super

Here is a new post from %sourceexcerpt%

More here: Youth1 Media’s SuperSeries Announces Executive Board

Industry-News.org finds the best stories around the globe and distributes them to our readers. Most articles are published by third parties and these links will take you to other websites. In some cases, websites require their own registration to read their stories.

The headlines are provided as a service to readers. All rights reserved by source. We provide special newsletters on Distressed Debt and Loan Sales News, Distressed Multifamily Real Estate, Distressed Commercial Real Estate, Distressed Funds, Jobs & Employment Newsletter, Fundraising Newsletter, Deals Newsletter, Institutional News, Bankrupsky News, Distressed Housing and Condomimun News, Distressed Legal News, Hedge Fund Conferences Newsletters, Real Estate Conferences Newsletter

Other Partner & Related Sites:

Institutional Partners Jobs www.InstitutionalPartners.com: Real Estate Jobs, Private Equity Jobs, Hedge Fund Jobs

Distressed Marketplace www.DistressedMarketplace.com: Distressed Loans, Distressed Funds, Distressed Real Estate, Distressed Companies: Distressed Distressed Asset Coalition (DAC) www.DistressedCoalition.com: Debt, Distressed Real Estate, REO, Foreclosures, Distressed Funds, Distressed Loan Sales;

Distressed Events: www.Distressed-Events.com distressed-conferences, distressed webinars, distressed classes, distressed debt information, distressed real estate

Certified Courses: www.Certified-Courses.com: Leading e-learning classes on Real Estate, private Equity, Hedge Funds

Global Financial Radio www.GlobalFinancialRadio.com: Industry news for commercial real estate, distressed debt, private equity firms, hedge funds

If you want to add a news site, remove a site, or partner with us, email newspartners@industry-partners.org

www.Industry-Partners.org We Find The News For You!

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

Robert Reich: Why We Must Raise Taxes on the Rich

by Robert Reich on April 4, 2011

Huffington Post…

It’s tax time. It’s also a time when right-wing Republicans are setting the agenda for massive spending cuts that will hurt most Americans. Here’s the truth: The only way America can reduce the long-term budget deficit, maintain vital services, protect Social Security and Medicare, invest more in education and infrastructure, and not raise taxes on the working middle class is by raising taxes on the super rich. Even if we got rid of corporate welfare subsidies for big oil, big agriculture, and big Pharma — even if we cut back on our bloated defense budget — it wouldn’t be nearly enough. The vast majority of Americans can’t afford to pay more. Despite an economy that’s twice as large as it was thirty years ago, the bottom 90 percent are still stuck in the mud. If they’re employed they’re earning on average only about $280 more a year than thirty years ago, adjusted for inflation. That’s less than a 1 percent gain over more than a third of a century. (Families are doing somewhat better but that’s only because so many families now have to rely on two incomes.) Yet even as their share of the nation’s total income has withered, the tax burden on the middle has grown. Today’s working and middle-class taxpayers are shelling out a bigger chunk of income in payroll taxes, sales taxes, and property taxes than thirty years ago. It’s just the opposite for super rich. The top 1 percent’s share of national income has doubled over the past three decades (from 10 percent in 1981 to well over 20 percent now). The richest one-tenth of 1 percent’s share has tripled. And they’re doing better than ever. According to a new analysis by the Wall Street Journal , total compensation and benefits at publicly-traded Wall Street banks and securities firms hit a record in 2010 — $135 billion. That’s up 5.7 percent from 2009. Yet, remarkably, taxes on the top have plummeted. From the 1940s until 1980, the top tax income tax rate on the highest earners in America was at least 70 percent. In the 1950s, it was 91 percent. Now it’s 35 percent. Even if you include deductions and credits, the rich are now paying a far lower share of their incomes in taxes than at any time since World War II. The estate tax (which only hits the top 2 percent) has also been slashed. In 2000 it was 55 percent and kicked in after $1 million. Today it’s 35 percent and kicks in at $5 million. Capital gains — comprising most of the income of the super-rich — were taxed at 35 percent in the late 1980s. They’re now taxed at 15 percent. If the rich were taxed at the same rates they were half a century ago, they’d be paying in over $350 billion more this year alone, which translates into trillions over the next decade. That’s enough to accomplish everything the nation needs while also reducing future deficits. If we also cut what we don’t need (corporate welfare and bloated defense), taxes could be reduced for everyone earning under $80,000, too. And with a single payer health-care system — Medicare for all — instead of a gaggle of for-profit providers, the nation could save billions more. Yes, the rich will find ways to avoid paying more taxes courtesy of clever accountants and tax attorneys. But this has always been the case regardless of where the tax rate is set. That’s why the government should aim high. (During the 1950s, when the top rate was 91 percent, the rich exploited loopholes and deductions that as a practical matter reduced the effective top rate 50 to 60 percent — still substantial by today’s standards.) And yes, some of the super rich will move their money to the Cayman Islands and other tax shelters. But paying taxes is a central obligation of citizenship, and those who take their money abroad in an effort to avoid paying American taxes should lose their American citizenship. But don’t the super-rich have enough political power to kill any attempt to get them to pay their fair share? Only if we let them. Here’s the issue around which Progressives, populists on the right and left, unionized workers, and all other working people who are just plain fed up ought to be able to unite. Besides, the reason we have a Democrat in the White House — indeed, the reason we have a Democratic Party at all — is to try to rebalance the economy exactly this way. All the president has to do is connect the dots — the explosion of income and wealth among America’s super-rich, the dramatic drop in their tax rates, the consequential devastating budget squeezes in Washington and in state capitals, and the slashing of vital public services for the middle class and the poor. This shouldn’t be difficult. Most Americans are on the receiving end. By now they know trickle-down economics is a lie. And they sense the dice are loaded in favor of the multimillionaires and billionaires, and their corporations, now paying a relative pittance in taxes. Besides, the president has the bully pulpit. But will he use it? Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future , now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

Go here to see the original:
Robert Reich: Why We Must Raise Taxes on the Rich

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

Video: Rosen Says Super Bowl Ads Have `Tremendous Impact’

February 4, 2011

Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) — Charles Rosen, founding partner and chief executive officer of advertising firm Amalgamated, talks about the role and value of television commercials created for the Super Bowl broadcast. Rosen speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Super Bowl Ads Take German Tone as Mercedes, BMW Pitch

February 4, 2011

Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Adam Haynes reports on the advertising strategy of Daimler AG’s Mercedes and Bayerische Motoren Werke AG who are promoting their German cars with high-priced advertising spots during the Super Bowl.

