to the UN, Sin Son Ho, warned this week his nation will respond militarily to any accusation by the UN Security Council of complicity in the March 26 sinking of the 1,200-ton Cheonan. Backed by the U.S. and Japan, South Korea is asking for Security Council condemnation of Kim Jong Il ’s regime for the attack, which killed 46 sailors. The multinational team that said on May 20 a North Korean torpedo caused the sinking briefed the Security Council on its evidence on June 14. China and Russia, which have veto power on the council, have resisted criticizing Kim’s regime for the attack. To contact the reporter on this story: Bomi Lim in Seoul at blim30@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam Added to Human-Trafficking Watchlist by U.S.

June 14, 2010

By Daniel Ten Kate and Nicole Gaouette June 15 (Bloomberg) — Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam all regressed last year in their efforts to battle trafficking of men, women and children for labor or commercial sex, according to the U.S. State Department . The three Southeast Asian countries were placed on a watch list of middle-tier countries, placing them one level above the worst offenders such as North Korea, Myanmar and Saudi Arabia, the report said. Malaysia was upgraded from the worst ranking, while Cambodia and Pakistan were removed from the watch list. The department’s 10th annual report grades 175 nations on their efforts to fight this modern form of slavery. The U.S. is listed for the first time, placed among those countries that are doing their best to comply with the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, the American law against human trade. Singapore’s government showed an “inadequate response” to sex trafficking in the city-state with only two convictions last year, the report said. Thailand and Vietnam similarly made little progress in prosecuting trafficking offenders, it said. Malaysia moved out of the worst tier with increased criminal charges against offenders, the report said. Cambodian authorities made a “significant increase” in convictions over the past year, including a public official, and Pakistan boosted efforts to combat bonded labor, the U.S. said. The U.S. is a source as well as a transit and destination country for people forced into labor, debt bondage and prostitution, the report said. The work is predominantly in manufacturing, janitorial services, agriculture, hotel services, construction, nail salons, elder care, strip-club dancing and domestic servitude, the U.S. said. ‘Tears of Families’ “Behind these statistics on the pages are the struggles of real human beings, the tears of families who may never see their children, the despair and indignity of those suffering under the worst forms of exploitation,” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said at a State Department event to mark the release of the report yesterday in Washington. The International Labor Organization estimated there were 12.3 million victims of forced labor, sex trafficking, debt bondage and recruitment of child soldiers worldwide in 2009. In the same year, there were 4,166 successful prosecutions for trafficking, the State Department report said. The U.S. report lists three tiers of nations. Among those in the bottom section — nations that don’t comply with the law and make no effort to do so — are Zimbabwe, Cuba, Mauritania and Sudan. Japan, Israel and Oman are listed in the middle tier — nations that don’t fully meet the law’s minimum standards yet are making “significant” efforts to do so. Oil-rich Qatar is listed in between the middle and lowest tier on a watch list of countries that don’t meet minimum standards and whose progress is less certain. More Prosecutions Needed The trafficking report calls for better law enforcement, improved laws and more prosecutions for trafficking. The report changes each year, and countries can move from tier one, where the U.S. and others are, to the bottom tier. This year, 22 countries were upgraded, including Djibouti, which moved from the second tier to the first, while 19 lost ground, such as the Dominican Republic, which slipped from tier two to tier three. Sixty-two countries on the list have never prosecuted trafficking, according to the report. “Most countries that deny the existence of victims of modern slavery within their borders are not looking, trying or living up to the mandates” of a United Nations protocol mandate against trafficking, the report said. To contact the reporter on this story: Daniel Ten Kate in Bangkok at dtenkate@bloomberg.net ; Nicole Gaouette in Washington at ngaouette@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

`Dead Border’ Thwarts Growth as Chinese Pay Price for Backing North Korea

June 14, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 15 (Bloomberg) — Business is slow at sportswear maker Li Ning Co. ’s store in Tumen, China, says Wang Qian, who sells World Cup-themed athletic shoes emblazoned with German and Italian flags. Across the Tumen River is North Korea, whose closed economy discourages growth in northeastern China, the country’s industrial heartland as recently as two decades ago. Tumen’s annual per-capita gross domestic product, at 16,000 yuan ($2,342), is two-thirds of the national average. Young adults, including ethnic Koreans, are leaving for better opportunities, especially in South Korea. “Most of the people here are over 40, and they’re not the type who buy a lot of sportswear,” said Wang, 22. More than 70 million Chinese who live in provinces on the 1,415-kilometer (880-mile) North Korean border are paying a price for their government’s 60-year alliance with the totalitarian regime in Pyongyang. Trade with South Korea, China’s fourth-biggest commerce partner, is routed toward coastal cities, and projects including a development zone on the Tumen River delta — where China, North Korea and Russia meet — may languish unless Kim Jong Il allows some economic freedom, according to Jin Qiangyi at Yanbian University about 50 kilometers from Tumen. “The border is a dead border,” Jin, an ethnic Korean and director of the Institute of Northeast Asian Studies, said in a telephone interview. While China is encouraging North Korea to open up, it “is refusing. It is very difficult.” Communist Regime One reason is China’s economic and political support for North Korea’s communist regime, which began when China came to North Korea’s aid in the 1950-1953 Korean war. China accounted for 79 percent of the North’s 2009 international trade, according to the Seoul-based Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency. China provides almost 90 percent of energy imports and 45 percent of the country’s food, according to a July 2009 report by the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations. Two-way commerce between China and North Korea, at $720 million from January through April, was still about 1 percent of the $63 billion total between China and South Korea, according to Chinese trade data. That gap is evident in Tumen, a city of 136,000 across the river from the North Korean town of Namyang. A group of about 20 peasants could be seen in Namyang through binoculars on June 4, tending a rocky field on the slope of a deforested mountain. A lone cow grazed in the marsh near the river, which flows to the Sea of Japan about 90 kilometers away. Border Shootings Two men ran across the 69-year-old two-lane bridge into China, glancing quickly back at the North Korean side. Hours earlier, three Chinese citizens had been shot dead by North Korean guards near a similar crossing hundreds of miles to the southwest. The guards have been “more tense” in recent weeks, said a 41-year-old Tumen woman hawking North Korean money and pins. They have held up transit of Chinese traders as tensions between the two Koreas rose following the March 26 sinking of a South Korean warship, said the woman, who gave only her surname, Li, because she said she feared being punished for divulging information to a foreign reporter. North Korea said May 26 it would sever all ties with the South following a report by a South Korean-led international panel concluding a North Korean torpedo sank the ship, killing 46 sailors. Near-Empty Streets Tumen’s streets were largely devoid of traffic, and a rock band from the provincial capital of Changchun played to only a scattering of onlookers steps from the Li Ning store. Shopkeepers had a ready explanation: emigration to South Korea by the region’s ethnic Korean population. More than 92 percent, or 1.78 million, live in Jilin, Heilongjiang and Liaoning provinces, with the heaviest concentration in the prefecture encompassing Tumen. South Korean statistics back up their claim. There were 363,087 ethnic Koreans from China living legally in South Korea last year, compared with 310,485 in 2007, according to the Ministry of Justice . Salaries in South Korea are one attraction. A 45-year-old taxi driver surnamed Zhang said his wife obtained a forged marriage certificate showing she was married to a South Korean. She works in a factory there, making air conditioners and earning the equivalent of 10,000 yuan a month, five times his wages. She saves 80,000 yuan a year and plans to return to China soon, he said. Zhang didn’t want to use his full name because of his wife’s illegal means of obtaining a visa. Better Business “There’s nothing to do around here,” said Sun Xiaoyu, a Tumen shopkeeper selling South Korean-made snacks and drinks. “Business would be much better if we bordered South Korea.” North Korea’s 2008 GDP was about 2 percent of South Korea’s $930.9 billion total, according the most recent data from South Korea’s central bank . China has targeted the region for accelerated development in a program called “Revitalize the Old Northeastern Industrial Base.” One goal is encouraging technology companies to open manufacturing facilities, replacing jobs lost a decade ago when state-owned plants were closed in China’s transition to a more market-driven economy. China also should encourage peaceful Korean reunification to help spur growth, Jin said, although the increasing tension makes that a distant prospect right now. “We must just wait,” he said. — Michael Forsythe . With assistance from Bomi Lim in Seoul, Stephen Engle in Beijing and Inyoung Hwang in New York. Editors: Melinda Grenier , Ken Fireman To contact the reporter on this story: Michael Forsythe in Beijing at mforsythe@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