Read the full article →

Video: Horrow Says Cold Weather Could Hurt Super Bowl Spending

February 4, 2011

Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — Rich Horrow, founder of Horrow Sports Ventures Inc. and a Bloomberg Television contributing editor, discusses the outlook for the Super Bowl at the Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, and the potential impact of the cold weather in the region on fans’ spending. Horrow talks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Venus Metals Corporation Limited (ASX:VMC) Identified Massive Sulphide Targets For Telfer North Super Project At Yarrie East

February 1, 2011

Venus Metals Corporation Limited (ASX:VMC) Identified Massive Sulphide Targets For Telfer North Super Project At Yarrie East

Read the full article →

Girl Scouts Trim Cookie Lineup

January 28, 2011

The new pilot Super Six program, reports the Journal, keeps Thin Mints (yay!), Do-Si-Dos, Trefoils shortbread cookies, Samoas and Tagalongs, Lemon Chalet Cremes. But U-Berry-Munch, All Abouts (shortbread + fudge) and sugar-free chocolate chip cookies? They may go the way of the AMC Gremlin. In other words, good-bye, and will we remember you were ever here?

Read the full article →

Video: Jets’ Title Hopes May Rest With Inconsistent Kicker

January 21, 2011

Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) — Nick Folk of the New York Jets botched more field goals this season than any kicker in the National Football League playoffs. Now he heads to Pittsburgh’s Heinz Field, one of the most difficult NFL stadiums for kickers, and could determine whether the Jets return to the Super Bowl for the first time in 42 years. Bloomberg’s Michele Steele reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Retail Watch: Nor’easter Challenging SuperValu

January 19, 2011

Facing identical store sales of a negative 4.9% in its third quarter, grocery store owner operator SuperValu Inc. is planning to cut costs including layoffs and closures and/or the sale of some of its store brands in the Northeast U.S. As a group, SuperValu’s Northeast banners pulled down corporate-wide store sales by more than 150 basis points in the third quarter, Craig Herkert, the company’s president and CEO, reported in his company’s third…

Read the full article →

Retail Watch: Nor’easter Challenging SuperValu

January 19, 2011

Facing identical store sales of a negative 4.9% in its third quarter, grocery store owner operator SuperValu Inc. is planning to cut costs including layoffs and closures and/or the sale of some of its store brands in the Northeast U.S. As a group, SuperValu’s Northeast banners pulled down corporate-wide store sales by more than 150 basis points in the third quarter, Craig Herkert, the company’s president and CEO, reported in his company’s third…

Read the full article →

Bob Samuels: Defending the Middle-Class: Why We Need Unions, Pensions, and Public Employees

September 13, 2010

Politicians and media pundits have joined the conservative effort to demonize unions, pensions, and public employees. In fact, if you landed on the planet today, you would think that the global financial meltdown was caused by greedy unionized public employees. Instead of blaming the super-wealthy for their huge gambling losses, there is a growing consensus claiming that the working poor and the downsized middle class are the cause of all of our problems. In the case of pensions for public employees, the popular sentiment is that these benefits will starve local and state governments, and so they should be eliminated or at least severely reduced. Leading the media frenzy against pensions is the misunderstanding of the cause and effects of unfunded pension liabilities. What no one seems to be saying is that due to the unethical and possibly illegal activities of Wall Street, most pension funds lost close to a third of their value in 2007 and 2008. While the banks and financial institutions were bailed out, no relief came to these pension funds, and new accounting rules forced public pensions to declare all of their present and future pension liabilities. However, we should remember that these liabilities do not have to be paid for today; in, fact, the pension liabilities cover the present and future retirement costs of all people in the system. Since reporters and the general public do not understand how pensions work, they are easily scared by what looks to be giant deficits. Furthermore, employers are using these huge numbers to get employees to accept reduced benefits, and the side effect of this scare tactic is that the public has turned on pensions, public employees, and unions. Unintentionally, the media, public employers, and the general public are playing into the hands of the wealthiest people in America who do not want to pay middle-class workers a decent wage with acceptable benefits. While it may be necessary to restructure pensions, it is important to stress that many employees have been contributing large parts of their salaries to ensure that they would have a viable income when they retired. Moreover, many employers have profited from being able to attract and retain workers earning reduced salaries because of the promised retirement packages. If these plans are not protected, not only will employers be breaking their promises, but more senior citizens will fall into poverty, which will present another drag on the economy through the reduction of consumer demand. Driving this attack on the middle class benefits and the working poor is the discovery by wealthy corporations and individuals that the best way for them to increase their earnings is to decrease the income and benefits of everyone else. In this move to concentrate wealth at the top, we find that nearly two-thirds of the income growth since 1979 has gone to the top 10 percent of US taxpayers. This tremendous concentration of wealth has been coupled with a decrease in tax rates for these wealthiest Americans, which in turn has resulted in giant state deficits and the reduction of needed social programs. If current trends continue, the top ten percent will continue to increase their earnings, while everyone else suffers. Of course, the great magic trick in all of this is that the Republican party has convinced many Americans that the real threat to their economic survival comes from the poor and the middle class. Perhaps no state better exemplifies this situation than California where the consolidation of wealth has surpassed the national average. Since these rich Californians are not paying their fair share of taxes, the state cannot support even its basic functions, and a huge deficit has resulted in massive budge cuts. Making matters worse is the law that requires a two-thirds supermajority to pass any budget or tax increase. The result is that even the Terminator cannot get a budget passed. To resolve this impasse, California is considering billionaire Meg Whitman for governor. Not only is she spending over a hundred million dollars of her own money on her campaign, but she is running on a very scary platform, which is basically to blame welfare for all of the states problems. Once again, we have the super wealthy blaming the poor for the problems in our economy. This is like a billionaire blaming her maid for the fall in her investment portfolio. Of course, Whitman, like so many other Republicans, also wants to attack unions, public employees, and pensions for our fiscal woes. She believes that we should replace defined benefit plans with defined contribution plans so that the next time the stock market tanks, everyone will lose all of their money. Whitman is as superficial as her commercials, and her only hope of winning is if she convinces workers and middle class people to vote according to their prejudices. What we need is a candidate who will stand up for workers, organized labor, and the middle class. Jerry Brown may not be the perfect candidate, but he does have a history of supporting rational policies that do not cater to the super wealthy. A key to this election will be the passing of Proposition 25, which allows a budget to be passed by the legislature with a simple majority vote. If Brown wins and Proposition 25 passes, California will be able to escape from its paralysis and start putting people back to work.