South Korea Presses UN Security Council to Take Action Over Ship’s Sinking

June 14, 2010

By Bomi Lim and Bill Varner June 15 (Bloomberg) — South Korea called on the United Nations Security Council to take “appropriate action” against North Korea for torpedoing the Cheonan warship, hours after the government replaced its top military commander. The Security Council’s response should be “commensurate with the gravity of the provocation,” South Korea’s Ambassador Park In Kook said in New York yesterday as officials presented evidence of North Korean involvement in the sinking. “We are just victims,” Pak Tok Hun, North Korea’s deputy ambassador to the UN told reporters before meeting privately with the Security Council, reiterating the country wasn’t responsible for the incident. South Korea yesterday replaced Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman General Lee Sang Eui’s after an investigation showed “many problems” in the country’s response to the incident. The findings may hinder President Lee Myung Bak ’s bid to win over a public that is skeptical of his hard line on North Korea and that punished his Grand National Party in local elections on June 2. The South Korean investigation may also undermine Lee’s push for action at the UN, said Brian Myers, professor of international studies at Dongseo University in Busan, South Korea. China and Russia, which have veto power in the council, have refused to back South Korea. “If they see even the South Korean people themselves aren’t really all that upset about the Cheonan sinking they are going to feel even less inclined to want to alienate North Korea,” Myers said. “The South Koreans need to project more of an image of firmness and resolve.” International Panel A South Korea-led multination panel, which said on May 20 North Korea fired a torpedo that sank the 1,200-ton warship, killing 46 sailors, presented evidence to the Security Council. The panel included experts from the U.S., U.K., Australia and Sweden. The evidence included photographs of pieces of the torpedo and information about the movements of North Korean submarines in the region at the time of the attack. Other proof included photos of ship plates that were bent inwards by an explosion and statements from survivors. South Korea’s presentation was “extremely convincing,” Japan’s Ambassador Yukio Takasu said, adding that the Security Council should “take action.” Some council members, Takasu said without naming them, “are still analyzing, have some questions and want to wait.” Gerard Araud , France’s ambassador to the UN, said he found the South Korean briefing “very convincing.” About Pak’s presentation, Araud said there was “nothing on the North Korean side, just allegations, accusations, no science.” North Korea has accused South Korea of cooking up evidence to justify U.S.-led efforts to stifle it. Drinking Binge South Korea’s probe into its response to the incident revealed a shot-drinking binge by General Lee and a cover-up of failures in the nation’s defense. Army Chief of Staff Han Min Koo will replace Lee, pending lawmakers’ approval, the Defense Ministry said yesterday. After downing 10 shots of whiskey at a military dinner in Daejeon on March 26, according to closed-circuit television footage cited by government investigators, Lee took a train 160 kilometers (99 miles) north to Seoul to take charge as the warship Cheonan split in two in heavy seas. Lee slept off his drinking session in his office, Yonhap News reported last week, citing investigators. The Joint Chiefs of Staff denied the General was too drunk to give orders. Tail Fin Within hours of reports of the drinking session, South Korean websites carried a picture of a shot glass in the shape of a torpedo, with No.1 written on one tail fin. That number, painted on a torpedo fin salvaged from the sinking site, was a key piece of the evidence put forward by a South Korean-led international panel to prove the North Korea was behind the attack. North Korea has played on contradictions in South Korea’s report, including a change in the reported time the incident took place. The South Korean military edited video footage to remove evidence of the timing of the event in an attempt to cover up the slow response, the probe found. The audit board on June 10 said 25 generals and civilian officials should be punished over numerous problems in the military’s ability to prevent attacks and the reporting of incidents. Almost one in four South Koreans said they don’t trust the probe’s findings, according to a poll commissioned by the Hankook Ilbo newspaper on May 24. Such skepticism has riled the government, which announced a crackdown on people spreading “false rumors” on the Internet. The People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy sent letters to Security Council members questioning the findings and calling for a reopening of the investigation, said Kim Hui Sun, a coordinator at the Seoul-based civic group. In a six-point objection , the group said the military’s failure to disclose information and the government’s clampdown on freedom of speech had undermined the inquiry. To contact the reporters on this story: Bomi Lim in Seoul at blim30@bloomberg.net ; Bill Varner at the United Nations at wvarner@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Taiwan, China Say They Reach a Basic Agreement on Reducing Trade Tariffs

June 13, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 14 (Bloomberg) — China and Taiwan said they reached a basic agreement on tariff reductions in a third round of talks to boost economic and trade relations. “We are still working on details, but the basic agreement has been reached,” Tang Wei, head of Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau affairs at China’s Ministry of Commerce, said late yesterday after talks in Beijing with Huang Chih-peng , director- general of Taiwan’s Bureau of Foreign Trade. An agreement would lower tariffs on more than 200 items exported from China to Taiwan including car parts, petrochemicals and machinery, the officials said. The exact items have yet to be decided, and Tang said he hoped that Taiwan would export textiles and car parts to China. An accord would allow service providers to compete in the two markets, he said. Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou has been pushing for an accord to bolster export-dependent Taiwan’s economy after a Chinese trade agreement with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations began this year. Ma is also seeking better relations with the island’s biggest trading partner and No. 1 investment destination. Any accord “will boost market sentiment and confidence,” Tony Phoo , an economist at Standard Chartered Plc, said by phone in Taipei yesterday. Still, “the preferred-tariff treatment won’t happen at least for the next one to two years.” Cross-strait ties improved after President Ma took office in May 2008 and abandoned his predecessor’s pro-independence stance. Ma’s administration has said the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement, or ECFA, may be signed this month. ‘Milestone’ “Signing the ECFA is a route that Taiwan must take and it is a milestone,” Liu Bih-rong , a professor of political science at Soochow University in Taipei, said by phone. “It signifies how the relationship between the two sides has recovered and more importantly, it will pave the way for more free-trade agreements and benefits.” Taiwan and China agreed in December to boost cooperation in fishing, agriculture and industrial goods at the fourth cross- strait talks as relations reached their warmest in 60 years. In November, they signed three memoranda of understanding to ease access to each other’s banking, securities and insurance industries. “Taiwan has abundant capital, advanced production technology, rich enterprise-management experience and international sales channels,” China’s Tang said in the opening remarks. “On the other hand, the mainland has very rich resources and a lot of labor and huge potential markets.” Trade Jumps Trade between the mainland and Taiwan increased 68 percent in the first four months of 2010 compared with same period last year, and Taiwan investment rose 45 percent, China’s Tang said today. An agreement would be in “both parties’ interests, so we have better resource allocation and cooperation,” Tang said. An agreement with China is “vital to Taiwan’s economy,” Chiang Pin-kung , chairman of the Taipei-based Straits Exchange Foundation, said in February. An agreement would help to ensure Taiwan can compete with regional rivals and may prompt other nations to agree to similar accords with the island, Chiang said. North Korea and Taiwan are the only two economies in the region that haven’t signed trade agreements with China and Asean, which groups Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, the Philippines and Brunei. Taiwan has been unable to join the wave of bilateral and multilateral free-trade agreements in recent years because China regards the island as a rebellious province. Taiwan’s Democratic Progressive Party opposes the trade accord and on Dec. 20 rallied 100,000 people in Taichung city to protest Ma’s China policies. “Even if the opposition gains power in future, with such a framework it would be difficult for them to reverse the entire decision,” said Soochow University’s Liu. — Henry Sanderson in Beijing and Weiyi Lim in Taipei. Editors: Carey Sargent , Dick Schumacher . To contact Bloomberg News staff on this story: Henry Sanderson in Beijing at 86-10-6649-7548 or hsanderson@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Taiwan, China Hold Third-Round Trade Talks Amid Optimism of June Agreement

June 12, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 13 (Bloomberg) — Taiwan and China started a third round of talks today aimed at strengthening economic and trade ties, amid rising speculation that they may sign an agreement this month. Huang Chih-peng , director-general of Taiwan’s Bureau of Foreign Trade met Tang Wei, head of Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao affairs at China’s Ministry of Commerce, in a Beijing hotel to discuss the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement, or ECFA. A pact will likely be agreed by the end of June, Taiwan’s Commercial Times reported today, citing a business group. Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou has been pushing for an accord to bolster export-dependent Taiwan’s economy after a Chinese trade agreement with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations began this year. The two sides have agreed to include goods and services, as well as a so-called early-harvest list of industries that will be the first to enjoy lower tariffs. Ma’s administration has also said an accord may be signed this month. “The preferred-tariff treatment won’t happen at least for the next one to two years,” Tony Phoo , an economist at Standard Chartered Plc, said by phone in Taipei today. Still, any agreement “will boost market sentiment and confidence overall,” said Phoo. Cross-strait ties improved after President Ma took office in May 2008 and abandoned his predecessor’s pro-independence stance. Ma is seeking better ties with the island’s biggest trading partner and No. 1 overseas investment destination. ‘Very Rich Resources’ “We can make use of each other’s advantages,” China’s Tang said in opening remarks today. “Taiwan has abundant capital, advanced production technology, rich enterprise- management experience and international sales channels. On the other hand, the mainland has very rich resources and a lot of labor and huge potential markets.” Taiwan and China may sign the agreement by the end of this month, the Commercial Times reported today, citing Kuo Shan-huei, chairman of the Association of Taiwan Investment Enterprises on the mainland. Wang Yi, director of China’s Taiwan Affairs Office, told Taiwan businessmen last night that the two sides will probably agree to the accord, the newspaper said, citing Kuo. Banking, Insurance Taiwan and China agreed in December to boost cooperation in fishing, agriculture and industrial goods at the fourth cross-strait talks as ties reached their warmest in 60 years. In November, they signed three memoranda of understanding to ease access to each other’s banking, securities and insurance industries. Trade between the mainland and Taiwan increased 68 percent in the first four months of 2010 compared with same period last year, and Taiwan investment rose 44.7 percent, China’s Tang said today. An agreement would be in “both parties’ interests, so we have better resource allocation and cooperation,” Tang said. An agreement with China is “vital to Taiwan’s economy,” Chiang Pin-kung , chairman of the Taipei-based Straits Exchange Foundation, said in February. An agreement would help to ensure Taiwan can compete with regional rivals and may prompt other nations to agree to similar pacts with the island, Chiang said. North Korea and Taiwan are the only two economies in the region that haven’t signed trade accords with China and Asean, which groups Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, the Philippines and Brunei. Taiwan has been unable to join the wave of bilateral and multilateral free- trade agreements in recent years because China regards the island as a rebellious province. Taiwan’s Democratic Progressive Party opposes the trade accord and on Dec. 20 rallied 100,000 people in Taichung city to protest against Ma’s China policies. — Henry Sanderson in Beijing and Weiyi Lim in Taipei. Editors: Jake Lloyd-Smith , Jim McDonald To contact Bloomberg News staff on this story: Henry Sanderson in Beijing at 86-10-6649-7548 or hsanderson@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

North Korea Threatens to Strike South&rsquos Loudspeakers

June 12, 2010

By Jungmin Hong June 12 (Bloomberg) — North Korea warned of an “all-out military strike” to destroy South Korean loudspeakers and other propaganda tools along their fortified border, according to the North’s state-run Korean Central News Agency. South Korea’s preparation for psychological warfare, is a “direct declaration of a war” against the North, the general staff of the communist state’s military said today in a statement on KCNA. The North’s military retaliation may turn Seoul into “a sea of flame,” the statement said. The South has already installed loudspeakers in 11 places along the border and is attempting to set up electronic displays, according to the statement. South Korea hasn’t detected any abnormal activities near the border area with the North, Yonhap News said following the KCNA report today, citing South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff . Tensions have risen on the Korean peninsula since an international panel concluded on May 20 that the North was behind a torpedo attack that sank the Cheonan warship, killing 46 of the South’s sailors. South Korea’s president Lee Myung Bak has taken the case to the United Nations Security Council, backed by the U.S. and Japan, to seek a resolution condemning North Korea. The North says the allegations are fabricated and has threatened to retaliate over any punitive action taken against it. South Korea will resume anti-North broadcasts across the border after the United Nations Security Council makes a determination about the sinking, Yonhap News reported yesterday, citing South Korea’s defense minister. To contact the reporter on this story: Jungmin Hong in Seoul at jhong47@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