Read the full article →

Things are looking up for BVI’s property market

September 1, 2010

The British Virgin Islands’ property market is showing signs of recovery after slowing in 2009. US visitors are returning to the islands, an investment hotspot for the super-rich.

Read the full article →

Zip Your Lips and Other Tips for Jobs with the Super Rich – FINS

August 19, 2010

Zip Your Lips and Other Tips for Jobs with the Super Rich FINS Working in a family office , where heaps of money are added to the mix, takes a delicate balance of strengths and a grace that goes beyond …

Read the full article →

This Week in Retail: Barnes & Noble Board Outlining New Chapter, Which May Climax in a Sale

August 4, 2010

Centro NP LLC and its parent company Super LLC and its joint venture Centro NP Residual Holding LLC completed a series of financing transactions that improves the debt maturity profiles across all three entities. The transactions address the bulk of the…

Read the full article →

Les Leopold: Are Bailouts for the Super-Rich Inevitable? Ask Paul Krugman

April 2, 2010

” There’s every reason to believe that this will be the rule from now on: when push comes to shove, no matter who is in power, the financial sector will be bailed out. ” Paul Krugman , 3/29/10 ” The recovery of big banks not only benefited bankers. It also created huge paydays for hedge fund managers, with the top 25 taking home an average of $1 billion in 2009. ” New York Times , 4/1/10 Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize-winning economist and influential New York Times columnist, says Wall Street institutions have become so big and powerful that they will never be allowed to fail. The only hope he sees is to regulate them thoroughly. He greatly prefers the stricter rules now being offered by Barney Frank in the House to the softer ones coming from Chris Dodd in the Senate. (Neither bill truly tackles the derivatives casino.) Krugman criticizes Senate Republican leaders who portray proposed bank regulations as just another Wall Street bailout. In fact these hypocritical leaders are doing all they can to thwart the Obama administration’s modest reforms and befriend Wall Street, hoping to net some cold, hard political cash from the bankers. Unfortunately, when Krugman says bailouts are inevitable, he’s handing the government haters another round of ammunition. “See, the liberal/pinkos are going to just keep on bailing out Wall Street,” they piously intone. But, why isn’t Krugman calling for an end to all financial bailouts for the wealthy, instead of announcing that they will go on forever? One reason is that he doesn’t think breaking up the big banks will work: “I don’t have any love for financial giants,” he writes , but I just don’t believe that breaking them up solves the key problem.” He argues that a run on thousands of little banks, as in the 1930s, would also require bailouts to avoid another Great Depression. Krugman’s sad fatalism is particularly worrisome to those of us who usually welcome his insightful commentaries. We expect thinkers like Krugman to imagine a better financial system — even if it’s not politically attainable right now. And that vision shouldn’t involve bailing out the richest, most reckless financiers, no matter what. Why should we ever accept or justify plutocracy? Just think about the implications of Krugman’s stance. Wall Street remains in firm control of our nation’s economy since they know they’ll always get bailed out of trouble. The inevitability of bailouts encourages bankers to find yet more ways to gamble with investor and taxpayer money. How long do you think it will take our ingenious financial engineers and tax lawyers to “innovate” around Congress’s new rules (especially the Senate’s extra-weak ones)? With everyone going so easy on the bankers who just sank our economy, Wall Street is using our bailout funds to reward its executives with bonuses that have no relationship to any real value they create for our economy. Just look at what is going on in the world of shadow banking. In 2009, the worst economic year for working people since the Great Depression (29 million Americans unemployed or forced into part-time jobs — with the BLS March 2010 jobless rate at 17.5 percent), the top 25 hedge fund managers “earned” on average $1 billion each! And that money is taxed only at 15 percent since it’s counted as capital gains. I defy anyone to show how those “earnings” can be justified in terms of job creation, contribution to our economy or social utility. And where did all that money come from? From us! If we hadn’t bailed out the big banks, these hedge fund managers would have earned nothing at all. Because the financial pay scales are so outlandish and unconnected to the production of real value, it makes effective regulation even more difficult. Can we really expect government regulators with civil service salaries not to cast their eyes on the sweet sinecures they might snag in the financial sector after they’ve finished their grubby tour of duty in the government? How hard are they really going to press their future employers? (Any bets on where Chris Dodd will end up?) Krugman has focused some much needed attention on the deregulation of finance since the 1980s and the rise of the shadow banking system, which evolved into a crazy unregulated casino of finance. But that’s only half the story. Why isn’t he — and why aren’t we all — talking about the gutting of progressive taxation, which also started in the 1980s? We didn’t just deregulate Wall Street back in the disco era. We threw out the whole idea of significantly taxing the super-rich. The marginal tax rate on those who earned more than $3 million (in today’s dollars) dropped from 91 percent during the Eisenhower years to 28 percent by 1990. Now the richest 400 people in the US are effectively taxed at only 16 percent, according to the latest IRS report . And that doesn’t even include the money these stupendously wealthy people didn’t declare and the resulting taxes they didn’t pay. In fact, we are losing $100 billion in taxes from the super-rich each year because they are hiding their money in overseas accounts. They’ve stashed it there for one purpose only — to avoid taxes that they are legally required to pay. (We lose another $30 billion a year in corporate profits taxes hidden in the same ways.). If we forced those tax cheats to pay what they owe, we could fund free tuition for every student in America who was admitted to a public college or university. And if we had even more nerve and reinstituted progressive taxation, we could put America back to work, rebuild our infrastructure and build a new green economy — without going further into debt. Let’s also talk about how deregulated finance and tax cuts for the super-rich destabilized our economy. We created the perfect conditions for big-time financial gambling. The super-rich had amassed so much money that they literally ran out of decent investments in the real economy of goods and services. And so shadow banking was born. Investors started chasing after fantasy finance securities like synthetic CDOs. Those were the casino chips that financed the savings and loan fiasco, the dot.com bubble and the housing explosion. Too much money in the hands of the few is the root cause of financial speculation and crashes — same as it ever was. Along the way much of our economy was financialized. By the 1990s, a lot of people thought the future was in hybrid financial securities, not hybrid cars. Shortly before the crash nearly 40 percent of all corporate profits came from financial corporations producing little of real value. Wall Street wasn’t serving Main Street. Rather, Main Street — and all of us — were serving the Wall Street bankers. The result: a financial crash and an obscene distribution of wealth. Allow me to share again with you the one factoid that says it all: It 1970 the ratio of compensation between the top 100 CEOs and the average worker in the US was 45 to 1. By 2008 it was 1,071 to one. No one can justify that gap on the basis of talent, knowledge or effort. So here we are in our new billionaire bailout society. Its features include a collapsing infrastructure, chronic high unemployment, a gutted public sector, a hollowed out middle class and a depleted environment. It’s a place where the super-rich keep on getting richer, not because they are creating new jobs for Americans, but because they are gambling yet again, knowing we will bail them out. Yes, regulation is critically important. But it’s not enough. If financial institutions truly are too big and too interconnected too fail, then we have only two choices: Bust them up so that they are small enough to fail, or turn all the major banks and their large shadows into public utilities. It’s just not right or sane to let private bankers and investors walk off again and again with billions of taxpayer dollars for what amounts to wrecking our way of life. But alas, this is the nightmare we’re going to keep having until our best thinkers put forth a compelling vision to end the insanity. Come on, Mr. Krugman — let ‘er rip! We know you’re not ready to make peace with our pampered and grossly overpaid financial elites. Americans are looking for a way out of our billionaire bailout society. Lead the way! Les Leopold is the author of The Looting of America: How Wall Street’s Game of Fantasy Finance destroyed our Jobs, Pensions and Prosperity, and What We Can Do About It Chelsea Green Publishing, June 2009.