North Korea Threatens to Strike South&rsquos Loudspeakers

June 12, 2010

By Jungmin Hong June 12 (Bloomberg) — North Korea warned of an “all-out military strike” to destroy South Korean loudspeakers and other propaganda tools along their fortified border, according to the North’s state-run Korean Central News Agency. South Korea’s preparation for psychological warfare, is a “direct declaration of a war” against the North, the general staff of the communist state’s military said today in a statement on KCNA. The North’s military retaliation may turn Seoul into “a sea of flame,” the statement said. The South has already installed loudspeakers in 11 places along the border and is attempting to set up electronic displays, according to the statement. South Korea hasn’t detected any abnormal activities near the border area with the North, Yonhap News said following the KCNA report today, citing South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff . Tensions have risen on the Korean peninsula since an international panel concluded on May 20 that the North was behind a torpedo attack that sank the Cheonan warship, killing 46 of the South’s sailors. South Korea’s president Lee Myung Bak has taken the case to the United Nations Security Council, backed by the U.S. and Japan, to seek a resolution condemning North Korea. The North says the allegations are fabricated and has threatened to retaliate over any punitive action taken against it. South Korea will resume anti-North broadcasts across the border after the United Nations Security Council makes a determination about the sinking, Yonhap News reported yesterday, citing South Korea’s defense minister. To contact the reporter on this story: Jungmin Hong in Seoul at jhong47@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

U.S. Concern Over China Military Spending Grows, Obama Adviser Mullen Says

June 9, 2010

By Viola Gienger June 9 (Bloomberg) — U.S. President Barack Obama ’s top military adviser said he has grown “genuinely concerned” over China’s motives for building up its armed forces. Admiral Mike Mullen , chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he was worried by China’s “heavy investments” in sea and air capabilities and its rejection of military contacts with the U.S. that had resumed last year, according to the text of a speech he gave to the Asia Society Washington tonight. “A gap as wide as what seems to be forming between China’s stated intent and its military programs leaves me more than curious about the end result,” Mullen said. “Indeed, I have moved from being curious to being genuinely concerned.” Mullen’s comments step up long-held U.S. criticism of China’s actions and follow a decision by leaders in Beijing to rescind an invitation for a visit from Defense Secretary Robert Gates while he was in the region last week. The U.S. and China last week blamed each other for the freeze in ties sparked by American arm sales to Taiwan, highlighting a divide that’s hampering efforts to resolve tension on the Korean peninsula. “The question is, should China and the U.S. work together, lead together, to promote regional stability?” Mullen told the group. “Washington’s answer is and has been an unequivocal yes. Beijing’s answer has been sometimes yes and sometimes no.” China also should take a stronger position on North Korea after allegations the regime was responsible for a torpedo that sank a South Korean vessel on March 26, killing 46 sailors, Mullen said. North Korea has denied any involvement and China, the totalitarian state’s main ally, has so far refused to take sides. Encouraged, Dismayed “I have been encouraged by public statements made recently by Chinese leaders as to the seriousness of this incident and the need for accountability,” Mullen said in the prepared remarks. Still, he said he was “dismayed by a fairly tepid response to calls by the international community for support.” Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao last month said his government would not protect anyone found to be guilty of sinking the ship. He added, however, that China was still reviewing evidence from both sides and had yet to draw a conclusion. China’s top priority was to ensure stability on the peninsula, he said. Mullen called on China to resume military talks “to reduce tension, increase trust and foster the sort of genuine and sustainable stability that the people who live and work in Asia so very much deserve.” ‘No Surprise’ China’s reaction to the planned arms sales to Taiwan threatens regional security, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in Singapore on June 5 at a meeting of defense officials from 28 countries. The deals “should come as no surprise” since they have been taking place for decades. “It is not the Chinese side that has set obstacles to military-to-military ties,” General Ma Xiaotian, deputy chief of general staff of the People’s Liberation Army, told the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue after Gates spoke. “We do not regard U.S. arms sales to Taiwan as something normal.” The weaponry Taiwan plans to buy includes advanced Lockheed Martin Corp. Patriot missiles valued at $2.8 billion, United Technologies Corp. UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters worth $3.1 billion, and Boeing Co. Harpoon missiles costing $37 million. Gates said the sales are “nothing new” and the U.S. doesn’t support independence for Taiwan, which China considers a renegade province that should be reunited by force if necessary. “Functional exchanges” with U.S. officials were ongoing even as high-level visits were “temporarily suspended,” Ma said. Military Backing Gates and Japanese Defense Minister Toshimi Kitazawa last month agreed to jointly monitor China’s navy after Chinese submarines and destroyers were spotted off Okinawa. Japan and South Korea have cited threats from North Korea or China as reasons for bolstering their defense capabilities — and their security alliances with the U.S. The U.S. has about 80,000 troops stationed in South Korea and Japan. Gates said the U.S. will conduct combined military exercises with South Korea and support action in the United Nations Security Council to pressure North Korea. South Korea has referred the sinking to the council , on which China holds veto power. China accounted for 79 percent of North Korea’s international commerce last year, according to South Korean estimates. China’s allegiance to the North stretches back to the foundation of the two countries, and China came to the North’s assistance during the 1950-1953 Korean War. Still, China depends on trade to maintain economic growth that reached 11.9 percent in the first three months of this year. South Korea is now China’s fourth-biggest trading partner. China voted alongside the U.S. to tighten UN sanctions against Iran today in New York. Voting for the measures doesn’t “close off continued diplomacy,” spokesman Qin Gang said in comments posted on the foreign ministry’s website after the vote. “A solution to the nuclear standoff should be resolved through dialogue and diplomatic means.” To contact the reporter on this story: Viola Gienger in Washington at vgienger@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

MTN’s Nhleko Ends Orascom Talks in Fourth Failed Transaction in Two Years

June 9, 2010

By Nicky Smith June 10 (Bloomberg) — MTN Group Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Phuthuma Nhleko failed to close his fourth deal in two years, frustrating the South African company’s ambitions of entering new markets to secure sales growth. MTN, Africa’s largest mobile-phone company, yesterday said it ended talks with Weather Investments S.p.A to buy $10 billion of assets of Orascom Telecom Holding SAE. The inability to complete the transaction caps more than 24 months during which Johannesburg-based MTN sought purchases to offset increasing competition and price-regulation pressures at home. “Management must now focus their attention on the assets that they have,” said Bruce Main , a fund manager at Ivy Asset Management which holds MTN shares. Nhleko, 50, who has said he will leave the company in March after eight years in the post, has tried to expand the company’s business in emerging markets through mergers or acquisitions. He has sought to add new markets to its 21 businesses across the Middle East and Africa as some of the world’s largest operators, including Vodafone Group Plc , seek expansion in Africa to counter slowing revenue growth in Europe. MTN said April 28 that it was negotiating to buy all or part of Orascom Telecom, the biggest mobile-phone company by subscribers in the Middle East. A purchase would have broadened MTN’s presence in Africa and the Middle East and extended its reach to markets such as Bangladesh, Pakistan and North Korea. Failed Deals That came after MTN and India’s Bharti Airtel Ltd. failed for the second time last year to conclude a $23 billion merger that would have created the world’s third-largest mobile phone company by subscribers. Talks about a tie-up with Indian mobile operator Reliance Communications Ltd. ended without an agreement in July 2008. Bharti said this week that it had completed a $9 billion deal to acquire African assets from Kuwait’s Mobile Telecommunications Co., also known as Zain. MTN’s discussions with Orascom were “terminated,” MTN said in a statement yesterday, without giving a reason. MTN spokeswoman Nozipho January-Bardill and Orascom spokeswoman Manal Abdel-Hamid didn’t respond to messages left on their mobile phones. Orascom Telecom operates in Algeria, North Korea, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Egypt, Tunisia, the Central African Republic, Burundi, Namibia and Zimbabwe. The talks failed after Algeria’s government blocked a possible sale to MTN of Orascom’s largest and most profitable unit, Djezzy. “It was clear that after Djezzy was out, there couldn’t be a deal,” Ivy Asset’s Main said. Algerian Obstacle The Algerian government has said it would make an offer to Orascom for the local unit, exercising its rights of pre- emption. Orascom Telecom this month said it received a letter from the Algerian government saying that it was preparing for talks on the possible purchase of the company’s unit there. MTN rose 3.2 percent to 101.40 rand in Johannesburg yesterday, while Orascom Telecom shares rose 1.9 percent to 5.88 Egyptian pounds in Cairo. Nhelko needs new growth drivers. In March, the company said full-year profit fell, as South African customer numbers declined 6.4 percent to 16.1 million, the first time subscribers in MTN’s home market have dropped. Subscriptions were hurt by a new law requiring customers to supply personal details to mobile-phone companies. The company’s regional market is also getting crowded. Mobile-phone operators, including the U.K.’s Vodafone Group, are seeking growth in Africa as revenue gains slow in their home markets. India’s Bharti Airtel bought Zain assets in 15 African countries. In April, France Telecom SA CEO Stephane Richard said the Paris-based company may invest as much as 7 billion euros ($8.4 billion) in deals focused on Africa and the Middle East in the next five years. To contact the reporter on this story: Nicky Smith in Johannesburg at nsmith38@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Bank of Korea’s Tilt Toward Rate Increase May Be Thwarted by Government

June 8, 2010

By William Sim and Michael Munoz June 9 (Bloomberg) — The Bank of Korea may keep the benchmark interest rate at a record low for a 16th month after its signal that higher borrowing costs may be coming was snubbed by government warnings about the impact of Europe’s crisis. Governor Kim Choong Soo will leave the seven-day repurchase rate at a record-low 2 percent tomorrow, according to all 12 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. While the meeting will be the first without a government representative attending the vote, Finance Minister Yoon Jeung Hyun made clear his expectation for the outcome last week, saying the bank should wait for second- quarter economic data before any move. “This suggests that political pressures are still a constraint in Bank of Korea decision-making,” said Kevin Grice , an economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London. Governor Kim “has been signaling to markets that inflation is set to rise and that gross domestic product growth should stay at trend pace, which suggest that rates need to move to more ‘normal’ levels.” Asia’s central banks are weighing the need to avert overheating by raising rates from world-recession levels against the potential impact of Europe’s debt crisis on the global recovery. South Korea has so far sided with China and Indonesia in standing pat, while Malaysia and India are projected to keep boosting borrowing costs after already moving in recent months. New Zealand’s central bank will probably raise its benchmark rate tomorrow to 2.75 percent from a record-low 2.5 percent, the first increase in almost three years, according to 13 of 15 economists in a Bloomberg survey. Two expect no change. August Move Grice said the Bank of Korea is likely to hold the rate tomorrow to gauge the impact on the global recovery of spending cuts by European nations struggling to reduce budget deficits. He expects borrowing costs to be boosted in August and the rate increased to 3 percent by the end of the year. South Korea’s expansion is being driven by exports, which surged 41.9 percent last month. Samsung Electronics Co. , Asia’s biggest maker of semiconductors, flat screens and mobile phones, posted a seven-fold jump in profit in the first quarter as rising demand drove up prices. Hyundai Motor Co. , South Korea’s largest automaker, reported a record profit in the same period by boosting sales in the U.S. and China. South Korea’s $929 billion economy grew 2.1 percent in the first quarter from the previous three months, compared with an April estimate of 1.8 percent, the central bank said last week. North Korea Tension The won, which plunged to a 10-month low on May 25 on escalating tensions with North Korea, tumbled 8.4 percent in May, its worst performance since February 2009, as Europe’s fiscal woes prompted investors to sell riskier assets and buy dollars. The benchmark Kospi stock index dropped 5.8 percent. A North Korean diplomat said last week that war on the Korean peninsula could begin “at any moment” over South Korean accusations that the government in Pyongyang ordered the March sinking of a warship that killed 46 sailors. Also last week, President Lee Myung Bak ’s party suffered a defeat in provincial elections, with the opposition Democratic Party winning seven of 16 races. Lee’s party, which held 11 of the 16 mayoral and gubernatorial posts, secured six. The government is likely to focus more on supporting the middle class after the loss, Kwon Goohoon , an economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in Seoul, said after the result. “Inflation and jobs growth are likely to get renewed focus while the currency’s competitiveness could get relatively less priority on concerns about its inflationary implications.” Inflation Accelerates Consumer prices rose 2.7 percent in May, quickening from a 2.6 percent gain a month earlier, as the cost of food and oil increased. That’s within the central bank’s target range of between 2 percent and 4 percent. Central banks in Australia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand last week kept borrowing costs unchanged amid concern Europe’s sovereign-risk woes could damage the global recovery. The Bank of Korea’s monetary board signaled May 12 that rates may move, saying it will “maintain the accommodative policy,” while dropping a reference to keeping that stance “for the time being.” A month earlier, one board member called for a pre-emptive increase in borrowing costs and two wanted to signal the policy may change, according to minutes of the April meeting. The central bank “should wait and check the second-quarter economic data before deciding on the next rate move,” Finance Minister Yoon said in an interview with the Maeil Business newspaper published last week. The data could be disappointing because of Europe’s debt crisis, cold weather and a poor jobs market, he said. To contact the reporters on this story: William Sim in Seoul at wsim2@bloomberg.net ; Michael J. Munoz in Hong Kong at mjmunoz@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