Read the full article →

Video: Derek Rucker Says Google, Audi Had Best Super Bowl Ads: Video

February 8, 2010

Feb. 8 (Bloomberg) — Derek Rucker, a professor at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Business, talks with Bloomberg’s Betty Liu and Adam Johnson about the best and worst television advertising during yesterday’s Super Bowl. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

What Dat? Is Better Question for NFL Champions: Scott Soshnick

February 8, 2010

Commentary by Scott Soshnick Feb. 8 (Bloomberg) — No one did more to elevate his stature in Super Bowl XLIV than New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton . It was Payton who used halftime to hatch a plan of surprise when conventional wisdom called for safe. He played to win. Imagine that. He did something that no other Super Bowl participant had dared. The Indianapolis Colts didn’t see that onside kick coming, which is why the Saints are going home champions. Let’s hope that coaches in all sports take note of the result, of Payton earning the ultimate honor, a celebratory ride on the shoulders of his players. Let’s hope those coaches take note of Saints quarterback Drew Brees carrying his son under a shower of red confetti, tears of jubilation covering his cheeks. Let’s hope they saw the images emanating from New Orleans, where they’re less than five years removed from devastation. “Louisiana, by way of New Orleans, is back,” said Saints owner Tom Benson , who didn’t need to explain. “And this shows the whole world.” There are feel-good stories and then there’s this. It’s hard to fathom anyone who doesn’t fancy himself a Hoosier pulling for quarterback Peyton Manning and the Colts, who were denied their second championship in four seasons. Shockey Silenced These Saints are the perfect antidote for difficult times, for reminding us that anything is, indeed, possible. It was the kind of game that left even loudmouth Jeremy Shockey searching for words. “I’m kind of at a loss,” is what Shockey came up with. If anyone knows about loss it’s the residents of New Orleans, where lives were lost, homes were lost and even hope was lost after Hurricane Katrina. No, a football game can’t repair damaged homes and psyches. But anyone who thinks it’s just a game needs a reminder of what a group of college hockey players did for the U.S. when they beat the Russians in the 1980 Olympics. Sports, at its best, can uplift. And that euphoria can linger. “We played for so much more than just ourselves; we played for our city,” said Brees, the game’s Most Valuable Player. “Eight-five percent of the city was under water.” And now 100 percent of the city is over the moon. Taking a Chance Make no mistake, unconventional wisdom is most responsible for the Saints beating the Colts, 31-17, last night at Sun Life Stadium in Miami. Saints fans used to wear brown paper bags over their heads. Last night those clad in black and gold, those who for more than an hour after the game kept chanting, wore nothing but smiles. They danced in the aisles, bopping as Iko Iko blasted from the loudspeakers. All season the fans of New Orleans asked Who Dat?, as in Who Dat Say Dey Gonna Beat Dem Saints. A more appropriate question last night would’ve been What Dat? Regretful is the fan at the refrigerator — or elsewhere — who missed the second-half kickoff because, well, what are the odds of anything of consequence happening? It’s just a kickoff. Well, something did happen. Something big. Something unexpected. Something memorable. Something wonderful. Hopefully something that changes the safety-first paradigm. A coach with everything to lose took a chance. The Saints trailed 10-6 at halftime, and the Colts would get the ball to start the second half. Payton knew that a touchdown might be too much to overcome, even for the highest- scoring team in the National Football League. Onside Kick So he called for an onside kick. Coaches usually order that low-percentage play because they have to, not because they want to, which explains why we’ve never seen one in the Super Bowl prior to the fourth quarter. This time it worked. Six plays and 58 yards later Pierre Thomas ran 16 yards into the end zone. “We were going to be aggressive,” said Payton, who earlier passed on a field goal for an unsuccessful fourth-and- goal attempt. “When you do something like that you put it on the players and they were able to execute.” Payton was able to take a chance because he, like Bill Belichick against the Colts earlier this season, didn’t fear the consequences of failure. How many other coaches do you suppose have thought about doing the same thing only to ponder the repercussions of being wrong. Risk versus reward, which this time was considerable. “The onside kick was huge,” said Melvin Bullitt , one of Indy’s special teams captains. Earlier this week Brees said the Saints, a five-point underdog, had a chance to lift their city, to give the fans hope. A chance. Payton took one. And because of it you’ll never miss the second-half kickoff again. (Scott Soshnick is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.) Click on “Send Comment” in the sidebar display to send a letter to the editor. To contact the writer of this column: Scott Soshnick in New York at ssoshnick@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Video: Forbes’s Van Riper Discusses Super Bowl Gambling Trends: Video