China, U.S. Blame Each Other for Severed Military Ties Amid Korea Tensions

June 5, 2010

By Daniel Ten Kate June 5 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. and China blamed each other for a freeze in military ties sparked this year by American plans to sell arms to Taiwan, highlighting a divide that’s hampering efforts to resolve tensions on the Korean peninsula. China’s reaction to the proposed sales “makes little sense” and threatens regional security, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in Singapore at a meeting of defense officials from 28 countries. The deals “should come as no surprise” since they have been taking place for decades, he added. “It is not the Chinese side that has set obstacles to military-to-military ties,” General Ma Xiaotian, deputy chief of general staff of the People’s Liberation Army, told the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue after Gates spoke. “We do not regard U.S. arms sales to Taiwan as something normal.” The strained military ties come after China last month declined to endorse an international investigation that concluded North Korea was responsible for the sinking a South Korean warship in March, a finding that prompted Kim Jong Il ’s regime to threaten “all-out war.” South Korea referred the matter yesterday to the United Nations Security Council, where China has veto power. “There is a real cost to any absence of military-to- military relations,” Gates said. “They are essential to regional security.” Patriots, Blackhawks The weaponry Taiwan plans to buy includes advanced Lockheed Martin Corp. Patriot missiles valued at $2.8 billion, United Technologies Corp. UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters worth $3.1 billion, and Boeing Co. Harpoon missiles costing $37 million. Gates said the sales are “nothing new” and the U.S. doesn’t support independence for Taiwan, which China considers a renegade province that should be reunited by force if necessary. Gates said China’s military buildup was largely targeted at Taiwan, a statement Ma rejected. The general said that “functional exchanges” with U.S. officials were ongoing even as high-level visits were “temporarily suspended.” “We hope that through all these exchanges and through a certain period during which we can both calm down and engage in cool-headed discussion, we can resolve the problems and lay a foundation for our relationship to move on,” Ma said. “Only on this basis can China-U.S. relations, which are important to all, become more mature.” South China Sea Gates said today the South China Sea, stretching from Singapore to the Strait of Taiwan, is an “area of growing concern.” China told some international oil and gas companies to halt exploration in offshore areas that Vietnam considers part of its territory, a U.S. official told Congress last year. “We object to any effort to intimidate U.S. corporations or those of any nation engaged in legitimate economic activity,” Gates said today. Exxon Mobil Corp. and BP Plc are among companies that have halted projects in the sea because of China’s objections, according to U.S. government agencies. China, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines and Taiwan have claims to all or part of the oil-rich Spratly Islands in the South China Sea. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has refrained from condemning North Korea for the March 26 sinking of the Cheonan warship that killed 46 sailors, calling instead for measures to ease tensions in the region. China is North Korea’s largest trading partner and main political ally, having fought alongside the North and against the U.S. in the 1950-1953 Korean War. China’s preference is for six-party talks to be resumed to resolve “the latest incident” with North Korea, Ma said today, referring to discussions involving the two communist nations, South Korea, the U.S., Japan and Russia. North Korea Options Gates said the U.S. will conduct combined military exercises with South Korea and support action in the United Nations Security Council to pressure North Korea. “At the same time, we are assessing additional options to hold North Korea accountable,” he said in Singapore. Gates declined to elaborate on the options when asked later. South Korean President Lee Myung Bak , who yesterday warned North Korea it would “suffer the consequences” if officials didn’t apologize for the attack, told business leaders in Singapore today there was “no possibility of a full-scale war” between the neighbors. The U.S. is South Korea’s “staunchest ally,” Lee said yesterday, when he also called for China to support his government’s efforts to censure North Korea for the attack. The 28,500 U.S. troops in South Korea “are well prepared to deter aggression,” Lieutenant Colonel Angela Billings, a spokeswoman for U.S. forces in Korea, said last month. To contact the reporter on this story: Daniel Ten Kate in Singapore at dtenkate@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

South Korea Faces Skeptics at Home Over Evidence Linking North to Torpedo

May 29, 2010

By Ben Richardson and Saeromi Shin May 30 (Bloomberg) — South Korea’s government is trying to stem skepticism about an inquiry that blamed North Korea for the sinking of a warship, according to local media reports. Prime Minister Chung Un Chan ordered the government to find a way to stop groundless rumors spreading on the Cheonan’s sinking, the JoongAng Daily said yesterday. Prosecutors questioned a former member of the panel that probed the incident over his critical comments, the paper said. The Joint Chiefs of Staff sued a lawmaker for defamation after she said video footage of the ship splitting apart existed, a claim the military denies, Yonhap News reported. Almost one in four South Koreans say they don’t trust the findings of the multinational panel, according to a poll commissioned by Hankook Ilbo on May 24. North Korea’s state-run Korean Central News Agency yesterday accused the South’s “puppet military of trying to cover up the truth about the sinking” by seeking to silence opposition lawmakers with the lawsuit. The news agency yesterday released six English-language articles asserting that the country is innocent in the March 26 sinking and attacking the evidence presented by the inquiry. The denials come as Wen Jiabao , premier of North Korea’s main ally, China, is in South Korea for a three-way summit that includes Japan. South Korea and Japan made a joint stand yesterday blaming North Korea, and want China to also take a stance. Wen May 28 said that while China won’t protect anyone found guilty of causing the ship to sink, it is still assessing the evidence. China is North Korea’s largest trading partner and main political ally, having fought alongside the North and against the U.S. in the 1950-1953 Korean War . ‘Blinded With Ambition’ “The South Korean conservatives are now blinded with the wild ambition to invent a pretext for escalating the confrontation,” the North Korean news service said in one report yesterday. “It has become clearer that a nuclear war is bound to break out,” the report said, “as long as such traitors are allowed to be at large.” In another, the agency wrote: “The case of the warship sinking is a sheer fabrication made by the South Korean ruling forces, a hideous burlesque orchestrated by them.” Lee Jung Hee, a lawmaker with an opposition party, the Democratic Labor Party, was sued for defamation by seven people at South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, Yonhap News reported May 25. Lee said during a speech in parliament that while the Defense Ministry had said there was no feed from a thermal observation device showing the moment the warship’s stern and bow split apart, such a video did exist. Accident Claims Prosecutors May 28 questioned Shin Sang-cheol, who runs Seoprise , a Web-based political magazine, over his assertion that the Cheonan sank in an accident and that the evidence linking the North to the torpedo was tampered with, the JoonAng said. Shin served on the panel that probed the sinking. The magnified photograph of writing on the torpedo showed that the marking was written on top of a rusted surface, the newspaper cited Shin as saying. The Defense Ministry asked the National Assembly to eject Shin from the investigation for “arousing public mistrust,” the report said. South Korea intends to present its case against the North to the United Nations Security Council . The U.S., Japan, Australia and the U.K. have all accepted the findings of the panel. The commission included experts from Sweden, which has an embassy in Pyongyang and isn’t aligned with South Korea and the U.S. ‘Awkward Position’ North Korea warned the UN to be wary of evidence that it said falsely accuses the country of torpedoing the warship, likening the case to the claims of weapons of mass destruction that the U.S. used to justify its war against Iraq in 2003. The Security Council risks being “misused” by the U.S., the country’s foreign ministry said last night in a news agency statement. “The U.S. is seriously mistaken if it thinks it can occupy the Korean Peninsula just as it did Iraq with sheer lies,” the statement said. The U.S. is joining South Korea in blaming North Korea for the sinking to “put China into an awkward position and keep hold on Japan and South Korea as its servants,” KCNA said. North Korean Major General Pak Rim Su said in Pyongyang yesterday that the international investigation into the sinking was biased because it was supervised by the South Korean military and included the U.S., the Korean Central News Agency said. Pak said the North does not have the type of submarines that the South said carried out the attack, Agence France-Presse reported, citing North Korea’s Chungang TV. South Korea’s Yonhap News quoted South Korean officials as saying the North has about 10 of the Yeono class submarines, AFP said. Senior Colonel Ri Son Gwon also derided claims that writing on the torpedo was put there by North Korea, AFP reported. “When we put serial numbers on weapons, we engrave them with machines,” Ri said, according to AFP. Twenty-four percent of respondents said they didn’t trust the government’s evidence, with more skepticism among younger and better-educated people, the Hankook Ilbo poll found. Almost 90 percent of people over 60 trusted the findings, while only 70 percent of those in their 40s did. To contact the reporters on this story: Ben Richardson at brichardson8@bloomberg.net ; Saeromi Shin in Seoul at sshin15@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

China, South Korea Agree to Deepen Links as North Denies Torpedo Charges

May 29, 2010

By Bomi Lim May 29 (Bloomberg) — China agreed to deepen ties with South Korea and Japan at an annual summit overshadowed by accusations that its ally North Korea sank one of the South’s warships. The North rejected the charges as “sheer fabrication” to justify a “a war of aggression against it.” Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has steered clear of public discussion of North Korea’s role in the sinking since he arrived in South Korea yesterday. In contrast, Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama today paid his respects at a cemetery where the 46 sailors who died in the sinking are buried, before flying to the resort island of Jeju for the two-day summit. There he said he would back any South Korean move to take the case to the United Nations Security Council . The three countries agreed to set up a permanent liaison office in South Korea in 2011 and to pursue a free-trade agreement, the South’s presidential office said today in a statement. The leaders also agreed to cooperate more closely on regional security issues, including getting North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons, the statement said. South Korea is “focusing all our efforts on holding North Korea responsible,” presidential spokesman Park Sun Kyoo told reporters yesterday in Seoul, adding that this would be a key aim at the summit also. Today’s trilateral summit mostly focused on economic issues, and other regional issues including North Korea’s recent attack will likely be discussed tomorrow, Kazuo Kodama , press secretary for Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told foreign media reporters. Security Council South Korea wants China to accept findings that the North fired a torpedo that sank the 1,200-ton Cheonan on March 26. China holds veto powers in the Security Council, so its acquiescence is needed to win a resolution condemning the North. Wen yesterday said that while China won’t protect anyone found guilty of the attack, it is still assessing the evidence. China is North Korea’s largest trading partner and main political ally, having fought alongside the North and against the U.S. in the 1950-1953 Korean War . “The case of the warship sinking is a sheer fabrication made by the South Korean ruling forces, a hideous burlesque” intended “to stir up the atmosphere of escalated confrontation,” state-run Korean Central News Agency said. At the three-way summit, President Lee Myung Bak stressed the need to enhance economic cooperation between the three countries and work toward integrating their economies, Lee’s spokeswoman Kim Eun Hye told reporters. Silence for Dead Hatoyama proposed a silent prayer for the dead at the start of the meeting, after pledging “active support” for South Korea’s push for UN action over the deadliest attack blamed on the North Korean regime in more than two decades. North Korea warned the UN to be wary of evidence that it said falsely accuses the country of torpedoing the warship, likening the case to the claims of weapons of mass destruction that the U.S. used to justify its war against Iraq in 2003. The Security Council risks being “misused” by the U.S., the country’s foreign ministry said last night in a statement carried by KCNA. “The U.S. is seriously mistaken if it thinks it can occupy the Korean Peninsula just as it did Iraq with sheer lies,” the statement said. The U.S. is joining South Korea in blaming North Korea for the sinking to “put China into an awkward position and keep hold on Japan and South Korea as its servants,” KCNA said. China proposed to the U.S. a joint investigation with North and South Korea into the sinking, the Seoul-based Hankyoreh newspaper reported, citing a diplomat it didn’t name. Russia plans to send its own team to South Korea for an independent assessment of the incident. A South Korea-led team involving experts from the U.S., U.K., Australia and Sweden blamed North Korea for the sinking in a May 20 announcement in Seoul. Russia also has veto power in the Security Council and participates in the stalled six-party talks on North Korea’s nuclear weapons program that are hosted by China. The U.S., Japan and South Korea also take part. North Korean Major General Pak Rim Su said in Pyongyang yesterday that the international investigation into the March 26 sinking was biased because it was supervised by the South Korean military and included the U.S., KCNA said. Pak said the North does not have type of submarines that the South said carried out the attack, Agence France-Presse reported, citing North Korea’s Chungang TV. South Korea’s Yonhap News quoted South Korean officials as saying the North has about 10 of the Yeono class submarines, AFP said. Senior Colonel Ri Son Gwon also derided claims that writing on the torpedo was put there by North Korea, AFP reported. “When we put serial numbers on weapons, we engrave them with machines,” Ri said, according to AFP. To contact the reporter on this story: Bomi Lim in Seoul at blim30@bloomberg.net ;

Read the full article →

China, South Korea to Deepen Ties Amid North Tension

May 29, 2010

By Bomi Lim May 29 (Bloomberg) — China agreed to deepen ties with South Korea and Japan at an annual summit overshadowed by accusations that its ally North Korea sank one of the South’s warships. The North rejected the charges as “sheer fabrication” to justify a “a war of aggression against it.” Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has steered clear of public discussion of North Korea’s role in the sinking since he arrived in South Korea yesterday. In contrast, Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama today paid his respects at a cemetery where the 46 sailors who died in the sinking are buried, before flying to the resort island of Jeju for the two-day summit. There he said he would back any South Korean move to take the case to the United Nations Security Council . The three countries agreed to set up a permanent liaison office in South Korea in 2011 and to pursue a free-trade agreement, the South’s presidential office said today in a statement. The leaders also agreed to cooperate more closely on regional security issues, including getting North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons, the statement said. South Korea is “focusing all our efforts on holding North Korea responsible,” presidential spokesman Park Sun Kyoo told reporters yesterday in Seoul, adding that this would be a key aim at the summit also. Today’s trilateral summit mostly focused on economic issues, and other regional issues including North Korea’s recent attack will likely be discussed tomorrow, Kazuo Kodama , press secretary for Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told foreign media reporters. Security Council South Korea wants China to accept findings that the North fired a torpedo that sank the 1,200-ton Cheonan on March 26. China holds veto powers in the Security Council, so its acquiescence is needed to win a resolution condemning the North. Wen yesterday said that while China won’t protect anyone found guilty of the attack, it is still assessing the evidence. China is North Korea’s largest trading partner and main political ally, having fought alongside the North and against the U.S. in the 1950-1953 Korean War . “The case of the warship sinking is a sheer fabrication made by the South Korean ruling forces, a hideous burlesque” intended “to stir up the atmosphere of escalated confrontation,” state-run Korean Central News Agency said. At the three-way summit, President Lee Myung Bak stressed the need to enhance economic cooperation between the three countries and work toward integrating their economies, Lee’s spokeswoman Kim Eun Hye told reporters. Silence for Dead Hatoyama proposed a silent prayer for the dead at the start of the meeting, after pledging “active support” for South Korea’s push for UN action over the deadliest attack blamed on the North Korean regime in more than two decades. North Korea warned the UN to be wary of evidence that it said falsely accuses the country of torpedoing the warship, likening the case to the claims of weapons of mass destruction that the U.S. used to justify its war against Iraq in 2003. The Security Council risks being “misused” by the U.S., the country’s foreign ministry said last night in a statement carried by KCNA. “The U.S. is seriously mistaken if it thinks it can occupy the Korean Peninsula just as it did Iraq with sheer lies,” the statement said. The U.S. is joining South Korea in blaming North Korea for the sinking to “put China into an awkward position and keep hold on Japan and South Korea as its servants,” KCNA said. China proposed to the U.S. a joint investigation with North and South Korea into the sinking, the Seoul-based Hankyoreh newspaper reported, citing a diplomat it didn’t name. Russia plans to send its own team to South Korea for an independent assessment of the incident. A South Korea-led team involving experts from the U.S., U.K., Australia and Sweden blamed North Korea for the sinking in a May 20 announcement in Seoul. Russia also has veto power in the Security Council and participates in the stalled six-party talks on North Korea’s nuclear weapons program that are hosted by China. The U.S., Japan and South Korea also take part. North Korean Major General Pak Rim Su said in Pyongyang yesterday that the international investigation into the March 26 sinking was biased because it was supervised by the South Korean military and included the U.S., KCNA said. Pak said the North does not have type of submarines that the South said carried out the attack, Agence France-Presse reported, citing North Korea’s Chungang TV. South Korea’s Yonhap News quoted South Korean officials as saying the North has about 10 of the Yeono class submarines, AFP said. Senior Colonel Ri Son Gwon also derided claims that writing on the torpedo was put there by North Korea, AFP reported. “When we put serial numbers on weapons, we engrave them with machines,” Ri said, according to AFP. To contact the reporter on this story: Bomi Lim in Seoul at blim30@bloomberg.net ;