February 5, 2010

Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — Tom Van Riper, a reporter for Forbes, talks with Bloomberg’s Carol Massar and Matt Miller about betting on the National Football League’s Super Bowl championship between the New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts on Feb. 7. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: New Orleans Celebrates Marketing Boost From Super Bowl

February 5, 2010

Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Eric Coleman reports on New Orleans’s hopes for a marketing boost as the Saints head to Miami for the National Football League’s Super Bowl championship against the Indianapolis Colts Feb. 7. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Super Bowl Win Doesn’t Guarantee Post-Career Success: Video

February 5, 2010

Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Michele Steele reports on the business efforts of National Football League players after a trip to the Super Bowl. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Wager on Saints to Cover Spread in Super Bowl, Quant Money Manager Says

February 4, 2010

By Elizabeth Stanton Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) — Super Bowl bettors should wager on the Saints to cover the point spread against the favored Colts because gamblers overpay for teams that rewarded them more richly during the regular season, according to an investment strategist. If the National Football League were the stock market, the Indianapolis Colts would be “overvalued,” according to Steve Sapra , a strategist at Analytic Investors LLC in Los Angeles who applies the same tools he uses as a money manager to analyze football. Teams that outperformed expectations more during the regular season either won the Super Bowl by a smaller-than- expected margin or lost by a wider one in seven of the past 10 years, according to his research. The Pittsburgh Steelers’ narrower-than-expected 27-23 victory over the Arizona Cardinals last year was no exception. The Colts are at least 4.5-point favorites to defeat the New Orleans Saints in the Feb. 7 matchup in Miami, meaning bets on the Saints pay out if they win the game or lose by a smaller margin. The Colts returned 38.7 percent on bets during the regular season, compared with a 12.5 percent in so-called alpha for the Saints. Bettors probably are giving the Colts even more credit, reasoning that the team’s losses in its last two regular-season games weren’t representative of its skill, Sapra said. “Realistically, investors view the Colts as 16-0, which would’ve made their alpha even higher,” he said. “The Colts’ alpha is higher in people’s minds than it is on paper, which would be indicative of an even larger mispricing.” NFL Alpha Sapra, 37, who is head of research for U.S. equity investment strategies at Analytic Investors , began calculating NFL team alphas six years ago. In portfolio management, alpha refers to the excess return of an investment over a benchmark. Analytic Investors manages $9 billion using quantitative techniques, in which securities are selected with computer models. Sapra’s NFL alphas look at how a team performed relative to the closing Las Vegas point spread on each game. This season’s highest-alpha team, the Oakland Raiders, returned 88.5 percent to bettors. The Raiders’ alpha was the highest recorded by an NFL team this decade despite their 5-11 record because four of their wins were major upsets. The lowest-alpha team, the St. Louis Rams, went 1-15 and produced a loss of 84.6 percent. In the past six Super Bowls, the lower-alpha team has either lost the game by fewer points than the closing line predicted, won by more points, or in the case of the New York Giants’ victory over the New England Patriots two years ago, won in an upset. That means bets on the lower-alpha team made money while bets on the higher-alpha team did not. ‘True Alpha’ The Colts went 14-2 in the regular season. They won their first 14 games before losing the last two while partly resting quarterback Peyton Manning and several other starters, having already clinched home-field advantage throughout the postseason. It’s comparable to a company with strong quarterly results delaying recognition of some revenue until the next quarter in order to smooth its earnings, Sapra said. “You could argue that the Colts’ true alpha is probably higher than 38.7, which would imply that the difference between the Saints and the Colts is even greater, which would make the Saints even more undervalued,” he said. Sapra, who has a doctorate in behavioral finance, said he’ll root for the Saints “to at least cover the spread so my prediction is right, but I don’t have an economic interest it.” “Betting markets in general, and the NFL in particular, are very, very efficiently priced, meaning that it’s very difficult to make money betting on Super Bowl teams,” he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Tebow Ad Helps CBS Increase Super Bowl Sales With Priceline, Toyota Absent

February 2, 2010

By Andy Fixmer and Michael Buteau Feb. 2 (Bloomberg) — Tim Tebow’s Super Bowl commercial for Focus on the Family, along with first-time advertisements from a dozen other marketers, helped CBS increase sales from the game as Priceline.com Inc. and Toyota Motor Co. opted out. New advertisers Electronic Arts Inc. , Qualcomm Inc. and truTV are joining Tebow and long-time Super Bowl marketer Anheuser-Busch InBev NV , the biggest sponsor, to push sales past the $206 million NBC reported last year, Dana McClintock , a spokesman for New York-based CBS Corp. , said in an interview. CBS has completed ad sales for the Feb. 7 match-up between the New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts, with prices for some 30-second spots exceeding $3 million, the most-watched U.S. TV network said yesterday. Building on record audiences for last month’s playoffs, the National Football League championship could attract 100 million viewers, said Jo Ann Ross , head of CBS advertising sales, topping last year’s record 98.7 million. “People don’t record the Super Bowl,” said Phil Marineau, senior product manager at Redwood City, California-based Electronic Arts, which is promoting the “Dante’s Inferno” video game. “They don’t want a Twitter or text message to spoil it, so they watch it live and they watch the commercials.” CBS’s sellout of ads a week ahead of the kickoff in Miami suggests the advertising market is recovering. Earlier Sellout In previous match-ups, networks had ads to sell until the weekend of the game, according to Andy Donchin , director of media investments at Carat , a New York advertising agency whose clients include Papa John’s International Inc. , the pizza chain based in Louisville, Kentucky. It’s rare to wrap up Super Bowl sales six days before the game, Donchin said in an interview. U.S. broadcast network advertising may rise 7.8 percent this year from 2009, Barclays Capital estimated last week, up from a prior projection of a 4.5 percent increase. CBS is running a Web site and a Feb. 3 show to let viewers vote on the best ads from past games. Tebow, the 2007 Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback at the University of Florida, will appear with his mother, Pam, in a commercial for Focus on the Family , a Christian non-profit advocacy group based in Colorado Springs, Colorado. “They will share a personal story centered on the theme of ‘Celebrate Family, Celebrate Life,’” Jim Daly , the group’s president, said in a statement. The ad is expected to recount the story of Pam Tebow’s pregnancy in 1987, the Associated Press reported. While on a mission to the Philippines, she rejected her doctors’ advice to abort her fifth child and gave birth to Tim, AP reported. Critical of Ads The Bob Tebow Evangelistic Association, founded by the athlete’s father in Jacksonville, Florida, couldn’t be reached for comment. Gary Schneeberger, a spokesman for Focus on the Family, didn’t respond to a voice-mail seeking comment. The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation criticized CBS for accepting the Tebow commercial while refusing to air a gay-oriented advertisement. Focus on the Family encourages gay men and women to abandon same-sex lifestyles . CBS, controlled by Chairman Sumner Redstone , has accepted commercials from advocacy groups since the network last aired the Super Bowl in 2007, the network said. “Our standards and practices process continues to adhere to a process that ensures all ads — on all sides of an issue — are appropriate,” CBS said in a statement last week. CBS rose 36 cents to $13.29 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading . The shares gained 72 percent last year. The company is scheduled to report earnings on Feb. 18. New Product Forum With at least 13 new advertisers, according to CBS, this year’s game is attracting double the number of new participants as last year and the year before. The network lists 38 marketers whose ad buys for the event are public. Companies introducing products are attracted to the Super Bowl because the championship draws the biggest TV audience of the year, Donchin said. Electronic Arts’ “Dante’s Inferno” arrives in stores on Feb. 9, two days later, Marineau said. Unilever , the world’s second-largest consumer products company and based in London and Rotterdam, is promoting a new line of soap for men and Dr Pepper Snapple Group Inc. , based in Plano, Texas, is announcing a cherry-flavored soda. Time Warner Inc. will air a 30-second spot for “Full Contact,” a behind-the-scenes program about the NFL on the New York-based media company’s truTV cable channel, formerly known as Court TV, according to a statement . Qualcomm, the San Diego-based maker of cell-phone chips, is promoting its FLO TV personal television service for handheld devices. Belgian brewer AB InBev’s Budweiser, the biggest advertiser, is taking five minutes of air time, according to Advertising Age, the industry trade publication. Dodge, owned by Auburn Hills, Michigan-based Chrysler Group LLC, is the only domestic automaker, while Volkswagen AG’s Audi and namesake German brand, Japan’s Honda Motor Co. , and South Korea’s Hyundai Motor Co. and Kia Motors Corp. have taken spots. “The positive side is the imports have really stepped up to the plate,” CBS’s Ross said in an interview. “In some cases they’re buying two 30-second spots.” To contact the reporters on this story: Andy Fixmer in Los Angeles at afixmer@bloomberg.net ; Michael Buteau in Atlanta at mbuteau@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

New York Jets Beat Chargers 17-14, Will Play Colts for Place in Super Bowl

January 17, 2010

By Erik Matuszewski Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) — The New York Jets are one win away from the Super Bowl after beating the San Diego Chargers 17-14 to reach the American Football Conference championship game for the first time since the 1998 season. The Jets scored two fourth-quarter touchdowns at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego and held the Chargers to fewer than 20 points for the first time this season while snapping San Diego’s 11-game winning streak. The Jets (11-7), who entered the postseason with the longest odds of any team to win the National Football League championship, will face the Indianapolis Colts on Jan. 24 for the AFC title and a trip to the Super Bowl, the National Football League’s title game, on Feb. 7. New York’s road victory as a 7 1/2-point underdog capped a weekend in which home teams won the first three divisional-round games by an average of 26 points. The Minnesota Vikings beat the Dallas Cowboys 34-3 today at the Minneapolis Metrodome as Brett Favre threw four touchdown passes. The Vikings (13-4) will visit the New Orleans Saints in the National Football Conference championship game on Jan. 24. The Saints (14-3) beat the Arizona Cardinals 45-14 yesterday, while the Colts (15-2) were 20-3 winners over the Baltimore Ravens. The Jets have won back-to-back playoff games for the first time since 1982, while Mark Sanchez became the second rookie quarterback in NFL history to win two postseason games. Joe Flacco of the Baltimore Ravens was the first, one year ago. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Vikings Will Play Saints for a Super Bowl Spot After Beating Cowboys 34-3

January 17, 2010

By Dex McLuskey Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) — Brett Favre threw three of his four touchdown passes to Sidney Rice as the Minnesota Vikings beat the Dallas Cowboys 34-3 to set up a meeting with the New Orleans Saints for a place in the Super Bowl. “It was convincing, to say the least,” Favre said in a televised postgame interview at the Metrodome in Minneapolis. “We’ll have to play that way in order to win next week.” Favre, at 40 the oldest quarterback to start a National Football League playoff game, completed 15 of 24 passes for 234 yards as the Vikings advanced to the National Football Conference championship game for the first time since 2000, where they lost to the New York Giants. Minnesota has played in the Super Bowl four times, losing each time. The New York Jets play the San Diego Chargers today for the right to face the Indianapolis Colts on Jan. 24 for the American Football Conference title and a Super Bowl spot. The Super Bowl, the National Football League’s championship game, is scheduled for Feb. 7 in Miami. Minnesota will play the top-seeded Saints in New Orleans for the NFC title on Jan. 24. Favre found Rice with a 47-yard pass with 4 minutes, 12 seconds remaining in the first quarter to open the scoring in Minneapolis. After Shaun Suisham kicked a 33-yard field goal for the Cowboys, Rice scored again midway through the second quarter on a 16-yard pass from Favre. Lead Widens The Vikings’ lead widened to 14 points four minutes before halftime, when Ryan Longwell made a 23-yard field goal after Dallas quarterback Tony Romo fumbled following a sack by Jared Allen on the Dallas 20-yard line. Romo was sacked another three times by Ray Edwards and lost the ball on two of three fumbles during the half. The Dallas quarterback was downed for the fifth time on the team’s opening drive of the second half and Suisham missed the 49-yard field goal attempt that followed, as the Cowboys sought to recover from a 14-point deficit for the second time in a playoff game. With 1:17 to play in the third quarter, Romo turned the ball over for the third time when he threw an interception to Ben Leber . The Vikings took over on Dallas’s 15-yard line and Longwell made it 20-3 with a field goal from 28 yards. The next Cowboys’ drive also ended with a punt after the Vikings sacked Romo for the sixth time. Minnesota led the NFL in sacks during the regular season. Seven plays later, Favre connected with Rice from 45 yards to make it 27-3 midway through the fourth quarter. Minnesota completed the scoring with 1:55 to play, when Favre found Visanthe Shiancoe for a touchdown from 11 yards. To contact the reporter on this story: Dex McLuskey in Dallas at dmcluskey@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Jets’ Sanchez Tries Imitating Flacco Not Favre, Manning Playoff Histories

January 15, 2010

By Erik Matuszewski Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) — New York Jets quarterback Mark Sanchez has a chance to accomplish something Brett Favre , Peyton Manning and Kurt Warner never did. Sanchez this weekend can become the second quarterback in National Football League history to win two playoff games as a rookie. The Jets play the San Diego Chargers on Jan. 17 for a spot in the American Football Conference championship game. One year ago, Sanchez had just decided to turn professional after his junior year at the University of Southern California. Now the 23-year-old rookie is among the eight quarterbacks still playing, a group that has combined for nine NFL Most Valuable Player awards and 29 Pro Bowl appearances. “I’ve grown up watching those guys so it’s pretty special,” Sanchez said at news conference at the team’s training facility in Florham Park, New Jersey on Jan. 13. “I’m honored to be here, but at the same time I don’t want to look back and say, ‘Man, that was cool getting to the divisional round.’ The only other quarterback left in the playoffs who hasn’t been to a Pro Bowl is Baltimore’s Joe Flacco , who as a rookie took the Ravens to last year’s AFC title game. Jets first-year coach Rex Ryan was the Ravens’ defensive coordinator last year and former New York Giants quarterback Phil Simms , now an analyst for CBS Sports , said that experience convinced Ryan that a rookie quarterback could be successful in the NFL. “Sure it helps,” Simms, who will work the Jets-Chargers game, said during a conference call. “He learned that his way, his belief in how to orchestrate a football team can still win, win big and win Super Bowls. He’s seen it and been a part of it.” Rookie Mistakes Sanchez is aiming to match the 24-year-old Flacco’s accomplishment after last week becoming the fourth rookie quarterback since 1950 to win an NFL playoff game, joining Flacco, Pittsburgh’s Ben Roethlisberger (2004) and Tampa Bay’s Shaun King (1999). After throwing 16 interceptions in his first 10 games, Sanchez helped the Jets win six of their last seven by limiting his mistakes. He didn’t throw an interception the last three games, including last week’s 24-14 playoff win over Cincinnati in which he completed 12-of-15 passes for 182 yards and a touchdown. “I don’t want to feel like I’ve figured it out,” said Sanchez. “I just think that working to eliminate turnovers has really helped.” The Jets have the NFL’s top rushing offense and best defense, so they haven’t had to rely on Sanchez’s arm to carry them to wins. He’s topped 200 passing yards in four games, and Simms said Ryan may take a few more chances through the air against the Chargers. ‘Competitive Level’ “I expect the Jets to sneak a few more pass plays in their game plan to keep it a little more balanced because the competitive level is going up,” said Simms, 54. The other playoff teams rely much more on the production of their quarterbacks: Manning, 33, in Indianapolis; Warner, 38, in Arizona; Favre, 40, in Minnesota; Drew Brees , 31, in New Orleans; Tony Romo , 29, in Dallas; Philip Rivers , 28, in San Diego and even Flacco in Baltimore. All had at least 1,000 passing yards more than Sanchez’s 2,444, with Manning and Romo topping him by 2,000 yards. Ryan said his quarterback will soon join them with awards and accolades, not to mention wins. “He doesn’t have to put it all on his shoulders and I think that’s why you see the success that he’s had,” Ryan, 47, told reporters on Jan. 13. “He’ll be a guy that goes to many Pro Bowls. He’s going to win a ton of games here.” Las Vegas oddsmakers have the Jets as 7 1/2-point underdogs against the Chargers, who have won 11 straight games. The winner will face the Ravens or Colts for the AFC championship and a spot in the Super Bowl. “Competitive guys make it to this level,” Sanchez said. “I probably won’t think about it until later on, but I hope it’s something I can reflect on and say, ‘Man, I beat some of those guys.’” To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Mike Shanahan May Be Named Redskins’ Coach Tomorrow, Washington Post Says

January 4, 2010

By Jay Beberman Jan. 4 (Bloomberg) — Mike Shanahan may be named coach of the Washington Redskins tomorrow, the Washington Post reported, citing people in the National Football League team’s organization. Shanahan, 57, coached the Denver Broncos from 1995-2008, compiling a 138-86 record while winning two Super Bowls. The Redskins fired Jim Zorn today as coach after two seasons.

Read the full article →

NBA: Super Celtics beat Wizards

December 12, 2009

NBA: Super Celtics beat Wizards

Read the full article →

Electric Rolls-Royce Could Be Out By Christmas 2010, Rumors Report

November 20, 2009

Rumors of an electric Rolls-Royce Phantom are back, with the word being the super-luxe automaker could have one on the road within 12 months.

Read the full article →

SuperClubs Promotes Bob Ford and Kristi Miller to Senior Directors

November 17, 2009

HOLLYWOOD, FL–(Marketwire – November 17, 2009) – On the heels of SuperClubs’ rebranding of its Breezes Resorts, the Caribbean-based all inclusive resort chain announced the promotions of Bob Ford to senior director of U.S. wholesale and Kristi Miller to senior director of U.S. field sales. The appointments were first made public October 24 during SuperClubs’ annual SuperAwards event in Jamaica, which celebrates the continued successes of its travel agent and supplier partners.

Read the full article →

Video: Inside Look – Protecting the Consumer

October 9, 2009

Obama Hopes to “Close Gaps” in Regulation – Interview with Consumer Advocate Ralph Nader, Author of “Only the Super Rich Can Save Us” (Bloomberg News)

Read the full article →

Brett Favre Offers Sports-as-Business Reminder: Scott Soshnick

October 5, 2009

Commentary by Scott Soshnick Oct. 5 (Bloomberg) — Brett Favre should tell the lunkheads at Lambeau to take a leap. Or, as an alternative, give them a lesson in sports business. Enough, already, with the vitriol aimed at a certain Viking. Yes, Favre spent 16 wonderful and productive seasons in Green Bay, which, for those of you who’ve never been there, is the closest thing to Mayberry R.F.D. that professional sports can offer. It’s the kind of place where the streets are named for revered members of the organization and where fans actually own the team. Favre won lots of games and even more hearts. He won the Super Bowl, too, cementing his stature as one of the best quarterbacks in National Football League history. Only that isn’t enough for the Cheeseheads, the folksy Midwest moniker assigned to fans of the Packers, who, in case you’ve somehow missed the hype, tonight host Favre and the reviled Vikings of Minnesota at the Metrodome in Minneapolis. “Brett Favre wearing a Vikings uniform playing the Packers — that’s about as bad as it gets,” said Packers great Jerry Kramer, who won back-to-back Super Bowls playing for Vince Lombardi . Kramer isn’t the only former Packer who’s peeved. According to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Fuzzy Thurston, who played on five Packers title teams, removed the framed photos of his good friend that hung in his home, including the one that’s autographed to his wife. Team Loyalty The folks in Green Bay behave as if Michael Jordan never donned a Washington Wizards jersey. They pretend that Wayne Gretzky didn’t play for the Kings, Blues and Rangers. Or that Joe Montana finished in Kansas City. They forget that Karl Malone left Utah for the Lakers and that Johnny Damon , beloved in Boston, went back on his word never to play for you know who. Funny what a few more zeroes on a contract offer will do. You have to wonder what will happen if, some day soon, the Yankees decide 35-year-old Derek Jeter is finished. Would the captain ever play for Boston? I asked. He didn’t say no. “It’s just another game,” said Favre, whose last pass at Lambeau Field was intercepted by Corey Webster of the Giants, who went on to win the Super Bowl. It was cold that day. Really cold. Favre is supposed to win those games. He didn’t. You can’t blame the Packers for thinking he was done. Favre waffled. The team moved on. It happens. Purple Judas Every Packers fan who considers Favre a purple-clad Judas should have a chat with former Baltimore Ravens coach Brian Billick , author of “More Than a Game: The Glorious Present — and the Uncertain Future — of the NFL.” Billick, like the fans in Green Bay, where the team has been a publicly owned, non-profit corporation since 1923, clings to the notion of football being about the game, about those three hours, about being a champion. Only today’s players don’t buy that babble. “They go bull (expletive),” Billick said. “Because it’s about the money for the club. Where’s mine?” Billick until last year had never been to the NFL draft , which he suggests is a simple task that can be completed online in about two hours. Only it has become a television extravaganza that turns his stomach. “It just reeked of money,” Billick said. “It had nothing to do with football. And the league is knee-deep in it. It was almost comical.” That, folks, from a football guy’s football guy. Expiration Date That’s an apt description for Favre, who you just know would love to demonstrate that Green Bay’s management grossly miscalculated his expiration date. And here’s a little-known fact the people of Green Bay ought to consider: There have been four stock offerings in the team’s 90-year history. The first issuance took place in 1923, followed by 1935, 1950 and 1997-1998, when 105,989 new shareholders were added and more than $24 million was raised. That money was used to improve Lambeau Field, which is named for the team’s founder and first coach. The most recently issued shares were purchased by people from all 50 states, as well as Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Not surprisingly, more than half of them were bought by Wisconsin residents, followed by Illinois and, you guessed it, Minnesota. Interesting. Maybe Favre is right where he belongs. ( Scott Soshnick is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.) To contact the writer of this column: Scott Soshnick in New York at ssoshnick@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Video: Sports News Briefs

September 11, 2009

Patriots 4-1 Super Bowl Favorites; NFL Financial State Remains Under Scrutiny – Excerpt of Interview with Former NFL Head Coach Brian Billick (Bloomberg News)

Read the full article →