Read the full article →

U.S. Stocks, Oil, Euro Tumble; Dow Ends Worst May Since 1940

May 28, 2010

By Rita Nazareth and Elizabeth Stanton May 28 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks slid, capping the worst May for the Dow Jones Industrial Average since 1940, while the euro slumped and Treasuries rose as a downgrade of Spain’s debt rating and escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula triggered a flight from riskier assets. The Dow tumbled 122.36 points, or 1.2 percent, to 10,136.63 at 4 p.m. in New York and lost 7.9 percent this month. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index sank 1.2 percent to 1,089.41, led by financial shares on the Spanish downgrade and energy companies after U.S. President Barack Obama extended a moratorium on new deep-water drilling. Oil erased gains after rallying as much as 1.6 percent to more than $75 a barrel. Ten-year Treasury yields decreased 7 basis points to 3.3 percent. The euro slipped 0.7 percent to $1.2273. Equities and commodities extended losses after Fitch Ratings stripped Spain of the AAA rating it’s held since 2003, saying the nation’s economic growth will slow as it attempts to cut its debts. Earlier losses followed disappointing U.S. economic data and a North Korean general’s warning of “all-out war” if any accidental clashes with South Korea break out. “Spain’s downgrade just adds to more uncertainty,” said Quincy Krosby , chief market strategist for Newark, New Jersey- based Prudential Financial Inc., which oversees about $667 billion. “There are too many geopolitical events. We have a three-day weekend in the U.S., and traders will definitely want to lighten their books.” ‘All-Out War’ Losses in U.S. stocks widened earlier after North Korean Major General Pak Rim Su disputed the results of the international investigation that found his nation sank a South Korean warship. “Any accidental clash that may break out in the waters of the West Sea of Korea or in areas along the Demilitarized Zone will lead to all-out war,” he said, according to North Korea’s official news organization. About 9.2 billion shares changed hands on all U.S. exchanges, 4 percent below the average for the year as trading slowed before the Memorial Day holiday. “With volumes being as they are today ahead of the holiday weekend, there is not much in the way of conviction among traders,” said Mark Turner , head of U.S. sales trading at Instinet LLC, which handles about 4 percent of U.S. equity trading volume. “So any headline has the potential to move the market. And the situation in North Korea has especially been in our crosshairs.” The retreat in the S&P 500 today came after the benchmark index rallied 3.3 percent yesterday as China assured investors it was committed to maintaining European investments even as a sovereign debt crisis rattles confidence in the region. Benchmark indexes pared declines late in the day after Goldman Sachs Group Inc. strategist David Kostin raised his estimates for S&P 500 earnings to $78 a share for this year and $93 a share for 2011, up from $76 and $90, to reflect “strong” first quarter earnings and better-than-estimated profit margins. The S&P 500 trimmed its advance for the week to 0.2 percent, while the MSCI World Index of shares in 24 developed nations rose 0.6 percent over the past five days. The U.S. gauge sank 8.2 percent in May and the global gauge lost 9.9 percent, the worst month since February 2009 for both and the biggest slide in May for the S&P 500 since 1962. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index erased gains, dropping 0.3 percent today after rallying as much as 0.7 percent. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbed 1.5 percent. BP Plc slid 5 percent in London after Europe’s second- largest oil company said procedures to plug a leaking well in the Gulf of Mexico may last another day or two. BP added rubber golf balls and scraps to the mud it was pumping into its leaking Gulf of Mexico oil well in an effort to stop the spill. Baker Hughes Inc., Halliburton Co., Transocean Ltd. and Schlumberger Ltd. slumped at least 4.9 percent to help lead declines in U.S. energy shares. Obama is suspending exploration in two areas off Alaska, canceling pending lease sales in the Gulf of Mexico and proposed sales off Virginia’s coast, extending by six months a moratorium on deepwater drilling permits and suspending operations at all 33 exploratory wells being drilled in the Gulf. The gain in Treasuries extended the drop in 10-year yields this month to 36 basis points, the biggest monthly loss since December 2008, as government data showed consumer spending in the U.S. unexpectedly stalled, fueling speculation the economic recovery will be slow. The benchmark note yield touched 3.06 percent on May 25, the lowest level since April 29, 2009. Its 17 basis point gain yesterday was the most since June. A gauge of U.S. corporate credit risk climbed the most in 15 months in May as Europe’s sovereign debt crisis sparked concern that economic growth may slow, making it harder for companies to refinance. The Markit CDX North America Investment Grade Index Series 14, which investors use to hedge against losses on corporate debt or to speculate on creditworthiness, increased 1.34 basis points today and 25.2 basis points this month to a mid-price of 117.17 basis points as of 4:19 p.m. in New York, according to Markit Group Ltd. The index, which typically falls as investor confidence improves and rises as it deteriorates, climbed the most since February 2009, according to CMA DataVision. Credit markets faltered in May as corporate bond sales fell to the least in a decade amid speculation Greece and other nations in Europe won’t be able to meet their debt payments and as the dispute between North Korea and South Korea raised the risk of a broader conflict. Crude oil for July delivery fell 58 cents, or 0.8 percent, to settle at $73.97 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Oil’s 14 percent decline in May was the biggest monthly decrease since December 2008, when prices touched $32.40 a barrel. Copper for July delivery lost 1.7 percent to $3.1045 a pound in New York. Gold futures rose in New York, capping a second straight monthly gain, on demand for an alternative to holding the euro. Gold for August delivery climbed 60 cents to $1,215 an ounce in New York. To contact the reporters on this story: Rita Nazareth in New York at rnazareth@bloomberg.net ; Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →