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Expert Guilty Of Leaking iPad Secrets

July 6, 2011

NEW YORK (Basil Katz) – A former senior director at Flextronics International pleaded guilty on Tuesday, telling a U.S. judge he was paid $200 an hour by an expert network firm to spill inside information to hedge funds. Walter Shimoon, 39, was the latest out of more than a dozen accused in a broad insider trading probe to plead guilty in Manhattan federal court to working illegally while consulting for Primary Global Research (PGR). At the plea hearing on Tuesday, Shimoon told U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff that he was paid $200 an hour by PGR to give secrets about Flextronics or its customers to hedge funds and investors, often over the phone. “On these calls, I offered specific non-public information,” Shimoon said. A U.S. representative for Singapore-based electronics equipment maker Flextronics, Renee Brotherton, declined to comment on the guilty plea. Shimoon, arrested in December, was accused of leaking secrets about Apple Inc iPad ahead of its launch and giving up new details about the company’s iPhone 4. Following an agreement with prosecutors, Shimoon pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud and one count of securities fraud. He faces up to 30 years in prison at his July 8, 2013 sentencing. Shimoon on Tuesday also said he provided production schedules and sales forecasts for Flextronics provider Omnivision Technologies to PGR customers. “I knew they (the customers) used the information I provided in purchasing and selling securities,” Shimoon said. One customer, identified in court papers as a hedge fund in White Plains, New York, was named in court by assistant U.S. Attorney Antonia Apps as Kingdom Ridge Capital. Shimoon’s contact there, Apps said, was employee Nick Caputo. Caputo did not immediately return a call requesting comment. Court documents unsealed on Tuesday said the hedge fund made $560,000 in profits in October 2009 by trading on Flextronics secrets provided by Shimoon. Kingdom Ridge Capital, founded in 2008 by two former SAC Capital Advisors LP employees, had under $350 million invested in U.S. equities according to a recent regulatory filing. In the ongoing investigation, a number of former SAC traders and analysts have either been implicated or investigated but no charges have been filed against SAC Capital’s founder, the billionaire trader Steven Cohen or any other SAC employees. Shimoon in court also admitted to being paid $27,500 by independent research firm Broadband Research. A lawyer for John Kinnucan, the firm’s owner, declined to comment on the hearing, but said his client was innocent of any wrongdoing. “John Kinnucan did not do anything wrong,” attorney Nathaniel Burney said. The case is USA v Shimoon et al, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, No. 10-mj-2823. (Additional Reporting by Matthew Goldstein; Editing by Lisa Shumaker) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Greece Would Likely Default If It Followed French Banks’ Plan: S&P

July 4, 2011

ATHENS (Angeliki Koutantou) – Greece would likely be in default if it follows a debt rollover plan pushed by French banks, S&P warned on Monday, deepening the pain of a bailout that one European official said will cost Athens sovereignty and jobs. European politicians and bankers had expressed confidence last week that the French proposal would not trigger a default, but ratings agency Standard & Poor’s said it would involve losses to debt holders, most likely earning Greece a “selective default” rating. “It is our view that each of the two financing options described in the (French banks’) proposal would likely amount to a default under our criteria,” S&P said. French banks, major holders of Greek sovereign debt, proposed voluntarily renewing some of the bonds when they fall due, but on different terms. S&P cut Greece’s sovereign rating to “CCC” last month, from “B,” on a view that any restructuring of the country’s massive debt load would count as an effective default. The euro fell from around $1.4550 to a session low around $1.4510 after the latest S&P comment. Derivatives industry body ISDA said before the French proposal was released in late June that a voluntary agreement to roll over Greek debt would “typically” not trigger payments on credit default swaps. Greece was already facing an uphill struggle this week to start the process of selling off state-owned assets and reform its tax system to meet European Union and IMF conditions for bailing it out. The deep spending cuts required under the loan terms have sparked angry protests on the streets of Athens. Eurogroup Chairman Jean-Claude Juncker said Greece will lose sovereignty and jobs to meet those criteria, a comment that has enraged unions. Any suggestion of foreign intervention in running the country is an incendiary political issue that will make implementing reforms even tougher. Public-sector union ADEDY, which has launched crippling strikes and protests, reacted angrily to his comments. ADEDY President Spyros Papaspyros said Juncker was out of line: “Mr Juncker interferes in the internal affairs of a country, provokes European rules and is an embarrassment for the country whose government tolerates him.” Juncker’s comments could trigger more of the anti-austerity street protests that have roiled the country for months as Greece stays stuck in its worst recession since the 1970s with a youth unemployment rate of more than 40 percent. “The sovereignty of Greece will be massively limited,” Juncker told Germany’s Focus magazine in an interview released on Sunday. Teams of experts from around the euro zone would be heading to Athens, he said. “One cannot be allowed to insult the Greeks. But one has to help them. They have said they are ready to accept expertise from the euro zone,” Juncker said. EASIER SAID THAN DONE Greece last week passed austerity measures worth 28 billion euros ($40 billion) and promised to deliver 50 billion euros in sell-off revenues by 2015, including raising 5 billion euros by the end of this year alone. On the list are public utilities whose sale is sure to prompt public reaction. “Greece now needs to push faster fiscal adjustments and structural reforms,” said EFG Eurobank economist Platon Monokroussos. “On the privatization front, it is of essence the government delivers fast results to send a strong signal to financial markets.” That is easier said than done. The socialist government, which came to power on a social welfare platform, has yet to launch a single state sale in 18 months in power and must set up a privatization agency within weeks to meet its target. It must also start to sell state property, estimated at up to 300 billion euros but often entangled in legal complications. “The 50 billion euro target is not achievable,” said Constantinos Mihalos, head of the Athens Chamber of Commerce. “Share values are very low right now because of the recession.” At the same time, Greece needs to deliver on pledges to reform a chronically inefficient tax system that has relied too much on middle class salary earners and let wealthy tax evaders off the hook, producing disappointing revenues this year. Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos told Reuters in an interview on Friday that Greece would tap for the first time private-sector expertise but tax offices around the country are notoriously resistant to any change. “A greater effort is needed to rein in tax evasion and broaden the tax base in a bid to bring the ratio of revenues to GDP closer to euro area average and reduce expenditure and waste in the broader public sector,” Monokroussos said. Investors have feared that default by Greece would send shockwaves through the world finance system with some commentators saying such an eventuality could call the whole euro zone into question. Another hurdle is the law on a uniform pay scale for the public sector, sure to cut further the salaries of civil servants who have already seen their pay reduced by an average 15 percent as a result of a wave of austerity measures to secure the 110-billion-euro bailout last year. On Saturday, euro zone finance ministers approved a 12 billion euro loan Greece needs to avert default. The IMF will meet on July 8 to approve the 12-billion euro loan tranche, which is expected to be handed over by July 15 and allow Greece to avoid the immediate threat of debt default. But the country still needs the second rescue package, which is also expected to total around 110 billion. EU officials will now look at how private creditors can be involved voluntarily so that rating agencies do not declare the rescue a “credit event.” (Additional reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney) (Writing by Dina Kyriakidou and Emily Kaiser; Editing by Louise Ireland, Peter Millership and Neil Fullick) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Nearly 10 Percent Of European Insurers Fail Stress Tests: Regulator

July 4, 2011

LONDON (Myles Neligan) – Nearly 10 percent of European insurers would need to raise fresh capital in the event of a severe economic shock accompanied by a plunge in share prices, tumbling interest rates and a property market crash, European insurance regulator EIOPA said on Monday. Thirteen insurers would in that scenario rack up a collective 4.4 billion euro ($6.2 billion) capital shortfall relative to the minimum required under the European Union’s proposed Solvency II regime, the watchdog said as it unveiled the results of a stress test aimed at gauging the sector’s financial resilience. EIOPA did not name the companies, but said the small size of the shortfall compared with the sector’s 425 billion euro surplus before the stress tests are applied demonstrated the industry was financially robust overall. “This shows that overall the European insurance industry has a good shock absorber in its capital position,” EIOPA chairman Gabriel Bernardino told reporters. “Now each company will have an analysis of the areas where they are more exposed, and they can take action.” Bernardino said it was “not appropriate” to identify the companies facing a potential capital shortfall, as the Solvency II capital rules the stress tests are based on could change before they are introduced in 2013. “The take-away is that there isn’t going to be a rush to raise equity. The status quo will be maintained,” said Investec analyst Kevin Ryan. Insurers emerged from the 2008 financial crisis in better shape than banks, but a small number of failures in the sector has spurred regulators to scrutinize it more closely for fear a major insurance collapse could endanger the financial system. EIOPA’s banking counterpart, the EBA, will later this month publish the results of a stress test of European lenders which will name the institutions that are found to be financially weak. EIOPA also said six European insurers would face a collective capital shortfall of 2.5 billion euros in a separate shock scenario involving a surge in sovereign bond yields. However, the industry’s exposure to bonds issued by critically-indebted peripheral euro zone nations at risk of default is “manageable,” EIOPA’s Bernardino said. Allianz, Europe’s biggest insurer, said its Solvency II capital thresholds were determined by an internal model which was both more accurate and tougher than the approach adopted by EIOPA. “For all insurers working with internal models, own results will provide a clearer picture than the EIOPA figures,” an Allianz spokeswoman said. The stress tests “confirm the robustness of the European insurance market and its ability to withstand severe stress scenarios,” said CEA, the European insurers’ lobby group. ($1 = 0.705 Euros) (Reporting by Myles Neligan; Additional reporting by Arno Schuetze in Frankfurt; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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BofA, JPMorgan Modifying Risky Mortgages Without Being Asked

July 4, 2011

Bank of America Corp and JPMorgan Chase & Co have started modifying tens of thousands of mortgages where the banks deem the loans especially risky, even if the borrowers have not asked, the New York Times reported on Sunday. In some cases, the paper said, the banks are slashing the amount borrowers owe, citing one case in Florida where a woman’s principal balance was cut in half. The paper said the banks are targeting holders of pay option adjustable-rate mortgages, a type of loan where borrowers have the option of skipping some principal and interest payments and having the amount added back onto the loan. Such “option ARM” loans were seen as especially high risk in the wake of the financial crisis; the two banks collectively still have tens of billions of dollars of such loans in their portfolios. One law professor quoted by the Times said the banks were behaving in contradictory ways, modifying some loans that should not be and not modifying some loans that should be. Spokespeople for the two banks were not immediately available to comment. (Reporting by Ben Berkowitz. Editing by Maureen Bavdek) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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For A Change, Gas Cheaper On Independence Day Than Memorial

July 2, 2011

(AP) NEW YORK — Call it an Independence Day discount. Gasoline prices usually peak in the summer. This year, however, they peaked a little earlier, on May 5. The subsequent slide has made gas about 24 cents per gallon cheaper than it was on Memorial Day. The national average now stands at $3.55 per gallon. That’s the cheapest gasoline has been since late March. Tom Kloza, publisher and chief oil analyst at Oil Price Information Service, expects the national average to drop another 25 to 30 cents per gallon this year. “Prices will be lower until we get to hurricane season, then who knows?” Kloza said. Hurricanes that pass through the Gulf of Mexico can potentially disrupt oil production and force fuel prices higher. While gas is cheaper than it was on Memorial Day, it’s hardly inexpensive. It’s still 79 cents more than a year ago. And the only other year gas prices were higher for the July Fourth holiday was 2008, when gas was around $4.10 per gallon. The drop in gas is due to a decline in oil prices. Benchmark West Texas Intermediate has given up more than 16 percent since the beginning of May. The contract for August delivery lost 48 cents to settle at $94.94 per barrel Friday on the New York Mercantile Exchange. In London, Brent crude fell 71 cents to settle at $111.77 per barrel on the ICE Futures Exchange. Oil fell Friday after China reported that its manufacturing industry cooled off in June, slipping to its slowest pace in 28 months. Activity slowed down as credit tightened due to inflation-fighting measures and weaker oversea demand. The country is still expected to drive world oil demand for years, but a slowdown in manufacturing could temper the demand for fuels. In the U.S., however, factory activity picked up in June, in part because of lower fuel prices. The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing executives, said Friday that its index of manufacturing activity has increased for 23 straight months. In other Nymex trading for August contracts, heating oil dropped 2.18 cents to settle at $2.9245 per gallon and gasoline futures added less than a penny to settle at $2.9726 per gallon. Natural gas fell 6.3 cents to settle at $4.33 per 1,000 cubic feet.

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Wall Street Finishes Best Week In Two Years With A Bang

July 2, 2011

NEW YORK (Ryan Vlastelica) – Stocks started July with a bang on Friday with Wall Street scoring its best week in two years on strong manufacturing data that eased concerns about slowing growth. The data spurred the rally into a fifth straight day, even as continued light trading volume called into question the sustainability of the gains. Investors were growing more optimistic a day after a temporary resolution to Greece’s debt situation. The S&P 500 .SPX climbed further above resistance at its 50-day moving average at 1,317, establishing another floor in the market after the benchmark index moved above a number of technical resistance levels. “The magnitude of today’s move is undoubtedly due to the light volume,” said John Norris, managing director of wealth management with Oakworth Capital Bank in Birmingham, Alabama. “We’ll take positive movement, however we can get it, but the gains could prove somewhat illusory.” Volume was light, with 6.2 billion shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange, the American Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, well below the year’s daily average of 7.55 billion. The day’s advance was broad, with about five stocks rising for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange. On the Nasdaq, nearly three stocks rose for every one that fell. The pace of growth in manufacturing picked up for the first time in four months, with an index of national factory activity rising to 55.3 in June from 53.5 in May, Institute for Supply Management (ISM) data showed. The ISM survey built on surprisingly strong regional business data on Thursday, reversing a recent trend of weaker-than-expected data. Norris said that while the data was encouraging, next week’s ISM non-manufacturing survey would prove more important for investors. “This news is great, but manufacturing is such a small segment of the economy that this doesn’t mean too much for GDP,” he said. The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was up 168.43 points, or 1.36 percent, at 12,582.77. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index .SPX was up 19.03 points, or 1.44 percent, at 1,339.67. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC was up 42.51 points, or 1.53 percent, at 2,816.03. The S&P rose 5.6 percent for the week, while the Dow gained 5.4 percent and the Nasdaq added 6.2 percent. For all three indexes, it was their biggest weekly percentage gain since July 2009. Consumer discretionary stocks led the day’s advance but trading volume was well below average ahead of the long Fourth of July holiday weekend. The S&P consumer discretionary sector index.GSPD gained 2 percent, led by education firm Apollo Group (APOL.O), which was one of the S&P’s top percentage gainers, up 6.4 percent at $46.47. Late Thursday, Apollo said it believes all of its academic programs meet the standards set by the key education rule. Investors focused on the U.S. data, even as the latest overseas data was sobering. Outside the United States, the global manufacturing sector lost steam for a second month running, surveys showed. Ford Motor (F.N) rose 1.7 percent to $14.02 after the automaker said June sales shot up 14 percent. General Motors (GM.N) was up 0.7 percent at $30.58 after the company reported a weaker-than-expected gain in June U.S. sales. But the company sees that tepid growth as “temporary,” GM’s U.S. sales chief Don Johnson told reporters. Oshkosh Corp (OSK.N) surged 13.9 percent to $32.95 after Carl Icahn said he wanted to meet with the management of the specialty truck maker to discuss enhancing shareholder value. The billionaire investor owned about 9.5 percent of Oshkosh shares as of June 20. On the downside, Eastman Kodak Co (EK.N) lost 14.2 percent to $3.07 after a U.S. trade panel upheld portions of a ruling unfavorable to the company in a patent fight over digital camera technology in cellphones. (Reporting by Ryan Vlastelica; Editing by Jan Paschal) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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‘Megalomania, Insanity, And Evil’ Caused Housing Bubble: Berkshire Exec

July 1, 2011

Charles Munger, the always-quotable vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, wasn’t mincing words on Friday. “The bubble in America was caused by some combination of megalomania, insanity and evil in, I would say, investment banking, mortgage banking,” Munger said at a conference in Pasadena. In assigning responsibility for the housing bubble that precipitated the financial-sector collapse of 2008, and ushered in a period of prolonged economic contraction, Munger also took issue with the accounting industry, calling it ” contemptible ” for its role in the debacle. And he had particular scorn for Richard Fuld, the former chairman and CEO of Lehman Brothers. “I would guess that Dick Fuld has not a single ounce of contrition wherever he sits today,” Munger said. Munger was speaking at a “Morning with Charlie” event, held in lieu of the annual shareholder meeting of Wesco Financial, a Berkshire company that Munger had chaired. Berkshire Hathaway recently acquired Wesco’s remaining stock, removing the company from public trading. Munger chose to make a public appearance anyway, though he said in April that the event would only be “ for hard-core addicts .” Munger is known for his blunt, often combative pronouncements. In April, he opined to a group of shareholders that Greece was in trouble because its citizens “don’t want to pay taxes or do much work.” In 2009, he called cap and trade “ monstrously stupid .” Around the same time, he said of Wall Street pay, “A man does not deserve huge amounts of pay for creating tiny spreads on huge amounts of money. Any idiot can do it. And, as a matter of fact, many idiots do do it.” At Friday’s meeting, Munger endorsed Coca-Cola stock , calling it “one of my favorites” and an “easy choice” for investors. He praised Elizabeth Warren, President Obama’s appointee to oversee the Consumer Financial protection Bureau, according to Bloomberg . He had a qualified compliment for former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, whom he called “a smart man” but one who “totally overdosed on Ayn Rand at a young age.” And he gave a wry nod to his own fanbase. Noting that Friday’s meeting would be the last of its kind, Munger told the crowd , “You all need a new cult hero.”

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Greek Parliament Passes Key Austerity Bill, Paving Way For Bailout

June 29, 2011

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greece’s lawmakers have approved a key austerity bill, paving the way for the country to get its next vital bailout loans that will prevent it from defaulting next month. The unpopular euro28 billion ($40 billion) five-year package of spending cuts and tax hikes was backed by a majority of the 300-member parliament Wednesday, including Socialist deputy Alexandros Athanassiadis, who had previously vowed to vote against. The European Union and International Monetary Fund have demanded the austerity measures pass before they approve the release of a euro12 billion loan installment from last year’s rescue package. Without those funds, Greece would be facing a default by the middle of July. The vote took place amid clashes between police and protesters outside Parliament. THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below. ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greek lawmakers began voting Wednesday on new austerity measures needed to secure crucial bailout funds as protesters opposed to the bill clashed with riot police outside Parliament. The bill needs a simple majority to pass and Prime Minister George Papandreou appears to have enough votes even though one of his deputies said he would not be backing the package. A no vote would push Greece to the brink of default as soon as next month with potentially huge repercussions for Europe’s banking sector and global markets. As deputies debated inside Parliament, riot police fired volleys of tear gas to push back protesters, who were pelting police with bottles and trash and overturning barriers. Papandreou’s governing Socialists hold a five-seat majority in the 300-seat chamber. The bill needs a simple majority of 151 to pass. The package, which involves euro28 billion ($40 billion) worth of spending cuts and tax increases over five years, is a condition for the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund to release the next euro12 billion ($17 billion) installment of the country’s bailout fund. An additional bill that details how the austerity measures will be implemented must also be passed in a vote Thursday. Hours ahead of the vote, it looks like only one Socialist deputy will fail to heed Papandreou’s call to back the measures, suggesting that the bill will get at least the 151 votes needed for it to pass. Hopes that the bill will pass have seen European stock markets trade strongly Wednesday and the euro jump toward $1.45. The vote comes against a backdrop of violent demonstrations and on the second day of a nationwide general strike that has brought much of Greece to a standstill. Hundreds of flights and ferried have been canceled, leaving tourists stranded during the summer high season. Protesters were trying to encircle Parliament to prevent deputies from entering and voting for the bill and a massive security operation was under way, with a large section of central Athens sealed off to traffic. Scuffles broke out early in the morning as demonstrators attempted to block a major avenue leading to the center of the city, and to Parliament. Riot police responded with pepper spray, and 10 people were treated in a nearby hospital for minor injuries, hospital officials said. Demonstrators also hoisted ghoulish effigies of men they hold responsible for Greece’s misfortune — Papandreou, new Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos and Deputy Prime Minister Theodoros Pangalos — and shook them in the air on sticks. “Dogs, you look after your masters,” they chanted at police. The furious marchers also emptied bags of garbage from municipal containers and lobbed them at the security forces, who stood their ground impassively. A day earlier, extensive clashes left at least 46 people injured, most of them police, as rioters pelted police with chunks of marble and ripped up paving stones, and authorities responded with repeated volleys of tear gas and stun grenades. Greece has said it has funds only until mid-July, after which it will be unable to pay salaries and pensions, or service its debts, without the next bailout installment from the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund. The country is also in talks for additional help in the form of a second bailout, which the prime minister has said will be roughly the size of last year’s euro110 billion ($157 billion) package. “Voting these measures is required to maintain our credibility in the (bailout) process,” Venizelos said during the debate Tuesday night. “Voting for these measures, regardless of any reservations, is an important, brave act of political responsibility.” Derek Gatopoulos, Menelaos Hadjicostis and Elena Becatoros contributed.

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Paper or Plastic? Neither, At New Grocery Store Without Packaging

June 24, 2011

Austin, Texas is already home to Whole Foods, but that won’t stop a group of entrepreneurs from founding a new grocery store right in the natural food behemoth’s backyard. While the new store In.gredients will also specialize in local and organic ingredients, there’s one major difference between this venture and its hometown competion: In.gredients promises to be the country’s first ever “package-free, zero waste grocery store.”

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Treasury Punishes Three Banks For Poor Mortgage Servicing

June 10, 2011

WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department will temporarily withhold payments to the nation’s three largest mortgage companies for failing to comply with the Obama administration’s signature foreclosure-prevention effort, perhaps finally making good on a 19-month-old threat, officials announced Thursday. Bank of America, Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase, which collectively service about half of all home loans, abused homeowners and violated the rules of the Making Home Affordable (MHA) program, Treasury said. The initiative aims to lower monthly payments, reduce loan balances or enable distressed borrowers to sell their homes before they’re seized by awarding a series of incentive payments to banks, investors and homeowners when foreclosures are averted. Treasury is only withholding pay to the three banks. The three were found to need “substantial improvement,” the agency said in a statement. Cumulatively, they received $24 million in government incentive payments last month. Last quarter, the three financial behemoths collectively reported about $11.4 billion in net income. (Another firm came in for criticism, but it was spared the momentary financial penalty because its results were skewed due to an acquisition.) The remaining six of the 10 largest mortgage companies that were audited were found to need “moderate improvement.” None passed with flying colors. Bank of America, the worst performer, was found to have poor internal controls for identifying and contacting homeowners. Its error rates were also more than four times Treasury’s benchmark when calculating borrowers’ income. JPMorgan improperly calculated the incomes of nearly a third of borrowers when it was trying to determine their eligibility for the program — more than six times the limit. And Wells Fargo had poor processes for determining borrowers’ eligibility. Its income error rates were also more than five times Treasury’s max. Treasury first identified potential mass non-compliance in November 2009, warning the participating companies that those failing to meet their obligations to homeowners under their contracts with the federal government “will be subject to consequences which could include monetary penalties and sanctions.” The Obama administration spent the next year and a half defending itself against accusations levied by federal auditors, members of Congress and consumer groups that it was soft on the big banks’ abusive behavior due to its reluctance to follow through on that threat. But the punishment that has been so long in coming may prove to be short-lived: Treasury will return the money they’re withholding from the three banks once they make the needed improvements. “If they fix the problem, they will get the money,” said Tim Massad, Treasury’s acting assistant secretary for financial stability, during a conference call with reporters. He added that Treasury had conducted 400 compliance reviews. Massad declined to answer questions over why the administration waited 19 months to make good on its threat. News that Treasury would temporarily withhold payments to the three companies was first reported by the Washington Post . More homeowners have been kicked out of the program than are receiving assistance, Treasury data show. Nearly half of them either face foreclosure proceedings, are in foreclosure, or have lost their homes. The initiative will fail to keep President Barack Obama’s promise of helping 3 million to 4 million homeowners avoid foreclosure, auditors have concluded. Potentially “thousands” of troubled homeowners were denied opportunities to lower their monthly mortgage payments under the administration’s program due to servicer errors and inadequate oversight by Treasury, according to a June 2010 audit by the Government Accountability Office (GAO). “All this appears to be is that, after the servicers seemingly violated their agreements with Treasury with impunity, Treasury’s sole response is to give them a temporary time-out before paying them in full,” said Neil M. Barofsky, the former special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program. His critical reports on the bailout earned him plaudits in Congress for looking out for taxpayers, but enemies at Treasury, which administered the TARP. “It further reaffirms Treasury’s long-running toothless response to the servicers’ disregard of their contract with Treasury, and by extension, the American taxpayer,” added Barofsky, who now serves as a senior research scholar and fellow at New York University School of Law. In statements, Bank of America said it’s working to improve its results while JPMorgan said it disagrees with Treasury’s conclusions. Wells Fargo went a step further, and said it is “formally disputing” the government’s findings. Like other companies, Wells has been in constant communication with Treasury and its auditors. Massad said government watchdogs have long been inside the companies’ offices, keeping tabs on their activities. But Wells Fargo said Thursday’s report “contradicts previous written assessments shared with us by the Treasury.” The withholding of incentives “mean very little to this company,” said Teri A. Schrettenbrunner, a senior vice president at Wells Fargo’s mortgage unit in Des Moines, Iowa. “We’re really in this to get the housing market stabilized. It’s in the best interest of everyone.” Most experts in and out of government agree that the MHA program has been a dismal failure. Home prices today are lower than when the initiative was launched. Home repossessions continue at a near-record pace. And Americans’ equity in their homes is at a two-year low, Federal Reserve data show. A substantial portion of them blame the Obama administration — rather than the mortgage industry — for its failure to police the mortgage companies, structure a program that dealt with the biggest drivers of default like negative equity and commit enough money. Indeed, government auditors have long faulted Treasury for its lack of oversight. An October 2009 report by the Congressional Oversight Panel, another federal watchdog created to keep tabs on the bailout, recommended that the administration develop “strong, appropriate sanctions to ensure that all participants follow program guidelines.” In its last report before disbanding, the panel noted that Treasury had yet to take any action. “There’s no way to help those who have already been harmed by this program,” Barofsky said. “The damage has been done.” More than three of every four housing counselors surveyed by the GAO said borrowers had either a “negative” or “very negative” experience with the administration’s primary initiative, the Home Affordable Modification Program, better known as HAMP. Just 9 percent described borrowers’ overall experience as “positive” or “very positive,” according to the May report. The counselors’ most popular recommendation to improve HAMP was for Treasury to enforce sanctions on mortgage companies for noncompliance. “In many ways, Treasury’s shameful enablement of servicer misconduct has contributed to this program’s abysmal failure,” Barofsky said. ************************* Shahien Nasiripour is a senior business reporter for The Huffington Post. You can send him an email ; bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed ; follow him on Twitter ; friend him on Facebook ; become a fan ; and/or get email alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 917-267-2335.

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Report: Businesses Can’t Just Be ‘Pawns’ In Education Reform

June 8, 2011

America’s business leaders say they want to fix education, but they don’t know how to do so effectively. As a result, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce commissioned a report that instructs business leaders on the best practices for private-public partnerships in education, according to co-author Whitney Downs, an education policy research assistant at the American Enterprise Institute. In November, she and Rick Hess , AEI’s director of education policy, sought to find out what they should do. They concluded that businesses need to be more forceful and not merely “pawns” if they want to change schools for the better, according to the report, released Wednesday and titled “Partnership Is a Two-Way Street: What It Takes for Business to Help Drive School Reform.” “Partnership does not mean being a pawn of the school district,” Downs told The Huffington Post. “It means putting your foot down when you want to meet certain end goals.” The report comes as business leaders, Downs said, realize that a faulty education system will lead to a problematic workforce down the line. Underperforming schools yield underperforming employees. With flashy education grants made by magnates such as Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates , business people seek to involve themselves in education more and more, but become frustrated as they don’t necessarily see the results they desire. “The business community can no longer afford to allow American education to continue as is,” Cheryl Oldham, vice president of the Institute for a Competitive Workforce at the US Chamber of Commerce, said in a press release. “Business engagement in education reform needs to be more robust than just donating money and sponsoring scholarships.” Diane Ravitch, an education historian who formerly served as assistant U.S. secretary of education and has often criticized business involvement in education, lauded the possibilities of such partnerships. “Many states are slashing public education budgets, laying off thousands of teachers, closing school libraries, and eliminating the arts. Other nations don’t do this,” she told HuffPost after seeing the report. “Business could play a valuable role by speaking up on behalf of our nation’s public schools.” She cautioned an overreliance on numbers. “Having survived the economic debacle of 2008, business leaders should know enough not to be misled by data, not to be impressed by systems where more students graduate but need remediation in college and are likely to drop out,” she saod, adding that businesses should support “high-quality education” that encourages “creativity, imagination, and ingenuity.” There are no silver bullets for creating partnerships, Downs stressed. “Often times, businesses tend to give scholarships or sprinkle extra dollars or supplies,” she said. “Those serious about systemically changing the state of American education need to face up to the fact that those methods aren’t going to get the job done. But we’re not trying to say that there’s a specific strategy for every problem you encounter.” A universal tip, she added, is that results cannot be achieved without taking the time to build relationships and obtain knowledge about local schools. The report examines successful partnerships in Austin, Massachusetts and Nashville and relies largely on interviews with the stakeholders in those areas. As a “critical customer,” the report says, Austin’s Chamber of Commerce enhanced schools, giving them more data tools. The report points to an increased number of students from the area enrolling in college as a result. In Nashville, 117 school-business partnerships and six partnership councils, the report asserts, resulted in an increased graduation rate, a decreasing suspension rate, and better standing under No Child Left Behind. The Massachusetts Business Alliance for Education helped companies craft policy and adapt the national Common Core curriculum, which Downs said resulted in the state’s winning federal Race to the Top dollars. As states struggle to measure teacher effectiveness, Downs added, business models can be useful to education. “Just by bringing a management mindset, that they’ll measure outputs and not just inputs,” she said, “that’s something that our education system hasn’t done very well.”

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Commercial real estate market makes a comeback

June 7, 2011

But continued debt woes and tight corporate spending could temper the recovery, and office space demand is likely to lag.

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Banks in race to shed commercial property debt | Stock News

June 5, 2011

Banks in race to shed commercial property debt . Posted on May 24, 2011 by. Lenders are fighting to slash their exposure to £224bn in commercial property loans, with half of that set to mature by 2013, a report from De Monfort University …

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The Agriculture Industry’s Dirty Little Secret

June 4, 2011

WASHINGTON — The agriculture industry fears a disaster is on the horizon if the one bit of new immigration policy that Congress seems to agree on becomes law. A plan to require all American businesses to run their employees through E-Verify, a program that confirms each is legally entitled to work in the U.S., could wreak havoc on an industry where 80 percent of the field workers are illegal immigrants. So could the increased paperwork audits already under way by the Obama administration. “We are headed toward a train wreck,” said Rep. Zoe Lofgren, a California Democrat whose district includes agriculture-rich areas. “The stepped up (workplace) enforcement has brought this to a head.” Lofgren said farmers are worried that their work force is about to disappear. They say they want to hire legal workers and U.S. citizens, but that it’s nearly impossible, given the relatively low wages and back-breaking work. Wages can range from minimum wage to more than $20 an hour. But workers often are paid by the piece; the faster they work, they more they make. A steady income lasts only as long as the planting and harvesting seasons, which can be measured in weeks. “Few citizens express interest, in large part because this is hard, tough work,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsak said this past week. “Our broken immigration system offers little hope for producers to do the right thing.” Arturo S. Rodriguez, president of United Farm Workers, said migrant farm workers are exposed to blistering heat with little or no shade and few water breaks. It’s skilled work, he said, requiring produce pickers to be exact and quick. While the best mushroom pickers can earn about $35,000 to $40,000 a year for piece work, there’s little chance for a good living and American workers don’t seem interested in farm jobs. “It is extremely difficult, hard, dangerous work,” Rodriguez said. Last year Rodriguez’s group started the “Take Our Jobs” campaign to entice American workers to take the fields. He said of about 86,000 inquiries the group got about the offer, only 11 workers took jobs. “That really was thought up by farm workers trying to figure out what is it we needed to do to show that we are not trying to take away anyone’s job,” Rodriguez said. Vilsak and the American Farm Bureau Federation president, Bob Stallman, said in a recent conference call with reporters that the best and likely only hope to stave off an economic catastrophe for American farmers and consumers is comprehensive overhaul of immigration policy. Vilsak said the industry is worth about $5 billion to $9 billion a year. “We need to address the agriculture labor supply,” Stallman said. “This situation will affect the future of America’s farmers and ranchers.” Manuel Cunha, president of Nisei Farmers League, a group representing growers in central California, said farmers don’t have the wherewithal to verify a worker’s status when their labor force is often hired on the spot and in a hurry to pick ripe crops. Forcing them to verify a worker’s legal status, he said, would prove disastrous. “If we were to use E-Verify now, we’d shut down, either that or farmers would go to prison,” said Cunha, a Fresno-based citrus farmer. “We’ve admitted many workers are not legal and if you have to get rid of everybody, where do I go to get my labor? Nowhere. We have to have a work force that we can put in the system.” Shawn Coburn, a politically active farmer who grows thousands of acres of almonds on the west side Fresno County, said he favors tighter borders, a guest worker program and a path to citizenship for those already in the U.S., or at the very least their children. But, like Cunha, he believes a mandatory E-Verify plan would be nothing but trouble for the industry. “I don’t think it’s going to happen, but if it does it would throw the California economy for a loop,” Coburn said. Without a broad overhaul in the works, industry officials have focused on improving the H-2A temporary agricultural workers visa program that’s aimed at allowing season workers to come and work on U.S. farms. The program, however, is costly, time consuming and inefficient, according to Cathleen Enright, vice president of federal government affairs for the Western Growers Association. “It has never been a great program or easy to work with,” Enright said. “It’s an unbelievably crushing program.” There isn’t enough capacity in the system to process, interview and approve visa applications for the nearly 1 million seasonal workers who take to the fields every season. Farmers are required to pay for a worker’s transportation from their home country to the fields, provide housing and other benefits. Even minor violations of the numerous rules and regulations that govern the H-2A program can lead to hefty fines, Enright said. “It’s too expensive, it’s too litigious, it’s too bureaucratic,” said Lee Wicker, deputy director of the North Carolina Growers Association. “We need a program that farmers can use and have confidence in.” Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., said farmers in his area want to do the right thing and hire legal workers but they are frustrated with the stifling bureaucracy that comes with the visa program. “It’s a labyrinthine visa process, with the slow walking of applications,” Gowdy said. “You could not by accident come up with a better plan to ruin the small family farm.” Farmers, he said, “are just at their wits’ end.” Using the program to get workers can put farmers at a disadvantage if their competitors decide to take their chances and hire illegal workers, Wicker said. Lawmakers agree the visa program is problematic, but there’s a wide divide on how to make it workable. In 2009, Rep. Howard Berman, D-Calif., and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., introduced legislation that would have given temporary resident status to immigrant farm workers and have created a path to legal residency for those workers after five years. Neither bill, known as the AgJOBS Act, made it out committee. The idea is part of the discussion involving changes to the seasonal workers visa program, but Republicans have pledged to block it because it includes a path to legal status for immigrant workers. Rep. Dan Lungren, a California Republican from an agriculture industry-heavy district near Sacramento, has said he sees that same “train wreck” Lofgren described, but that the AgJOBS bill isn’t the answer. “We’re going to have a crisis in agriculture,” Lungren said during a hearing this year on the visa program by the House Judiciary subcommittee on immigration policy and enforcement. “And while it sounds great to say an agreement (on AgJOBS) is going to take care of it, it’s not going to pass.” About the only hope for success for any immigration-related legislation, Lungren and others say, is a bill that would make it mandatory for American employers to use the government’s E-Verify program to ensure their workers are legal. GOP Rep. Lamar Smith of Texas, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, has pledged to introduce such legislation. Such a proposal appeared to get a push this past week when the Supreme Court ruled 5-3 in favor of an Arizona law that allows the state to penalize businesses for hiring illegal immigrant workers. Agriculture officials say there needs to be some exception for farm workers. “It needs to take into account the unique aspects of agriculture,” Vilsak said. ___ Associated Press writers Gosia Wozniacka and Tracie Cone in Fresno, Calif., contributed to this report. ___ Array ___ Online: Array Array Array Array

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Video: Alpert Sees Global Economic Forces Behind U.S. Jobs Data

June 3, 2011

June 3 (Bloomberg) — Dan Alpert, managing partner at Westwood Capital Management, David Semmens, U.S. economist at Standard Chartered Bank, and Michael Purves, chief market strategist and head of derivatives research at BGC Financial LP, talk about today’s May U.S. jobs report and the outlook for the labor market. They speak with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” Duke Lane, president of Lane Packing Co., and Fort Worth, Texas, Mayor Mike Moncrief also speak. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Agency Blocks Restart Of Keystone Oil Pipeline

June 3, 2011

WASHINGTON — The U.S. pipeline safety agency Friday blocked a Canadian company from restarting its Keystone oil pipeline until U.S. officials are satisfied the company has made required repairs and completed safety tests. The order by the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration cites two leaks last month on the 1,300-mile pipeline, which carries oil from Canada through North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska. One arm then travels through Missouri to Illinois, while another goes through Kansas to Oklahoma. A spokeswoman for the pipeline agency said Friday that federal inspectors will closely review repair work done by the pipeline’s owner, Calgary-based TransCanada. The company reported a May 7 leak of about 400 barrels in North Dakota, and a leak of about 10 barrels last Sunday in Kansas. TransCanada is seeking to build a second pipeline from western Canada to the Texas Gulf Coast – a project that has drawn fierce opposition from environmental groups who call the pipeline an ecological disaster waiting to happen. The proposed pipeline, like the existing pipeline, would carry crude oil extracted from tar sands in Alberta, Canada, to refineries in the U.S. Critics say the tar sands produce “dirty oil” that requires huge amounts of energy to extract, while supporters say the two pipelines would create thousands of jobs and help cut $4-a-gallon prices at the pump. Anthony Swift of the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group, said the federal order blocking the Keystone line “should be a clarion call” for the U.S. State Department to seriously consider safety concerns posed by the proposed pipeline from Canada through Montana to Texas. State Department approval is needed because the project crosses the U.S. border. Pipeline regulators need time to sort out what has gone horribly wrong with the current Keystone project before moving forward with the new one, dubbed Keystone XL, Swift said. “The history of Keystone has shown that these pipelines are dangerous. State shouldn’t fast track the review of Keystone XL until we know how they can be built and operated safely,” he said. A spokesman for TransCanada could not immediately be reached for comment. ___ Array

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Controversial Crude Pipeline Springs Second Leak

May 31, 2011

(The Canadian Press) — TransCanada Corp. is grappling with another pump station leak that has shut down its Keystone pipeline, as it seeks to convince U.S. authorities that a controversial expansion will be environmentally safe. The Calgary-based company (TSX:TRP) said Tuesday it has suspended crude oil shipments along Keystone while it completes repairs and cleans up oil that spilled at a Kansas pumping station. The latest spill comes just 2 1/2 weeks after the major energy shipper experienced a similar problem at a pumping station in North Dakota. The failure of a three-quarter inch fitting in early May was responsible for a leak of 500 barrels of crude at that pumping station. The more recent leak spilled only a about 10 barrels of oil, although TransCanada had originally said Tuesday that as much as 40 barrels were released onto the pump station’s property. “Unfortunately, on this weekend (in Kansas), it was a half-inch fitting — a different type of fitting — that broke, resulting in some crude oil being released onto our property,” said TransCanada spokesman Terry Cunha. Keystone normally carries between 400,000 and 450,000 barrels per day of Alberta crude to refineries in Illinois and a major storage hub in Oklahoma. It has capacity to carry 591,000 barrels per day. “We don’t expect (the disruption) to have any impact on our ability to deliver for our customers,” Cunha said. News of the Keystone closure was one of the reasons the price of benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude for July delivery gained US$1.82 to US$102.41 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange Tuesday afternoon. The energy industry has been under increased scrutiny recently, with a series of high-profile spills grabbing headlines — from the huge BP offshore well blowout in the Gulf of Mexico more than a year ago, to the Enbridge Inc. (TSX:ENB) pipeline rupture in Michigan last summer, to a major spill on the Rainbow pipeline in northern Alberta a month ago. Environmentalists and landowners in several U.S. states oppose TransCanada’s US$7-billion plan for Keystone XL, which will double the system’s capacity and extend its reach further south to refineries in Texas. The U.S. State Department is expected to decide on Keystone XL later this year. The chief executive officer of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce is set to speak to the Calgary Petroleum Club later Tuesday on the need for a Canadian energy strategy. “Where we really need a lot of action right now is in the United States, particularly with Keystone XL,” Perrin Beatty said in an interview ahead of the speech. He said this would potentially allow for Canadian oil to displace about 40 per cent of crude imported from the Middle East into the U.S. “And it’s not only a matter of economic security for the United States, but a matter of national security as well, because today it is dependent on oil from regions of the world which are unstable and where the source of supply is far from assured.” All major construction projects are going to encounter some degree of NIMBY — Not in My Back Yard –attitudes from the public, but pipelines are by far the safest way to transport crude, Beatty said. “In terms of the environmental impacts, they’re far easier to control and to mitigate by pipeline than by moving it in any other way, and what the Canadian pipeline companies have demonstrated is that where there has been a problem, they’ve acted very quickly to try to clean it up.”

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Google, Tres Amigas Aim To Fix America’s Electrical Grid With Novel Technologies

May 27, 2011

Anaheim, Calif. — During the American wind industry’s annual convention this week, two of the boldest proposals for the future of renewable industry didn’t involve bigger or better turbines. They’re instead focusing on the comparatively unsexy issue of America’s creaking electricity grid. The Internet giant Google and an upstart New Mexico-based company called Tres Amigas want to transform the way power gets from wind farms and solar power arrays to your house. Both plans rely heavily on unproven technologies: Google and other investors plan to build a 350-mile long undersea cable off the Atlantic coast , while Tres Amigas wants to create a 22-square mile superconductor “Superstation” to synchronize the nation’s three major electrical grids. As the U.S. becomes more and more energy-hungry, the country needs more generating capacity. And with most Americans resistant to new projects anywhere near cities and suburbs, new plants need to be placed far away from population centers to win approval. Google’s backbone could open up hundreds of miles of ocean territory for offshore wind farms, and the Tres Amigas project would open up wind and solar projects in remote parts of New Mexico and Texas. Both of these projects are taking place within a larger push to improve the American antiquated electrical grid, said Peter Fox-Penner, a principal at The Brattle Group, a consulting firm that worked on the Google-supported project’s application to federal regulators. “All segments of the industry are building more transmission now,” Fox-Penner told HuffPost. “Primarily to integrate renewable into the grid, abut also for reliability and other reasons.” Google’s support for the Atlantic Wind Connection — a 37.5 percent stake — could be a good public relations move for a company that relies on energy-sucking data centers to run its core business. According to an estimate in Harper’s , just one data center “can be expected to demand about 103 megawatts of electricity — enough to power 82,000 homes, or a city the size of Tacoma, Washington.” Environmental organization Greenpeace has dinged the company for not relying enough on renewables (while acknowledging that it performed far better than some tech companies, like Apple). So far Google has invested a total of $400 million in clean energy projects. Google says it is pursuing the projects both because they make good business sense and because they make the company more environmentally responsible. The Atlantic Wind Connection project is still at an early stage, and no one knows if Google and its co-investors can pull it off. One of the project’s lead developers has said the scheme is “about as risky as you can get.” The engineering challenges of laying all the cables and connecting them to both wind farms and the grid on land are daunting — and Google isn’t even proposing to build any wind farms itself. Offshore wind is still a young segment of the industry, and no project at this scale has yet been completed: Google’s plan would create development opportunities for up to 6,000 megawatts of power when all of Europe, the world leader in offshore wind, only has about half that many megawatts online. The project got good news last week when the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved a 12.59 percent profit rate, but other federal and state regulators still need to weigh in. And while Google says the project, which is 22 miles off the coast, is far enough off-shore to ensure that any offshore wind farms that sprout up along the electricity backbone aren’t a visual nuisance, the long saga of the Cape Wind project shows just how tenacious seashore dwellers can be about their ocean views. Watch Google’s Rick Needham, the company’s green business operations director, explain the Atlantic Wind Connection and Google’s green energy plans. Building a wind farm on land is less technically challenging than building one far offshore, but it still has to connect into the grid somehow. America’s grid is so balkanized that when the wind is blowing hard in Texas and electricity is cheap there, California utilities can’t buy the cheap power and pass the savings along to customers. While grid difficulties are not unique to renewable energy, the sector has the most to gain from improvements because wind and solar depend on the weather and thus need to be able to send their extra energy across large distances as flexibly as possible to balance out supply fluctuations, experts say. Tres Amigas is trying to connect the western, eastern and Texas power grids — an idea the federal government proposed but failed to execute in the 1950s — with a $1 billion plus project that could ultimately send 30 gigawatts zooming across the country. Because the three grids don’t quite operate on the same frequency, Tres Amigas would use novel technology to synchronize the electricity: superconducting high-voltage direct current cables and new computer programs. Power would first need to be converted from AC to DC, then whipped around the superstation on the superconducting cables and finally be converted back to AC to be shipped off to another grid. The company that makes the high-tech cables, American Superconductor, is an important investor in the project, but it has recently weathered fire for management problems . The market for this plan, though, remains untested. Texas in particular seems reluctant to open up its grid — and its wind farms — over fears of utility bill increases. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, moreover, cautioned Tres Amigas last March over the lack of detail in its applications. The man behind Tres Amigas, however, is optimistic — CEO Phil Harris plans to break ground this year on the first part of the project, which will transmit a few gigawatts between the three grids. The final superstation plans to be able to transfer around 30 gigawatts. See Tres Amigas founder and CEO Phil Harris talk about the project. Even if these splashy projects never get off the ground, the push towards renewable — now mandated by many state laws — means the U.S. will likely need many more transmission lines in the future. “There’s the highest activity probably in the history of the country right now,” said Fox-Penner.

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Sen. Ron Wyden: Fact-Checking the Oil Companies’ Defense of Taxpayer Subsidies

May 19, 2011

Just one week ago the American people heard executives from the top five oil companies stand-up and explain why — despite record profits — they need the federal government to give them a break on their taxes. We’re talking about the billions of dollars in tax incentives and assistance that oil companies get for drilling in the United States. These incentives were put in place long ago when the oil industry was just getting started. Today, these major oil companies are among the largest corporations in the entire world. That hasn’t been the case for awhile. In fact, in 2005, representatives of the country’s major oil companies told me that they no longer needed tax incentives to keep drilling in the U.S. because oil was selling for $55 a barrel and that price gave them more than enough financial incentive to keep drilling. Well, if the oil companies thought that $55 a barrel oil was enough to keep them drilling in 2005, it would seem safe to assume that with oil hovering around $100 a barrel today, they would no longer be asking for their tax incentives to keep drilling. That wasn’t the case at last week’s hearing. So what’s changed since 2005? Why are some of the largest and most profitable companies in the world still telling Congress that they still need government assistance? Let’s break it down. Claim #1: Oil is getting harder and harder to find. The truth about oil supplies: If anything, U.S. oil supplies and prices are less tied to the global market now, and new oil supplies are easier to find, than they were in 2005. The location and technology for getting oil and gas, especially from on-shore shale formations, have not only dramatically increased U.S. oil and gas reserves, but the technology is now so well established that U.S. oil and gas production is rising rapidly as a result. According to a recent analysis by the U.S. Energy Information Administration, oil production from the Barnett shale formation in Texas — literally in the backyards of the headquarters of these same companies — has tripled since 2005. In fact, total U.S. oil production has increased over 10% since hitting its low point in 2008 and EIA projects that because of increased production in oil shale and in the Gulf of Mexico and other sources that it will continue to grow. On top of that, the CEO of ExxonMobil said on CNBC in March 2011, “I am not aware of anyone who is having difficulty securing supplies of oil…there is no shortage of supply in the market.” Claim #2: Oil companies face global competition. The truth about global competition: U.S. oil prices are also less tied to global markets and competition now than they were in 2005, because of increased U.S. production and increased Canadian tar sands production flooding into the U.S. market. This should be of no surprise to the five major oil companies who testified last week, because every single one of them has made major investments in Canadian tar sands projects. Claim #3: The loss of tax breaks will drive up the price at the pump. The truth about the price at the pump: Recalling that hearing in 2005, I also asked the CEOs about ending these tax breaks on their companies and several of them said it wouldn’t affect them or would only minimally affect them. ExxonMobil CEO Lee Raymond said “As for my company, it doesn’t make any difference.” Chevron CEO James O’Reilly said ending these tax breaks would have “minimal impact on our company.” And, BP’s US CEO Ross Pillari agreed, saying “it’s a minimal impact on us.” So if taking away the tax breaks won’t have much of an impact on the oil companies, why would it have much of an impact on price? The American people should not be held hostage to the false claims that without the billions in taxpayer subsidies they currently receive, these companies will produce less oil and that will raise the price at the pump. It’s time for the oil companies to own up to what they said in 2005: they did not need taxpayer subsidies then, and they do not need subsidies now.

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Art Brodsky: Air of Inevitability Escaping From AT&T’s Takeover of T-Mobile

May 17, 2011

There was a notable hissing sound emanating from Capitol Hill at the end of last week. It was the air being let out of AT&T’s trial balloon, “The Inevitable.” Thanks to some aggressive questioning from the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee, particularly Chairman Herb Kohl (D-WI) and Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Al Franken ( both D-MN), it quickly became clear that there are lots of problems to the $39 billion takeover of T-Mobile that AT&T either hadn’t counted on, didn’t want to deal with or thought would simply be overlooked. AT&T has said repeatedly it expects the deal to be approved, and hasn’t yet mentioned any conditions. Granted, it is early in the process, but telling everyone what is expected is part of creating that air of inevitability to intimidate legislators and agency staff that will have to make the call. Adding to the environment, financial and industry analysts have said since the deal was announced on March 20 that it would be approved, albeit with some conditions. That meme, based on the performance of the Antitrust Division in big, high-profile media/telecom cases, has infiltrated much of the thinking and writing about the deal. As the hearing demonstrated, and as some reporters are starting to pick up, AT&T’s deal is not a foregone conclusion, and, in fact, the company still has a lot of explaining to do in order to justify wiping out the fourth-largest national wireless carrier. It took several minutes of questioning of AT&T Chairman Randall Stephenson for Kohl to get the simple admission that yes, T-Mobile is a competitor for AT&T. “You are competitors, right?” Kohl asked. Stephenson said T-Mobile is “part of the eco-system” of the wireless industry. Kohl, disbelieving the reply, said it was “incontrovertible” that the companies were competitors. Is T-Mobile a competitor for AT&T? T-Mobile USA President Phillipp Humm did a similar dance, all but ignoring the TV commercial Public Knowledge President Gigi Sohn played for the subcommittee at the start of the hearing, which depicted AT&T’s network as the weight around its customers, slowing them down relative to T-Mobile’s 4G network. It was hard not to have some sympathy for Humm, who had to argue his company was abandoning the U.S. and was so constrained it couldn’t possibly compete any more. Admitting abject failure for so vital and perky a company as T-Mobile in such a public forum had to be excruciating. But that’s what the home office demanded, so Humm did it. The hearing was notable not only for the tough questions tossed at Stephenson and Humm, but for the lack of tough questions posed by those who would normally be forthright in defense of the merger. While it’s true, as some commentators said, that no senator came right out and said the merger should be blocked, the questioning did reveal a lot. The onslaught of hostile questions on pricing, consumer rights accompanied by the observations of the creation of a wireless duopoly surely showed that the senators, primarily on the Democratic side, have enough serious doubts about the deal that approval by the Justice Dept. should not be a foregone conclusion. Even more interesting was the commentary from the Republicans, including from Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), AT&T’s home-state senator on the committee. (AT&T has its headquarters in Dallas.) Cornyn issued no clarion calls for the merger to be approved forthwith. He gave no denunciations of government regulators trying to quash the free market and the fate of his great constituent company. He instead settled for some platitudes on broadband access, criticizing the broadband part of the stimulus program and feeding Stephenson some softball questions on innovation and the role of the private sector. Even then, Stephenson’s claim that there are 600 devices in the wireless market (you should pardon the expression) rang hollow, considering it kept a five-year exclusive deal on the iPhone, which is worth much more than, at least 595 of those other devices. AT&T is pumping millions of dollars into getting this acquisition through, and clearly didn’t get its money’s worth from the Senate panel. If the Senators send a letter to the Justice Department that in any way would give political cover to the Antitrust Division blocking the merger, then the deal could be in real trouble. The meme is starting to change , as reporters are starting to realize that AT&T’s conquest may be a reach too far. It may have better luck in the House, where the rhetoric can be less constrained than in the Senate. The House Judiciary Committee’s Internet Subcommittee has a hearing tentatively scheduled for May 26. The full Committee Chairman Lamar Smith is from Texas, although he is from the San Antonio area that AT&T scorned, moving its HQ from there to relocate up north. There is no shortage of highly charged members on the subcommittee, who could more than make up for the tepid response AT&T got in the Senate. The only conditions which could stifle the House hearing are the obvious facts of this case, which as Sohn, Sprint CEO Dan Hesse, and Cellular South CEO Victor “Hu” Meena testified, are anticompetitive and anti-consumer on any number of levels.

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NAFTA Cost U.S. 700k Jobs, Report Says

May 12, 2011

When the North American Free Trade Agreement was first signed in 1994, proponents said it would eventually create jobs for the U.S. economy. 17 years later, a new report estimates, the American worker only has hundreds of thousands of job losses to show for it. According to a report by Economic Policy Institute economist Robert Scott, entitled “Heading South: U.S.-Mexico trade and job displacement after NAFTA,” an estimated 682,900 U.S. jobs have been “lost or displaced” because of the agreement and the resulting trade deficit. The historic agreement, signed just three years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, tore down trade barriers between the U.S., Canada and Mexico, making trade and investment easier for businesses without allowing for the cross-border movement of labor. Despite the agreement being considered a boon for Mexico, the country’s economy grew only 1.6 percent per capita on average between 1992 and 2007, The New York Times reported in 2009. The EPI’s calculation of 682,900 jobs lost to NAFTA takes into account jobs created as a result, too. Last year, for example, U.S. exports to Mexico supported 791,900 jobs. It’s just that those jobs created pale in comparison to the 1.47 million U.S. jobs that would be necessary without the imports resulting from NAFTA, the report found. Still, the number of jobs lost to NAFTA looks minimal when placed against the havoc freaked by the financial crisis. Only in 2008, at the height of the crisis, the U.S. economy hemorrhaged 2.6 million jobs, according to CNNMoney . The U.S. is currently considering a similar trade agreement with South Korea, called U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement (KORUS FTA). KORUS, like NAFTA, could similarly displace American jobs, EPI warns. Perhaps the most drastic switch post-NAFTA has been in the two country’s trade deficit. In 1993, before the signing of NAFTA, the U.S. held a $1.6 billion trade surplus over their neighbor to the south, which supported 29,400 jobs. By 1997, the tides had turned, and Mexico laid claim to a much larger surplus of $16.6 billion. As of 2010, it’s not even close. Mexico’s trade surplus now hovers around $97.2 billion. Jobs continue to be lost to NAFTA today. In the years 2007-2010, the U.S. economy has lost 116,400 as a result of the trade deficit created by NAFTA. And last year, the growth of Mexican auto exports to the United States alone created more Mexican jobs — 30,400 — than the entire U.S. auto industry. It’s the U.S. manufacturing sector that has suffered most mightily from NAFTA, alone accounting for 60.8 percent — 415,000 total — of the jobs lost to the agreement. Specifically, those making computer of electronic parts have accounted for 22 percent of all job losses, and motor vehicle and parts workers accounted for 15 percent of job losses. Job losses haven’t been limited to certain geographic regions, either, as all fifty states have lost jobs as a result. And while the states with the largest total number of job losses, California and Texas, do hug the southern border, it’s actually manufacturing-heavy states to the north, such as Michigan, Indiana and Kentucky, that have lost the largest share of jobs to Mexico. The below chart tracks jobs displaced as share of total state employment:

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Mighty Mississippi Moves Oil Prices

May 12, 2011

Fears that flooding along the lower Mississippi would disrupt gasoline production at the region’s refineries were eased Wednesday, but highlighted the key role the river plays in shaping the nation’s energy and commodity prices. Gasoline futures closed at just over $97 last friday, a low unseen since February, and, as a result, analysts predicted that pump prices would fall in June. Then, cable news networks filled the airwaves with images of the swollen Mississippi River and frightened people who live and work nearby. Some of the river’s major tributaries had begun flowing backwards. The Army Corps of Engineers were imploding dams and talking about opening certain spillways to distribute the water volume. Those decisions produced some flooding but also threatened to swamp refineries in the lower Mississippi River region. Crude oil costs and gasoline futures contracts are closely watched in part because both inform the price of gas at the pump. When consumers have to pay more for gas, they have less to spend on other goods and services, a scenario that could dampen the economic recovery. But what refiners have to pay for the crude oil they transform into gasoline and consumers pay at the pump is not just a function of what traders buy and sell. It is also a function of how much oil moves down the Mississippi. “I think that there were a lot of us who thought you had this perfect storm of sorts to bring prices down until we realized the magnitude of what might happen along the Mississippi,” said Phil Flynn, a PFGBest Research senior market analyst based in Chicago. A cluster of 11 lower Mississippi River region refineries have the combined capacity to process about 13 percent of the nation’s petroleum products, said Flynn. The process begins when barges and tankers stop and unload crude oil at river facilities known as docking terminals. When a river swells, it can become impossible for a barge to dock at a terminal. Tanker ships require extra tugboat assistance to remain at terminal. And, a swollen river can render a ship unable to pass beneath bridges to reach certain terminals. On Wednesday the amount of water flowing in the Ohio River, the Mississippi’s largest tributary, forced the U.S. Coast Guard to close 20 percent of its terminals, according to a Reuters report. At least one ship was also unable to clear the Interstate-10 bridge near Baton Rouge, La., because of the Mississippi’s volume. If those sorts of problems continue or spread, the volume of crude oil available to refineries will shrink and refineries will, in turn, slow down gasoline production, Flynn said. This could tighten the gasoline supply and contribute to rising prices at the pump. Wednesday’s events did mark a new twist in May’s already dramatic crude oil and gasoline futures price fluctuations. “This month has been, if you like, bipolar,” said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service. The service tracks petroleum prices and is based in Maryland. “To call this May simply volatile is a little like calling Trump a little bit pompous or the Atlantic a little bit wet…But I do not believe that this is the apocalypse.” Crude oil prices rose in January amid political protests in Middle East. In February and March, the spread of unrest in additional oil-producing nations and a joint U.S. Nato bombing operation in Libya pushed crude oil prices even higher. But, in the last two weeks, the value of the U.S. dollar rose, an event that typically pushes crude oil prices down. Then, a combination of power outages and tornado damage in Texas and Alabama dampened refinery production. That is the type of event that might typically push gasoline futures prices up. Instead, futures prices fell Friday in what’s generally been explained as a bubble burst. This week’s logistical problems on the Mississippi are happening at a time of year when refining activity is already curtailed for scheduled maintenance and a production switch from winter to summertime gasoline, said Flynn. But so far this year, high gas prices at the pump have kept demand for gasoline low. “That’s the beauty of the market at work,” said Flynn. In fact, a weekly U.S. Energy Information Agency report released late Wednesday morning indicated that demand for gas slipped because drivers are facing an average pump bill of almost $4 per gallon. The report also indicated that last week U.S. refineries processed 14.1 million barrels of oil. That pushed gasoline inventories about 2.6 million barrels higher than had been expected. And, information emerged Wednesday that while flooding might force the Army Corps of Engineers to open spillways such as the Morganza in Louisiana, only one small refinery would be certain to close under those circumstances, said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates, a Houston-based consulting firm. The refinery contributes less than half a percent to in nation’s total refining capacity, Lipow said. “Even if there are some disruptions, other disruptions, we’re talking about oil that might have been processed at a refinery in Baton Rouge, having to go to Houston or Beaumont(,Texas) or Corpus Christi (,Texas),” Lipow said. Commodities markets responded. On Wednesday, Oil prices began at nearly $104 a barrel and ended the day at $98.57. While crude oil prices were dropping, so were gasoline futures contracts. Gasoline futures — agreements with large volume gasoline buyers and investors that deeply influence the price of gas at the pump –- fell from about $3.38 cents a gallon to about $3.12 around noon. The 26-cent drop triggered a five-minute halt on gasoline futures trading on the New York Mercantile exchange, according to the Wall Street Journal. By the day’s end, gasoline futures rebounded to $3.37. “It’s sometimes difficult to tell what’s going to happen,” said Lipow. “As more information gets out there … people are realizing that we are not going to have the worst case scenario — if the levees hold.” Market activity on Wednesday even sparked a new round of complaints about financial speculation — and lawmakers’ hesitancy to control the activity — in Washington, D.C. “What we have now on Wall Street is a crude oil casino, and it has been opened and is now being protected by the Republicans,” said Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) at a press conference. In late April, Attorney General Eric Holder announced that he had created the Oil and Gas Price Fraud Working Group. The task force will explore the possibility of illegal activity in the energy market. People who think that oil prices have been particularly volatile should think back a few years, Lipow said. In July 2008, the price crude oil reached near $145 per barrel. By January 2009, crude oil was selling for about $40 per barrel.

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Jeffrey Rubin: A Recession Is Coming But Not Yet

May 11, 2011

There will be many dress rehearsals in commodity markets before the next global recession. An example is last week’s dramatic and broad-based sell off that took oil prices for over a $10/barrel tumble. And there is no doubt that despite the scarcity of the resource, the price of oil will crash the next time the global economy sewers. But is that time already upon us? If the monetary authorities in China and India continue to hike interest rates at the pace they have set recently, the next global recession may not be that far off. After all, these economies are today’s global economic growth engines. But when push comes to shove, the political masters of those central banks may soon temper their enthusiasm so they can battle inflation. If the money-printing U.S. Federal Reserve Board doesn’t care about inflation why should the People’s Bank of China ? Compare income per capita between the U.S. and China and it is not too difficult to figure out which one should be more desperate for economic growth and, as a result, more willing to seek trade-offs against inflation. In the meantime, there are several tactical paths China can take that at least give the appearance of holding inflation in check. Reducing the weighting of food and energy prices in China’s consumer price index would be one way. As long as the country’s headline inflation rate stays below 5 percent, markets won’t get too upset about what it is really measuring. Having the People’s Bank of China step away from the U.S. treasury auction could be another way of keeping reported inflation at bay. A soaring Yuan, and hence tumbling import prices would provide a partial offset to building domestic price pressures, such as what led to the recent truckers strike in Shanghai. Of course, there could be other reasons for commodity market sells-offs in the future. But let us not lose sight of the forest for the trees. No matter how much oil prices and other key commodities such as copper and grain fall, look at the parameters in which they now move. Even land-locked oil prices like West Texas Intermediate barely dipped below $100 per barrel. And Brent, the world oil price never made it below the triple digit price threshold. How the goals posts have moved. Five years ago, those prices would have been all time highs. Last week, they generated headlines of plunging oil prices. What hasn’t changed however is the intrinsic relationship between oil and economic growth. Ratchet down expectations for economic growth and quite naturally you lower expectations for future oil prices. But that’s only because without burning more oil, there is no economic growth.

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Government May Force Big Banks To Reduce Loan Balances For Distressed Homeowners

May 11, 2011

The nation’s five largest mortgage firms may be forced to reduce loan balances for distressed homeowners as part of an agreement with state attorneys general and the Obama administration to settle claims of faulty mortgage practices, a top state official involved in the negotiations said Tuesday. The proposal is part of a set of remedies banks would have to agree to in order to settle the state and federal probes launched last autumn, which found that the largest mortgage firms illegally seized the homes of at least dozens of borrowers and engaged in shoddy practices that short-changed troubled borrowers. Mortgage principal reductions would comprise part of a larger fine levied on Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Wells Fargo and Ally Financial. Penalties could reach $30 billion, officials said. The forced reduction of mortgage principal as a penalty against flawed past practices has proven contentious. Some Republican attorneys general have objected, as have some Republican members of Congress. On Tuesday, however, a state official told The Huffington Post on condition of anonymity that the option “very much remains on the table.” While officials have not determined how much would be exacted from the banks — and specific dollar amounts to settle the probes have not yet been discussed between the state and federal governments and the banks — the proposal to compel financial firms to cut loan balances is part of one of two documents circulated Tuesday at a hotel in northern Virginia, where bankers, state officials and policy makers from the Obama administration began a three-day meeting. The targeted banks have argued vociferously, both in private discussions and in public, that they opposed cutting distressed homeowners’ principal balances. During meetings two weeks ago, representatives from such banks conducted a presentation which they claimed illustrated that mandating principal reductions would not prevent a significant number of new foreclosures and would be harmful to the general economy. The banks said “it would trigger a stampede of strategic defaults,” an official familiar with one of the two discussions said at the time, referring to instances in which borrowers who can afford to make good on their obligations choose not to. Strategic defaults are much more common in the business world than among homeowners, according to experts who study the issue. Homeowners generally feel a moral obligation to continue making their payments, whereas corporations view the breaking of contracts as pure business decisions. Government officials questioned the banks’ assumptions and fought back against their claims. The other document circulated Tuesday outlines standards that mortgage firms would have to adhere to for current and future borrowers, like forcing banks to ensure they have the right documentation when they move to repossess homes. The document was revised from an earlier draft first circulated in early March, The Huffington Post reported last week . The standards are a response to investigations launched last fall after the nation’s largest lenders voluntarily halted home seizures when faulty document practices — like so-called “robo-signing” — came to light, erupting into a nationwide scandal. Currently, no national standards govern how mortgage firms should treat borrowers who fall behind on their payments or default on their obligations. Congress has taken up the matter, and officials generally agree on how mortgage firms should treat borrowers. Tuesday’s bipartisan meeting included the Washington Attorney General Rob McKenna (R) and Colorado Attorney General John Suthers (R), who called in remotely. Top officials from Florida’s and Texas’ attorney general offices, both led by Republicans, attended, along with the Democratic attorneys general from Delaware, Iowa, Illinois, North Carolina and Connecticut. Top officials from the Treasury Department, Department of Justice and the Department of Housing and Urban Development were also present.

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15,000 Jobs Could Be Lost if Sears Leaves Illinois

May 9, 2011

Since Illinois Governor Pat Quinn signed a controversial income tax hike into law, several big businesses with headquarters in the state have publicly considered leaving . On Monday, Gov. Quinn told reporters he was working to keep Sears Holdings Corp. from flying the coop. According to Crain’s Chicago Business , Sears has been in talks with North Carolina, Texas, Tennessee and New Jersey about leaving the Hoffman Estates-based headquarters after their state and local tax incentives expire in 2012. “We do owe it to our associates and shareholders to consider options and alternatives and intend to be very thoughtful and thorough in our deliberations,” a Sears spokesman said in a statement. “It is still very early in the process.” Sears Roebuck and Co. moved into the Hoffman Estates offices after leaving its home in Chicago’s Sears Tower (now Willis Tower) 22 years ago. It was reportedly set to open up shop in North Carolina, when Illinois offered them $100 million in state infrastructure money to stay. The company has since become a vital part of the community: at least 6,000 Sears employees live in the Chicago suburbs, and an additional 9,000 have jobs with nearby businesses, vendors and contractors, according to the Daily Herald . The Daily Herald sums up how destructive the move would be to the area: Besides the loss of roughly 15,000 jobs, a Sears move out of state would lead to the loss of millions in tax revenue, according to the impact study Sears commissioned from Gruen Gruen & Associates and the Regional Economics Applications Laboratory. “Annual tax revenues to the state of Illinois will decline by $130.7 million,” the study said. “Annual tax revenues to the Chicago region will decline by $112.4 million.” This is not the first time Gov. Quinn has been asked to expand tax incentives for big businesses to keep them in the state. On Friday, Motorola announced that the state agreed to a $100 million deal to keep their headquarters in suburban Libertyville. The company agreed to spend nearly $600 million in research and development in return. “We will sit down with the Sears people and their representatives and their elected representatives who are in the area of Hoffman Estates and I’m sure we’ll work out something that will work for the company but, more importantly, work for the common good, for the workers, for the jobs,” Quinn said, according to the Chicago Sun-Times . Legislation is also pending in Springfield that would extend Sears’ deal 15 years if the company keeps a certain number of local employees.

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What Really Caused Oil’s Record Drop?

May 9, 2011

NEW YORK (Reuters) – When oil prices fell below $120 a barrel in early New York trade last Thursday, a few big companies that are major oil consumers started buying around $117. It looked like a bargain. Brent crude had been trading above $120 for a month. But the buying proved ill-timed. Crude kept on falling. “They were down millions by the end of the day, trying to catch a falling piano,” an executive at a major New York investment bank said. Never before had crude oil plummeted so deeply during the course of a day. At one point, prices were off by nearly $13 a barrel, dipping below $110 a barrel for the first time since March. Oil’s descent followed the biggest one-day price drop in silver since 1980 on Wednesday, after hedge fund titan George Soros was reported to be selling. Exchange operators raised silver’s margin requirements, making it more costly to trade the metal and sending investors out of the market. Silver plunged by 20 percent, more by week’s end. The rout unnerved some commodity investors. Oil just doesn’t fall by 10 percent in the course of a normal day, though. In commodities markets, oil is king, and its daily contract turnover, typically around $200 billion, is usually able to absorb even large inflows or outflows of investment. The rare moves of $10 a barrel usually are set off by dramatic events — the outbreak of the first Gulf War in 1991, or the collapse in 2008 of Lehman Bros bank, which both led to recessions. Of course, there was major news last week. But the daring Pakistan raid that killed Osama Bin Laden had done little to shift the balance of oil markets on Monday. In interviews with more than two dozen fund managers, bankers and traders, no clear cause emerged for the plunge in price. Market players were unable to identify any single bank or fund orchestrating a massive sale to liquidate positions, not even an errant trade that triggered panic selling, as seen in the equities flash crash last May. Rather, the picture pieced together from interviews on Thursday and Friday is one of a richly priced commodities market — raw goods have been on a five-month winning tear over all other major investment classes — hit by a flurry of negative factors that individually could be absorbed but cumulatively triggered a maelstrom. Computerized trading kicked in when key price levels were reached, accelerating the fall. “It was a domino effect,” said Dominic Cagliotti, a New York-based oil options broker. The negative factors — prominent cheerleaders turning bearish, some weak economic data, cheap money from the U.S. Federal Reserve ending by July, a lessening of political risk — merely provide a backdrop for the waves of selling. What stands out is the way computers turned readjustment of positions in a huge and deep market into a rout. THE COMPUTERS Stunningly large jolts from so-called stop-loss trading amazed market traders. The automated sell orders were generated as oil crashed through price points that traders had programed in advance into their supercomputers. In many cases, computer algorithms sold for technical reasons, as oil dropped through levels that, once breached, could trigger ever larger waves of selling yet to come. The machine trading, based on subtly different but fundamentally similar, algorithmic models, eliminates the white-knuckles and potential human error involved in actively trading a volatile market, and increases anonymity. Instead of breeding hesitation, abrupt price drops can quickly prompt these machines to unload a bullish long position in oil, and build up a bearish short one instead. Machine-led trading is one plausible thesis for another apparent market anomaly that occurred on Thursday. Exchange data shows that the total number of open positions in the oil market — a number that would typically fall in a selloff — instead rose. Normally, panicky funds selling oil en masse would cause total “open interest” numbers to shrink, as exiting investors closed out contracts. But some machines, following the market trend, may have gone further, by dumping long positions and quickly amassing sizable short positions instead. “Computers don’t care. Momentum just increases until nobody wants to stand in front of it,” said Peter Donovan, a floor trader for Vantage on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Some big Wall Street traders watched their own systems sell into the down trend but couldn’t know for sure who had initiated the selling spree. They only knew that similar machines at other firms, from New York, to London, Geneva and Sao Paulo, would be automatically selling in much the same manner. During Thursday’s crash, such selling locked in profits that high-flying commodities traders have been accumulating for months. Some of Thursday’s rout appears to have been more a product of the wisdom of crowd computing than of widespread human panic. “We believe the magnitude of the correction appears in large part to have been exacerbated by algorithmic traders unwinding positions,” Credit Suisse analysts wrote in a report. High frequency trading and algorithmic trading accounts for about half of all the volume in oil markets. BIG NAMES TURNED BEARISH Some of the seeds for the rout were sown earlier. In April. Goldman Sachs’ bullish team of commodities analysts, led by Jeff Currie in London, issued two notes to clients in rapid succession recommending they pare back positions. In one, the bank called for a nearly $20 dollar near-term correction in Brent oil, while maintaining a bullish longer-term outlook. The closely watched money king, George Soros, who runs a macroeconomic hedge fund, had said for months that gold was pricey. Even online advisors to mom-and-pop investors such as The ETF Strategist had warned of a bubble in precious metals that could be ready to pop. On Wednesday, the Wall Street Journal had reported the Soros Fund was selling commodities including silver, and four sources from other hedge funds told Reuters they believed Soros was busy selling commodities positions again on Thursday. Silver markets already had suffered four days of carnage and ended the week down nearly 30 percent. But silver is a tiny market, much more susceptible to sharp price moves. Some traders suspect that big holders were cashing out of the least liquid commodity market first, before moving onto the big one – oil. As crude crashed on Thursday, it dragged down every other major commodity. The Reuters Jefferies CRB index, which follows 19 major commodities, was on its way to a 9 percent weekly drop, the biggest since 2008. Oil’s selloff began in London, and accelerated as New York traders piled in. A routine report on U.S. weekly claims for unemployment benefits spooked investors, showing the labor market in worse shape than expected. That fed a growing pessimism about the resilience of the global economy after industrial orders slumped in Germany and the massive U.S. and European service sectors slowed. Then the European Central Bank surprised with a more dovish statement on interest rates than expected, signaling its wariness about the euro zone outlook. The dollar rose sharply. Before noon New York time, Brent crude oil prices were already trading down a jaw-dropping $8 a barrel. Fourteen hundred miles southwest of New York’s trading floors, on Texas refinery row, oil men were stunned by the drop, which played havoc with their pricing models. “It was nuts. Our risk management guys were tearing up their spreadsheets,” said a major U.S. independent refiner, who asked not to be identified. A range of factors, both economic and political, were also at play. The recent rise in raw goods has been fueled in part by the U.S. Fed pumping cash into the markets by purchasing $600 billion in bonds. This program has pushed interest rates extraordinarily low, making borrowing essentially free once adjusted for inflation. Investors have been using the super-cheap money to buy into commodity markets. But the Fed’s program is slated to end on June 30. “Funds were likely to take profits before June when the direct (Fed) bond purchases stop. All were eyeballing each other to see who would take profits first,” said a London-based oil trader. China, the world’s fastest-growing consumer of commodities, also is tightening monetary policy to tamp growth rates and control inflation, raising the prospect of a slowdown in demand for oil. The political risk premium built into oil prices also came under scrutiny last week. The unrest sweeping through the Arab world – home to over half of world oil reserves – has boosted oil this year. The only major supply disruption so far is from Libya, where war has cut off at least 1 million barrels a day. “We’ve been in a world thinking there’s more risk, more risk, more risk,” said Sarah Emerson of Energy Security Analysis Inc. “People took this week, and the news of bin Laden’s death, to simply reflect. They stopped and said, maybe there’s less risk.” GAME OVER Put all these factors together, and they amounted to a reason to sell. Traders and brokers who spoke with Reuters speculated that macro funds like Soros and others, which had been aggressively overweight commodities, were cutting the portion of their portfolio allocated to commodities. Because those positions had grown so large, even a small rebalancing would amount to billions and billions of dollars in contracts sold. After weeks of thin trading in Brent oil futures, Thursday’s trade volume hit a record. Early Thursday, investment advisory firm Roubini Global Economics had also joined the fray, telling clients for the first time in years to cut commodities in their macro portfolios. Many funds were merely taking months of handsome profits off the table. Yet Thursday’s rout certainly produced casualties. By the afternoon New York time, some of the world’s biggest money managers thought they smelled blood. Several banks and funds seemed to be selling oil in an orderly fashion, even if the price drop was extraordinary. But could a hedge fund be struggling for survival? They wondered whether any major commodities funds were on the losing end of bullish oil bets, and were getting forced by margin calls from brokers into dumping massive positions. One trader at a major bank in New York called a colleague at one of the world’s largest hedge funds. During the conversation, they exchanged notes, suspicious that one or more commodities-focused hedge funds might be facing a moment of reckoning, one of the participants said. No fund could be pinpointed. By the end of the day, the person said, they were less suspicious — a view shared by week’s end by many market participants who spoke to Reuters. No one was naming a major hedge fund in dire trouble, or a computer trading algorithm that went haywire. And unlike last May’s flash crash in equities markets — when stocks fell by a similar 9 percent margin in just minutes — Thursday’s decline came in rolling cascades, playing out over at least 12 hours. Even after Brent fell to settle around $110 by the end of the day, crude prices were still up 38 percent from a year ago. “Since prices have been advancing well beyond any reasonable measure of value, Thursday’s declines felt more like orderly corrections than chaotic panics. There was no sense that anyone was ready to jump from the window,” said oil analyst Peter Beutel of Cameron Hanover in Connecticut. CASUALTIES The day left some commodities-heavy funds nursing wounds – weekly losses of 10 to 20 percent, according to several fund managers who invest in other hedge funds. Two of the sources said that London-based BlueGold, a fund known for taking aggressively bullish directional bets on oil in the past, had sizable losses. It was not immediately clear how much the fund dropped, and BlueGold declined comment. One money manager said of BlueGold’s head trader Pierre Andurand: “He’s had tougher weeks so I don’t think it’s game over.” Fund sources also cited losses at $20 billion Winton Capital, of around 2.2 percent, on Thursday. FTC Capital, a $300 million European commodities fund, lost 4 percent in one of its larger funds, the sources said. Neither fund was available for comment. In the space of just hours, the drop in the price of crude oil had shaved nearly $1 billion off the cost of supplying the world’s daily oil needs. That could be good news for gasoline consumers. But Eric Holder, the U.S. Attorney General who has recently formed a government working group to investigate manipulation in oil markets, had a blunt warning for oil traders. He wants proof the savings are being passed on to end users. “This working group was created to identify whether fraud or manipulation played any role in the wholesale and retail markets as prices increased. If wholesale prices continue to decrease, fraud or manipulation must not be allowed to prevent price decreases from being passed on to consumers at the pump,” Holder said on Friday. (Reporting by Matthew Goldstein, Svea Herbst, Jennifer Ablan, Emma Farge, David Sheppard, Claire Milhench, Zaida Espana, Robert Campbell and Josh Schneyer. Writing by Josh Schneyer. Editing by Stella Dawson)

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The Return Of ‘Made In The USA’

May 5, 2011

NEW YORK (Nick Zieminski) – The “Made in the USA” label may be poised for a comeback, a new study argues. The next few years will bring a wave of reinvestment by U.S. multinational manufacturers in their home base, as rising wages and a strong yuan currency make China a less attractive production center, the paper by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) predicts. The study, published on Thursday, says U.S. reinvestment will accelerate as the United States becomes one of the cheapest locations for manufacturing in the developed world. If it came to fruition, such reinvestment could speed up a delicate economic recovery that has yet to gain much traction. There is evidence the trend has already started: * Caterpillar Inc has repatriated manufacturing of construction excavators, boosting investment in facilities in Texas, Arkansas and Illinois. * NCR Corp brought back production of automatic teller machines to Georgia, creating 870 jobs. * Toymaker Wham-O moved production of Frisbees and Hula-Hoops from China and Mexico to the United States. More such announcements are likely over the next year or two, BCG says, citing conversations with clients. “If you work the math out using today’s numbers. you’d still say it’s a good idea to go to China,” said Hal Sirkin, a senior BCG partner and lead author of the study. “(But) around 2015, you get to a point of indifference between producing in the U.S. and producing in China.” Wages in China are still a fraction of what U.S. workers earn. Direct pay and benefits for production workers in the United States are about $22 per hour, versus only about $2 in China, roughly 9 percent of the U.S. cost. But that difference is expected to narrow, with the Chinese worker earning about 17 percent as much as his or her U.S. counterpart four years from now. Factoring in higher U.S. productivity rates, the weaker U.S. dollar and other factors, such as shipping costs, that difference could narrow further. “MADE IN THE USA” The study predicts China will remain a major global player — just less of an exporter to the United States. China will still export to Europe, whose workers are less able to move for jobs than U.S. workers are. U.S. wage advantages could eventually reach the point that European automakers will export U.S.-made cars to Europe, the study said. The appeal of a shorter supply chain and fewer headaches from issues like intellectual property will also help encourage jobs and production to come back to the United States, BCG said. Policy could also nudge manufacturers to make the move. High unemployment is driving state incentives to attract factories, while unions are becoming more flexible. Still, the study’s thesis is based on assumptions that may not play out. One is that supply and demand of labor in China are increasingly moving out of balance. Another is that demand from a growing Chinese middle class will raise costs, as factories shift to producing for domestic consumption and workers demand more pay to pay for goods that were out of reach before. Also, the yuan’s rally could reverse. Since China first loosened restrictions on trading the yuan, its value has steadily strengthened from more than 8 yuan to the U.S. dollar in 2005 to fewer than 6.5 per dollar now. The expected U.S. reinvestment, meanwhile, will affect some industries more than others. Shoes or clothing are work-intensive and do not require highly skilled labor. But higher-value goods made in lower volumes, such as home appliances and construction equipment, are more likely to bear the “Made in the USA” label in coming years — especially if they are large and expensive to ship. General Electric Co’s example supports the study’s contentions. GE’s appliance unit is in the middle of a four-year, $600 million plan to build up its manufacturing presence in Louisville, Kentucky, adding some 830 new jobs. “The default has been to say: ‘Let’s put the next plant in China,’” Sirkin said. “We’re saying: ‘Sit back and think through your options.’” BCG is a management consulting firm that advises large manufacturers on issues ranging from strategy to operations. (Additional reporting by Scott Malone in Boston, editing by Gerald E. McCormick) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Madison Ave. Media, Inc. Appoints Dr. Forrest E. Watson Chairman of Advisory Board

May 3, 2011

Legendary Texas Business Professional Brings Global Business Experience to a Leading Global Digital Media Company

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Government Borrowing Goes On Under GOP, Obama Plans

May 2, 2011

WASHINGTON — It’s all but impossible to glean from the political rhetoric, but government borrowing will grow by trillions of dollars over the next decade if the budget backed by House Republicans translates into law. And by a few trillion more if President Barack Obama gets his way. Call it the unpleasant truth behind a political struggle over raising the debt limit that is expected to intensify as lawmakers return Monday from a two-week break. While polls show voters angry over the debt, and politicians support a goal of paying it down, the two principal deficit-reduction plans would merely restrain its growth for the next decade – the Republicans’ significantly more so than the president’s. To do otherwise, Congress “would have to enact policies that would produce a surplus,” with money left over to begin retiring debt, said Robert Bixby, executive director of the anti-deficit Concord Coalition. The last government surplus was in 2001. For one to occur in the future would require “Republican spending policies and Democratic tax policies,” Bixby said, referring to GOP calls for deep program cuts, and Obama’s support for higher taxes. “Right now the two parties haven’t been able to agree on those kinds of changes.” The increase in debt woven into their budgets is not a fact that Obama, Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., chairman of the House Budget Committee, or any other official chooses to trumpet. The president and most lawmakers generally avoid saying directly that government debt will rise if their budget prevails – although they are careful not to claim it won’t, either. Instead, they use similar, vaguely reassuring terms. “We have to live within our means, reduce our deficit and get back on a path that will allow us to pay down our debt,” Obama said last month as he called for $4 trillion in deficit reductions over the next dozen years. Unlike the Republicans, he favors about $1 trillion in tax increases, in addition to allowing Bush-era tax cuts on upper-income households to expire. Administration officials say they have no estimates of the impact the president’s new proposals would have on the future size of the government’s debt, which now stands at nearly $14.3 trillion. The president’s original budget for 2012, unveiled last winter, would leave debt at $27.6 trillion at the end of the decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The administration itself put the figure at $26.3 trillion. “The House Republicans’ budget reduces government spending by $6.2 trillion over the next decade and puts the budget on a path to balance in the years ahead,” Ryan wrote on the panel’s website, a theme that is similar to the one Obama struck. Congressional Budget Office figures, however, show that if Ryan’s plan were put into law, there still would be new borrowing each year and government’s debt would total $23.1 trillion at the end of 2021. The House Republicans’ plan relies on repealing the year-old health care law, as well as deep cuts in Medicaid and domestic programs. Its most controversial provision, phasing out Medicare as it now exists, would not begin for 10 years and has no impact on debt in the current decade. The GOP plan would generate about $4 trillion less debt than Obama’s budget envisions over the decade. Republicans point out that unlike Obama’s plan, theirs would quickly begin shrinking the debt as a percentage of the overall economy. Even so, debt would rise by nearly $9 trillion in 10 years. The administration has asked Congress to approve borrowing beyond the current $14.3 trillion debt ceiling. In exchange, Republicans want the White House and Democrats to agree to a series of measures to cut spending in the near term and make sure it stays under control in the future. They sometimes suggest that their approach would put an end to borrowing. “While America cannot default on its debt, we also cannot continue to borrow recklessly, dig ourselves deeper into this hole and mortgage the future of our children and grandchildren,” House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio said last winter on the day Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner notified lawmakers the limit on borrowing would have to be raised. More recently, Rep. Jeb Hensarling of Texas, a member of the GOP leadership, said Obama “is going to have to start the process of cutting up the credit cards, pure and simple.” Voter anger over government spending and rising debt helped generate tea party enthusiasm for Republicans and propel them to control of the House in the 2010 elections. An AP-GfK poll taken last month showed continuing concern. Among Republicans, 95 percent said they were very or somewhat worried that the increasing federal debt would harm the financial future of their children or grandchildren. Among independents, 82 percent agreed, and among Democrats, 79 percent. Yet polls also show the public is less willing to support changes in Medicare, spending cuts and certain tax increases that have been proposed to stop the debt from growing. Two plans have been advanced that project a surplus in less than a decade, one by the conservative Republican Study Committee in the House, and the other by first-term Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. The RSC proposal projects a $50 billion surplus in 2020, while Paul’s shows red ink disappearing even more quickly, in 2016. Both rely on highly controversial spending cuts to meet their targets and have drawn relatively little political support. In the House, the RSC plan split Republicans down the middle, with 119 GOP members voting in favor and 120 against. In addition to cuts of domestic and defense programs, it recommends gradually raising the age of eligibility for Medicare to 67 for those born in 1952 or later. Paul’s blueprint has not yet come to a vote in the Senate, but it has less than a handful of supporters. Among other recommendations, it calls for abolishing the Departments of Commerce, Education, Energy, and Housing and Urban Development.

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Steve Blank: Stanford’s Hottest Student Startups Furiously Work to Iterate and Pivot

April 28, 2011

The Stanford Lean LaunchPad class was an experiment in a new model of teaching startup entrepreneurship. With one week and one more updates to go, this post is part seven. Parts one through six are here , Syllabus is here . With a week to go the teams are starting to look like opening night before the big play. Teams are iterating and pivoting right and left, one team threw their entire business model out the window and did a complete restart, and another team was having a meltdown over personalities. Week seven of the class Last week the teams were testing their hypotheses about their Channel (how a company delivers its value proposition (i.e. its product or service) to its customers. This week they were testing their hypotheses about Revenue Models: what are customers really willing to pay for? How? Are you generating transactional or recurring revenues? Is it a multi-sided market, and if so who’s the user versus who’s the payer? The Nine Teams Present The first team up was PersonalLibraries the team making a (reference management system for discovering, organizing and citing researchers’ readings). Oops. No more. The team looked at the potential revenue and concluded that the outlook for this business with this customer segment was dismal. They decided to do something more dramatic than just a Pivot. They did a restart. They moved from “Reference Libraries” to “Product Libraries” — an online social shopping system. (If this had been a real startup rather than a class we would have had the team test many more variants on customer segment, revenue models, channels, etc before such an extreme move.) They quickly came up with a new business model canvas, value proposition and customer segment. The team hasn’t been getting much sleep as they have a week and a half to make meaningful progress. Lets see what they can pull off. To see the slides, click here . Autonomow , the robotic farm weeder, had a busy week. In talking to their sales channel (farm equipment dealers) and customers (organic farmers) they realize they have an opportunity to come up with a unique revenue stream. Instead of selling or leasing the equipment they are going to charge for leasing according to weed density in the farm fields . The denser the weeds, the higher the rental price per day. Customers and dealers agree that it’s a fair deal. Wow. On the way to the WorldAg Expo their Carrotbot (their research platform they built to gather data for machine vision/machine learning) hit the farm fields near Avenal , California. The videos of the robot in the field were priceless. CarrotBot hits the ground Where are we? At the World Ag Expo in Tulare the team encounters its first potential competitor — “Robocrop.” (No kidding, I couldn’t make this up.) The Robocrop Precision Guidance System for row crop cultivators uses a camera to shift a hitch so cultivators can cut very close to the plant rows and the Robocrop InRow is a robotic weeder. To see the slides, click here . The next team was D.C. Veritas , the team building a low-cost wind turbine for cities and utilities. Last week the team pivoted and their wind turbine is now embedded into street and highway light poles. This week the D.C. Veritas team put it into overdrive and did mass interviews of city officials across the United States. In Palo Alto they talked to the financial and utilities mangers. In Williamstown, West Virginia, they spoke to the city planner and a member of the budget committee. In Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, it was the city engineer and director of public works. In Amarillo, Texas, they had interviews with the head of the bidding process, the Street light manager, Director of Public Works and the utilities engineer. They quickly got a good handle on the canonical project approval process inside a city. They combined their understanding of the city approval process with the data they gleaned from customer interviews and developed preliminary archetypes . These represented the different customers in the approval cycle inside a city. To see the slides, click here . Agora Cloud Services The Agora team, (a marketplace for cloud computing), (a relative island of calm in a turbulent sea of other teams) now believed their business was providing a tool set for managing Amazon Web Services cloud compute usage. They believed they could build tools that would save customers 30% of their Amazon bill by providing service matching, capacity planning and usage monitoring and control. The team was a paragon of steady and relentless progress. They had another four interviews with potential customers and consultants. To see the slides, click here . The Week 7 Lecture: Partners Our lecture this week covered partners. Which partners and suppliers leverage your model? Who do you need to rely on? Our assignment for the teams for next week: what partners will you need? Why do you need them and what are risks? Why will they partner with you? What’s the cost of the partnership? What are the benefits for an exclusive partnership? What are the incentives and impediments for the partners? To see the slides, click here . —— The pressure was on. The other five teams were also furiously iterating and pivoting. The JointBuy team (the one that sent out 16,000 emails last week) realized that the low-fidelity website they used to test key concepts needed to get real to attract buyers and sellers in volume. The team pulled a week of all-nighters and turned the wireframe prototype into a fully functioning site . In almost every entrepreneurship class with a team project there’s a team that can’t figure out how to work together. These are the same problems one sees in real startups (disagreements over who controls the vision, team members not pulling their weight, disillusionment with the team direction, individuals uncomfortable in rapid decision making with less than perfect data, etc.) We give the students an escalation path if they’re having interpersonal problems (mentors — to teaching assistant — to professors) to see if they can first work through the issues without our intervention. While these are always painful we try to teach that they are part of the learning process. Better you encounter the problems in a classroom than after you raised a venture round. At this point in the class almost all the teams are in a full sprint to the finish line. Next week, the last lecture. Then the final presentations. Steve Blank’s blog : steveblank.com

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Susan Buchanan: Oyster Growers Say Post-Spill Assistance Is Inadequate

April 25, 2011

(This article was published in “The Louisiana Weekly” in the April 25, 2011 edition.) African American oystermen in Louisiana’s lower Plaquemines Parish, where beds are damaged, are a tenacious bunch and don’t intend to abandon their livelihoods and seek work elsewhere if they can help it. After a disastrous year since the spill, they’re getting assistance from the state but want BP to live up to a commitment to restore beds. And they hope that Gulf Coast Claims Facility paymaster Ken Feinberg will compensate them fairly for losses. “Oyster beds on the east bank of lower Plaquemines were decimated by the opening of the Caernarvon Freshwater Diversion” on the Mississippi River, said Telley Madina, executive director of the Louisiana Oystermen Association based in Pointe a la Hache. He spoke at an April 19 panel on the coast sponsored by the Greater New Orleans Foundation. Last May, the state opened the Caernarvon Diversion — located 15 miles below New Orleans on the east bank near Braithwaite at the St. Bernard and Plaquemines Parish border — at full capacity to keep oil from the west bank and surrounding areas. Fresh water from the river, however, reduced salinity in oyster habitats, with deadly consequences. Madina said that his father in law, Byron Encalade — president of the Louisiana Oystermen Association — expects to harvest nothing this year from the waters around Pointe a la Hache, where Encalade lives. Oysters there died from the intrusion of fresh water. He said “most of the population on the east bank of lower Plaquemines is minority African American, and many families have been surviving off the water there for generations.” In addition to killing oysters, fresh water diversions didn’t always keep oil at bay. “The Caernarvon opening was intended to suppress oil, but oil still got into both the west and east banks, including Spanish Bay,” an oyster area east of the river in Plaquemines, Madina said. Some private beds on the east bank in lower Plaquemines survived oil and the diversion’s opening, however. Madina said “we’re estimating that it will take five years for most east bank beds to recover, partly because it took five years for them to come back strong after Katrina. They had just gotten full grown when the oil spill happened.” Other predictions are that recovery will take 3 to 5 years, or 5 to 10 years, he said. “The diversions were done for the good of the state because of the spill, to keep oil from the west bank and from coming into Spanish Bay on the east bank — although it eventually did,” Madina said. “BP should help the state recoup losses but has already said it doesn’t want to pay for oyster damage from diversions.” Olivia Watkins, spokeswoman for the Louisiana Dept. of Wildlife and Fisheries, said last week “we had a $15 million, verbal commitment for oyster restoration from BP last fall, but they’re trying to back out of it now. In Louisiana, a verbal commitment and a handshake are as good as a promise.” Watkins pointed to the high mortality of oysters along Louisiana’s coast as a result of the oil spill and spill-response actions. “The oyster industry can’t wait for the federal NRDA process–which can take five to ten years to complete–to begin restoration,” she said. Louisiana and other Gulf states are to be returned to pre-spill conditions through a Natural Resource Damage Assessment or NRDA. Scientists involved in the NRDA continue to collect data in the Gulf, and restoration ideas are being sought. Watkins said “we can’t sit back and do nothing” about the beds. The state took action this month, and announced two, $2 million allocations, or a total of $4 million, in emergency funding for cultch planting on public oyster seed grounds on the Mississippi River’s east bank. Cultch, mostly shells and limestone, is used to provide bedding where young oysters, called spat, attach and grow. Louisiana oysters spawn in the spring and in late August or September. Watkins said the state will ask BP to compensate it for the $4 million in cultch spending. She said “we already have permits from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for the Lake Borgne cultch planting.” And at the request of the Louisiana Oyster Task Force, “we will be applying for a permit for Black Bay in Plaquemines Parish so that planting can get started there in time for the fall spat set.” Curtis Thomas, Louisiana-based spokesman for BP’s Gulf Coast Restoration Organization, said last week that BP intends to fulfill its environmental and economic commitments to the Gulf, and added “BP knows the NRDA process will resolve many issues that remain through and even after this unprecedented response” to the spill. Thomas continued, saying “with respect to the oyster beds, alleged damage to them caused by the state of Louisiana’s fresh water diversion, which may have reduced water salinity, is not compensable under the Oil Pollution Act — that is, BP is not obligated to pay for such damage because it was not caused by the oil spill.” He also said “some, senior Gulf state regulatory officials are reporting that damage to oyster beds in 2010 was not caused by the spill or the fresh water diversion; rather it was caused by increased water temperature and lower levels of dissolved oxygen.” He did not explain who those state regulatory officials were or what locations they had referred to. BP will provide $1 billion for early, restoration projects in the Gulf for damage to natural resources caused by the spill, NRDA trustees said last week. The trustees include Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Texas, the U.S. Dept. of the Interior and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The trustees said they plan to use the money for rebuilding coastal marshes, replenishing damaged beaches, conserving ocean habitat for injured wildlife, and restoring barrier islands and wetlands. Meanwhile, fishermen are getting the short end of the stick from the Gulf Coast Claims Facility, Madina said. “Less than 10% of GCCF payments have gone to Gulf fishermen, shrimpers and oystermen, who so far have been compensated for only a fraction of their losses.” He had heard that some workers in seafood restaurants in New Orleans had been fully paid on their GCCF claims. “These groups of people shouldn’t be pitted against each other, but GCCF should first help the people affected on the coast, like fishermen,” he said. Madina continued, saying “I don’t think problems on the coast will wrap up in 2012 as Ken Feinberg says. We’re still seeing big tar balls wash ashore in lower Plaquemines, and I won’t be surprised if we have more, enormous fish kills, like we did last September.” Madina knows oystermen in lower Plaquemines who are taking $5,000 final, individual payments from the GCCF and signing away their rights to sue BP because they can’t wait any longer for money. “For shrimpers, the season is starting and they need cash to get their boats ready,” he said. “Fisheries are a $2.4 billion industry statewide, and it is just about the only industry on the east bank of lower Plaquemines.” Madina said “oystermen need money to pay their mortgage or rent. You can’t survive these days floating up and down the river on a boat.” Under a new initiative, oyster shells from participating New Orleans restaurants will be collected to rebuild oyster beds in Louisiana, said Mandi Thompson, executive director of the Gulf Coast Leadership Forum, speaking at that group’s conference in the Crescent City last week.

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Google To Invest $100 Million In World’s Largest Wind Farm

April 18, 2011

NEW YORK – Google Inc said on Monday it and two Japanese partners will pay General Electric Co about $500 million for a majority equity stake in the world’s largest wind farm, under construction in Oregon. The $2 billion Shepherds Flat project, near Arlington, Oregon, is due to be completed next year. It will stretch over 30 square miles of north-central Oregon and generate enough energy for 235,000 U.S. homes. The site’s developer is Caithness Energy. Measured by its 845-megawatts of capacity, the site is the world’s largest wind farm, Google and GE said. GE said the collaboration was part of its strategy of drawing private investment to the U.S. wind market. GE and Google are partnering with the U.S. unit of Japan’s Sumitomo Corp and a unit of Itochu Corp. Google, Itochu and Sumitomo will together own 56 percent of the total project, reducing GE’s equity stake to 34 percent. Caithness will own the balance, GE Energy Financial Services spokesman Andy Katell said. The site will eventually use GE 338 turbines and will provide electricity to Southern California Edison, a unit of Edison International. Google said its investment totaled about $100 million. Sumitomo jointly owns a Texas wind farm with GE and owns wind farms in Japan and China. Itochu partnered with GE on an Oklahoma wind farm. Google has invested more than $350 million in the clean energy sector. Earlier this month, it invested in a solar project near Berlin. (Reporting by Nick Zieminski, editing by Bernard Orr) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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This University Endowment Owns About $1B In Gold Bars

April 16, 2011

he University of Texas Investment Management Co., the second-largest U.S. academic endowment, took delivery of almost $1 billion in gold bullion and is storing the bars in a New York vault, according to the fund’s board.

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Gulf Oil Spill: Claims Czar ‘Pleased’ Despite Glitches, Criticism

April 15, 2011

WASHINGTON — Danielle Thomas spends much of her day with the phone to her ear, listening to hard-luck stories about Alabama workers still dealing with the fallout of last year’s Gulf oil spill. Thomas is an attorney with a legal-aid group that’s helping people navigate the sometimes-byzantine compensation process overseen by the Gulf Coast Claims Facility (GCCF), which administers payouts from BP to workers and business owners affected by the disaster. Nearly a year after the spill, she says a lot of Alabamians are still adrift and waiting for their checks. “These people are still really, really hurting,” said Thomas, whose group, Legal Services Alabama, deals with many service-industry employees who were stung by a drop-off in tourism last summer. “Bills are coming due, or they’re already way past due. They’re borrowing from friends and families. There are people living out of cars with their children. … It’s unbearable for people.” The explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig last April 20 ushered in a torrent of litigation and a massive, $20 billion compensation program. According to GCCF’s most recent figures, the fund has paid out nearly $4 billion on some 300,000 claims thus far. Kenneth Feinberg, the well-known mediation lawyer the White House appointed administrator of the GCCF, says he’s pleased with his team’s progress. Still, lawyers helping claimants say many have gotten bogged down in the program’s bureaucracy. “I’m doing my best,” said Feinberg, who ran the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund as well. “The program is not perfect, but I think we are achieving what BP and the administration wanted to see done.” A $20 billion payout scheme doesn’t come without a few hitches. Many claimants argue that the methodology for compensation is too rigid, gauged as it is on workers’ past wages rather than what they expected for 2010 and beyond. They also claim the system can be too arbitrary, with some claimants waiting on money when their colleagues, who seemed to work in the same capacities and at similar wages, have already received their checks. And some say the process is simply taking too long. According to Thomas, in some cases claims that were supposed to be processed within 90 days have sailed past the 110-day mark, putting already-strapped claimants in a jam. “With the sheer magnitude of the claims, you’re going to have some delays,” Feinberg said, adding that many of the claims have insufficient documentation. “I do not agree with the criticism that the program is not processing claims.” Feinberg has withstood some withering criticism from residents at town hall meetings, and he’s taken shots from a number of Gulf-area politicians whose constituents are calling in with woeful tales of stalled cases. Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Alab.), hardly the harshest of Feinberg’s critics, told The Huffington Post, “We continue to hear from Alabamians frustrated with the opaque and seemingly ever-changing compensation guidelines.” Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood, who in legal briefs and news reports has blasted what he sees as a lack of transparency, recently filed a motion asking that a federal judge step in and audit the process. Hood also said that a recent bump in the money BP pays to Feinberg’s firm — from $850,000 to $1.25 million per month — “speaks volumes” about Feinberg’s role in the process. Feinberg, in response, said the comment “almost rises to the level of defamation.” “Mr. Feinberg is in over his head,” Hood told HuffPost. “With 9/11, that was a finite number of people. This is a massive undertaking.” Hood says that during a recent string of town hall meetings claimants complained to him that they were getting lost in continual requests from the GCCF for documentation on their earnings. “They’re leading people on and not paying claims,” Hood said. “They can make the rules up as they go.” One of the most contentious issues in the claims process has been the so-called “quick payment.” In such cases, the fund will promptly dole out $5,000 to individuals and $25,000 to businesses if the parties relinquish their right to sue for further damages. Some lawyers believe that claimants are being steered by GCCF claims processors toward these payments — something Feinberg has steadfastly denied. Legal-aid lawyers like John Jopling, whose Mississippi Center for Justice has heard from 535 claimants asking for help, worry that some workers are accepting quick payments out of desperation when they could have more money coming their way down the road. “Why would you [accept] that,” Jopling asked, “unless your circumstances were such that you needed money so badly that you’d forgo any scientific evidence of what the safety or seafood issues were and just cash in.” “The problem is people need the money now,” said Sister Mary Ellen Lacy, who has been assisting claimants in Bayou La Batre, Ala. “They’re more apt to take the quick pay,” which comes in 14 days. Feinberg, however, believes people tend to take the quick payment for one of two reasons: Either they received an emergency payment last year and feel “adequately compensated” already, or they simply lack the proper documentation to prove further damages. If people were being pushed into quick payments, “you would think there would be a flood of citizen complaints in the Gulf,” he said, “and we haven’t seen that.” Lacy says many people haven’t received checks because of lost or insufficient documentation, and a lot of the confusion is due to the fact that it’s “just a huge, huge operation.” She added, “I’ve seen people who feel they got treated right… but I’ve seen predominantly people who are still struggling with how to make sense of it all.” Another common complaint has been a perceived capriciousness in the handling of claims. There are cases that have baffled some lawyers. “There are inconsistencies in the results, despite similar or identical facts,” said Jopling. “Even people at the same place, with the same employer and the same function. Seven of them got their claim accepted, four got their claim denied. Why?” In some cases, the claims problems are simply logistical. Members of the Gulf’s considerable Southeast Asian fishing community complain that there aren’t enough claims agents who speak their languages. David Pham, who works for BPSOS, a Vietnamese advocacy group with an office in Bayou La Batre, says his group’s claimants from Southeast Asia are being funneled toward the one claims agent in the area who speaks Vietnamese. Many of those claimants — who are shrimpers, oystermen, and workers from the local seafood-processing plants — have to find their own translators to get them through the process. Pham says he’s also uncomfortable with the quick-payment element. “We’re afraid they’re just going to accept it,” said Pham, who estimates only about half of the area’s seafood plants have re-opened. He says most of the locals feel strapped, particularly after the winter off-season. “No one’s getting paid right now. Everyone’s been idle. Some did go back to work but it’s limited what you can do. You’ve got to wait for the trucks from Texas and Florida to bring in oysters.” Thomas, the attorney at Legal Services Alabama, says she’s now handling around 100 claims cases, with at least three new ones coming across her desk each day. Some people merely have simple questions; others have complicated cases that won’t be resolved soon. A lot of the claimants come from the Gulf Shores area, where they worked in restaurants and hotels, and now the emergency money they received from the fund last year has run out. “A lot of the jobs they depended on are gone,” said Thomas. “But the bills don’t stop coming.”

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Joblessness And Hopelessness: The Link Between Unemployment And Suicide

April 15, 2011

Kerri, a 57-year-old living near Seattle, says she lost her software sales job three years ago — and that age discrimination has made her ongoing search for work feel hopeless at times. “I went to an interview and the guy actually excused me before we even started. He said, ‘Well, we’re looking at your resume and we don’t feel that you’d be a good fit,’” Kerri recalls. “Why would I be brought in after two phone interviews with managers?” By the winter of 2009, she says, she’d taken all the rejection she could stand. She swallowed a bunch of pills. “There was a reason: I had no hope,” she recalls. “There was no point for the future. I had just lost another job opportunity that I thought I had done a really good job at and they just dismissed me. I was old, and they’re not going to hire me. With that, I couldn’t have my life back.” She says that when she came to in a hospital, doctors told her she’d called 911 before passing out because she wanted someone to come feed her two dogs. She doesn’t remember making that call. While she says she’s more comfortable now talking about what happened then, she asked that her full name not be used in this story because she’s only told one other person, a family member, that she tried to kill herself. Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. How much did Kerri’s joblessness contribute to her decision to try and take her own life? Researchers have long sought to understand the possible link between unemployment and suicide. As layoffs surged late in 2008, the Suicide Prevention Resource Center , a group based in D.C. and Massachusetts that helps organizations develop suicide prevention programs, reviewed two decades’ worth of research on the question. It found that a “strong relationship exists between unemployment, the economy, and suicide.” But, the group cautioned, it’s never just one factor that drives people to the edge. “Economic circumstances themselves are insufficient to cause a suicide; in fact, we do not know of any single factor that is sufficient on its own to ’cause’ a suicide,” says an SPRC memo based on the research. “Stressors such as the loss of a job, a home, or retirement security can result in shame, humiliation or despair, and in that context, can precipitate suicide attempts in those who are already vulnerable or do not have sufficient resources to draw on for support.” A new study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finds that the suicide rate from 1928 to 2007 has risen and fallen in tandem with the business cycle. It spiked at the onset of the Great Depression, rising to its all-time high in 1933. It fell during the expansionary World War II period from 1939 to 1945. It rose during the oil crisis of the early ’70s and the double-dip recession of the early ’80s, and fell to its lowest level ever during the booming ’90s. “Economic problems can impact how people feel about themselves and their futures as well as their relationships with family and friends. Economic downturns can also disrupt entire communities,” the study’s author, Feijun Luo, an economist in the CDC’s Division of Violence Prevention, says in a statement. “We know suicide is not caused by any one factor — it is often a combination of many that lead to suicide.” Has suicide spiked during the worst recession since the Great Depression started in 2007? The government’s official numbers lag, so it’s too early to answer that question. According to the most recent data — a preliminary estimate the CDC released in March — suicide ticked up slightly in 2009, becoming the 10th leading cause of death in the United States. Suicides accounted for 11.7 of every 100,000 deaths in 2009, up from 11.6 deaths the previous year and 11.3 in 2007. A recent paper by Timothy J. Classen of Loyola University Chicago and Richard A. Dunn of Texas A&M found that mass layoffs and long spells of unemployment specifically were associated with increased suicide risk. That study relied on data from 1996 to 2005. In this recession, the long-term unemployment rate (defined by the government as jobless spells lasting at least six months) has soared to unprecedented levels. More than 6 million people — nearly half the total unemployed in March — had been out of work that long. And more than a million people have been out of work for 99 weeks or longer, passing the maximum limit for unemployment insurance. The ranks of the long-term jobless keep growing even as the unemployment rate goes down. “Given our findings for a slightly earlier time period, I would be concerned that the increasing rate of long-term unemployment in the United States is having important consequences on the mental health of many American workers, and I would be concerned that we are going to see increased rate of suicide because of it,” Dunn says. “We won’t be able to study this until the latest data comes out, but we won’t have that data for another two or three years.” For some of those struggling with joblessness, it seems obvious that the ongoing jobs crisis will lead to more suicides. Gerry DePietro, who says she lost her job as an accountant in 2008, became one of a cadre of long-term unemployed who share their troubles with others online. DePietro, who is in her mid 60s and lives in Norristown, Pa., says she got a job this week after 30 months of unemployment. She’s no longer one of the “99ers” — people who’ve exhausted all 99 weeks of their unemployment benefits without finding work — but she says she’ll continue to be an advocate for their cause. “You wonder why I am so passionate about my fight for the 99ers?” wrote DePietro in a February email, one of dozens she’s sent to reporters and Congressional staffers. “I just received word of YET ANOTHER 99ER WHO TOOK HIS OWN LIFE! A young father with a wife and 2 young children! THE SUICIDE RATE IS HIGH, BUT YOU NEVER HEAR ABOUT THAT.” Tales of the jobless committing suicide for lack of work abound online in forums and blogs. Change.org is a website that allows users to create their own petitions and contribute news stories. A 2010 blog item on the site , for instance, drew a bright line connecting job loss and one man’s suicide. “Wayne Zickefoose was facing a desperate situation. With an impending foreclosure and a mountain of credit card debt, he must have felt there was no way out,” the story said. “On June 13th, he picked up a handgun and shot his wife and 3-year-old son before killing himself. The tragedy isn’t just an isolated incident. As joblessness rates rise, people are getting desperate.” For their part, suicide prevention advocates don’t dismiss the notion that joblessness adds to the emotional burden of anyone prone to suicidal thoughts, but they say the array of factors leading to such a decision is too complex to be tied to just one thing — and that 90 percent of people who actually die by suicide have an underlying mental health issue. And advocates warn the media to tread carefully around the topic. “Avoid reporting that death by suicide was preceded by a single event, such as a recent job loss, divorce or bad grades,” say recommendations for media from a coalition of groups led by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, the American Association of Suicidology, and the Annenberg Public Policy Center. “Reporting like this leaves the public with an overly simplistic and misleading understanding of suicide.” Contagion is the concern: The suicide prevention groups say studies have shown dramatic, simplistic headlines about suicide motivation can lead to copycat suicides. The anti-suicide groups updated their reporting recommendations on Thursday, including for the first time advice for citizen journalists, bloggers, and message board administrators — a nod to the pivotal role that social media and the Web now play in discussions of the topic. But at least among some of the jobless, media reports about suicide are considered too tame. Bud Meyers, a Las Vegas casino bartender who’s been out of work for more than two years, wrote on his blog in November that he suspected that media avoidance of suicide topics had a worse effect than contagion. “If the news media had reported the full stories of all these unemployed-related suicides, maybe many of those poor souls would still be clinging on to life today, and possibly living with some measure of hope,” he wrote. “And maybe they wouldn’t have had to write their own eulogies or their pathetic suicide notes either.” When Meyers (whose name is a pseudonym) later posted an apparent suicide note online at the beginning of the year (“now I must face the stark reality of the last three weeks of my life,” he wrote), unemployed Twitter users alerted a CNN reporter, Ali Velshi. Velshi took to the CNN Newsroom and told Meyers on air to “hang in there.” Meyers’ online acquaintances also notified Las Vegas police, who visited his home. Meyers said he told the officers that what he’d written wasn’t a suicide note — something he later repeated to a plethora of media outlets, including The Huffington Post and the Associated Press . Still, the coverage at the time made him the despairing, middle-aged face of long-term unemployment. He continues to struggle. In an interview, he says that he tells himself: “Bud, you’ve had a good life. You’ve had a good 55 years. Why not end it now? Why spend the last 15 to 20 years of my life in total poverty when I’ve already had it so good up to a certain point? Why ruin a good life by ending it so badly?’” Yet he’s hanging on. He says he’s accepted the generosity of a stranger who took him in and he is also applying for disability benefits from the Social Security Administration. Whether or not they decide to take their own lives, people in their fifties who’ve been out of work for a long time (and the HuffPost has interviewed dozens of these people in the past few years) say they feel disconnected from society, as though they’re watching the world through a window. The isolation deepens as they sit at their computers, flinging resume after resume at prospective employers who rarely respond — even just to say no. Some hang out in online forums where jobless folks gab over the latest news on the economy or unemployment benefits. Kerri used to do this, too. She says she once closely followed the news on Congress.org because the site had excellent detail on benefits she might receive. The site’s administrators have described their comment boards as “almost like self-organizing self-help groups where people share information on [unemployment] benefits in their states.” Kerri says she also once sought out darker stories. “For some reason I was attracted to a lot of different stories that had to do with suicide,” she says. “I would read about it and I would think, ‘That sounds like a good idea. I could just go to sleep.’” Today, things are different. While Kerri says she’s still depressed, she has been coping more effectively after getting involved with a local church and finding some part-time sales work. “The fact that I’ve been able to get some temp jobs makes me feel like I am still worth something,” she says. Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

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Technology Stocks Now A Bargain After Dropping Post-Japan

April 14, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO (Noel Randewich) – Top technology companies warrant a fresh look as earnings season hits full swing next week after their shares were hard hit by sputtering PC sales and supply issues following Japan’s largest-ever earthquake. Fund managers have sold down sector bellwethers since the March 11 disaster, fearing worse-than-expected damage to margins as they battle to secure critical components from a country that supplies 14 percent of the world’s electronics. Plus sliding PC sales — blamed on an explosion in powerful tablet computers like Apple Inc’s iPad and smartphones — have triggered a shift away from entrenched PC players. Now, some argue major players such as Intel, Cisco and Hewlett-Packard present attractive bargains despite uncertainty about how much the sector will be affected by Japan over the next few months. Intel, HP, Dell and Microsoft Corp are trading at less than 10 times forward earnings versus the market’s 13.5 average. All have underperformed the market in past weeks. “Tech in general, especially things related to the PC, has not had strong a strong bid to it as of late,” said Pat Becker Jr., a portfolio manager at Becker Capital Management. But “if you look at corporate profits, these companies are putting up peak margins or close to it and are printing cash.” Since the quake, Intel’s stock has lost 5 percent, HP is off 1 percent, and Microsoft has added just 1 percent. That compares with a 1.5 percent gain for the S&P 500 Index. Even Apple — hurt by a rebalancing of the Nasdaq 100 and fears of supply hiccups for components like memory chips and touchscreen glass — has shed 3 percent and now trades at 13 times forward earnings. Analysts say the Cupertino, California, company remains a bargain despite gaining 38 percent over the past 12 months, with the highest projected earnings growth among major tech stocks yet still valued lower than Google Inc. For a table comparing Big Tech, please click link.reuters.com/jyh98r . QUAKE FALLOUT Overall, the U.S. technology sector trades at about 13.5 times expected earnings, about the same as the S&P 500 Index, according to StarMine SmartEstimates, which places more weight on recent forecasts by top-rated analysts. Google Inc reports on Thursday, kicking off a quarterly results season that will be picked apart by investors anxious about the fallout from Japan. World PC sales unexpectedly dipped 1.1 percent in the first quarter, according to research house Gartner — the first drop in two years. With the iPad dulling demand, IHS iSuppli expects PC sales to gain 11 percent this year, versus 2010′s 14 percent. But some say pessimism about the PC industry is exaggerated and ignores a corporate market where the tower and monitor still reign supreme, and where loosening budgets should spur a replacement cycle this year. “Technology is going to be a leadership space for the next year,” said Michael Yoshikami, CEO of YCMNET Advisors, which holds a number of technology stocks. “We are going to see tech upgrades sooner rather than later.” Wall Street has priced in conservative forecasts also due to the still-unclear impact of Japan’s crisis. But Wall Street may see volatile swings depending on executives’ forecasts. Japan accounts for 14 percent of the world’s electronics manufacturing, and the disaster damaged chip-making equipment and interrupted production. [nL3E7EM0FP] “While we think the results for the first quarter will be good, we’re more concerned about management commentary — talking down numbers, talking down expectations, perhaps using Japan as an excuse,” said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer at Solaris Asset Management. “Some investors will see right through that and see there’s an opportunity.” The consumer space is attractive, portfolio managers say. People increasingly see select gadgets as indispensable, which helps tech companies weather the impact of rising gasoline prices and weak jobs growth. “Some types of consumer electronics have moved into the category of needs, not want: in particular smartphones,” said Mike Shinnick, a portfolio manager at Wasatch Advisors Inc in Indiana. “Downloading music, watching videos, that’s what kids do for fun. They’re not asking for a new baseball mitt.” But semiconductor investing still requires caution. Japan’s role as supplier of a fifth of the world’s chips has caught Wall Street’s attention. Texas Instruments on Monday will be the first major U.S. chip player to report earnings, and will probably explain how much revenue it expects to lose after it was forced to temporarily close two factories in Japan. Intel follows Tuesday and is expected to post revenue below target due to weak notebook sales, especially after a flawed chipset interrupted the launch of its newest processors. But underscoring the value some see in the industry, Texas Instruments agreed to buy rival National Semiconductor for $6.5 billion — a 78 percent premium. “Tech doesn’t get much respect if you look at the multiples. Arguably it could still get more respect from investors,” said Sterne Agee analyst Shaw Wu. Other investors predict a slightly inflated March quarter due to over-stocking. Seagate Technology gave better- than-expected guidance for the January-March quarter, suggesting PC makers are securing more parts than they need. As investors hunt for bargains, analysts also warn about potentially overpriced items. Google, chipmaker Nvidia and Internet content delivery company Akamai Technologies carry more expensive multiples than the market average. “With a lot of components you’re going see some artificial inflation of demand in the March quarter because of the Japanese over-ordering phenomenon,” ThinkEquity analyst Rajesh Ghal warned. (Additional reporting by Bill Rigby in Seattle, editing by Edwin Chan and Maureen Bavdek) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Obama Team Hopes To Coax Back Online Donors

April 14, 2011

NEW YORK — If the grass-roots energy that fueled President Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign proves hard to duplicate as he seeks re-election, so too could the Internet-powered small donor base that helped him shatter all fundraising records. The weak economy, lack of a Democratic primary challenger and no clear front-runner in the Republican field may delay or prevent small donors from opening their wallets, strategists say, forcing a greater dependence on wealthy contributors for a re-election campaign that could cost more than $1 billion. Many Web-based activists also contend that Obama has let them down, from extending Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy to breaking his pledge to close the U.S. military prison for terrorist suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. That’s dampened the ardor of many online donors, says Peter Daou, who was Hillary Rodham Clinton’s Internet director in her 2008 presidential campaign but now backs Obama. “I will make the unequivocal statement: It will not be what it was,” Daou said. “There’s a sense of promises not kept, too much solicitousness of the Republican position. Many, many people are saying, ‘I’m not going to send him a dollar.’” Obama launches a series of fundraising events this month, beginning Thursday in his hometown of Chicago, before heading to California, New York, Texas and elsewhere. He will mingle with contributors who give as much as $35,800 or as little as $25. “There’s real power at the grass roots that is still there,” Obama adviser David Axelrod said. “Now, obviously, we are contending with a lot of forces out there that are well-heeled.” “I don’t know what the mix will be, but grass roots will be a major part of it,” Axelrod added. “But we have to be prepared to defend ourselves.” The online army that texted and tweeted Obama to victory in 2008 also helped the old-fashioned way. Some 54 percent of Obama’s $750 million haul came in contributions of $200 or less. His record fundraising allowed Obama to become the first presidential candidate to reject federal money in both the primary and general elections. The president’s 2012 re-election effort began last week in an email announcement to supporters. Aides said the campaign received 23,000 contributions in the first two days, 96 percent of which were less than $200. They declined to say how much came later in the week but insisted the early results were positive. “The response we got was much more robust than we anticipated,” Axelrod said. “But we don’t believe in treating our supporters like an ATM machine. We want them to help build the campaign. That comes first.” Persuading online supporters to contribute money is a more labor-intensive effort than simply including a solicitation page on the campaign website. Small donors typically are engaged through web activism, such as signing Internet petitions or watching and emailing videos to friends. They might then attend a local campaign event or two before deciding to make a donation. And grass-roots donors often wait until relatively late to contribute. They were slow to send checks to the Obama campaign through much of 2007, only beginning to engage early the next year when his primary battle with Clinton got under way. They also contributed heavily at the peak of the general election campaign, when Obama faced off against Republican John McCain. Some Obama advisers have played down the notion of a $1 billion fundraising goal, noting that in 2008, Obama raised more than $300 million during the protracted Democratic primary fight alone. With no credible primary challenger, they say, Obama may not be pushed to spend heavily until a Republican rival emerges. Still, advisers concede an overall lack of grass-roots enthusiasm could affect the high-dollar donor base as well. The president acknowledged the diminished excitement in a conference call with supporters last week, saying, “We may not have the exact same newness that we had.” Re-engaging major donors and fundraisers is another challenge the Obama team faces as it ramps up the campaign. Dozens of the campaign “bundlers” who collected checks from big donors in 2008 have been given ambassadorships and other government jobs and are therefore precluded from raising campaign money this time around. Some Wall Street donors, unhappy with the president’s efforts at financial regulation following the 2008 economic collapse, have indicated they may withhold support. And Obama himself will have less time to spend on the fundraising circuit than he did in 2008, as the demands of the presidency consume most of his time. That could make it harder to engage mid- and high-level donors who want to see him at fundraising events and won’t settle for a stand-in. The Obama team also will have to contend with the emergence of independent conservative groups like American Crossroads that are expected to raise and spend heavily to defeat the president. Crossroads and other groups were significant players in the 2010 election after the Supreme Court eased restrictions on political spending by corporations, unions and others. Several Democratic strategists have announced plans to launch their own independent groups to support Obama’s re-election and help Democratic Senate and House candidates in 2012, but those efforts are just starting to take shape. “He’ll need a lot of help from larger donors, but I think they will do very well on their small-donor program too,” said Peter Buttenweiser, a Philadelphia-based Obama bundler. “Once things pick up again, over six to nine months, the Internet will come into play.”

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Controversial Google Deal Approved

April 8, 2011

WASHINGTON — Government officials are letting Google Inc. proceed with its $700 million purchase of airline fare tracker ITA Software, but are imposing significant conditions on the deal. The purchase will establish the Internet search giant as a key player in the online travel market. ITA gives Google control over the technology that powers the reservation systems of most major U.S. airlines and many popular online fare-comparison services, including Kayak, TripAdvisor and Hotwire. But to win Justice Department clearance Friday, Google agreed to license ITA’s software to other companies, and it will be prohibited from accessing any proprietary data or technology of ITA customers that resides on or runs through ITA servers. In addition, the government will monitor Google to ensure it does not engage in anticompetitive behavior. That could include manipulating its powerful Internet search engine to steer consumers to its own services – or bury links to rivals far down in its search results – if it uses ITA to enter the online travel business. The company will be subject to broad requirements to report to government officials on its online travel operations, including travel search and advertising. In addition, the government will establish a forum for complaints about Google’s behavior This could eventually lay the groundwork for a broader investigation by either the Justice Department or the Federal Trade Commission into Google’s practices as it expands beyond general Internet search into more specialized markets. The company’s search results already highlight some of its own specialized services, including mapping, video and finance. The European Commission and the Texas attorney general are currently looking into whether Google manipulates search results to extend its monopoly into other online businesses. Google has promised it won’t sell airline tickets or book other travel arrangements on its own site. Rather, it has said it wants to use ITA to improve its search results for travel – giving consumers more choices and better ways to search for plane tickets. That would enable the company to command higher ad rates from airlines, hotels, rental car agencies and other leisure services trying to reach travelers.

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Texas Instruments Makes $6.5 Billion Buy

April 5, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO — Texas Instruments Inc. is buying National Semiconductor for $6.5 billion in a marriage of two of the world’s premier makers of analog chips, which are widely used in electronics to transform signals such as sound into digital form that computers can understand. In scooping up National Semiconductor, TI is getting a storied Silicon Valley company whose history stretches back more than 50 years and is known for its power-management chips. The deal is the latest example of consolidation among big players in the technology world as trends such as the explosion in smartphones have shaken up the competitive landscape. Longtime foes have joined forces while friendships have frayed as the boundaries between companies’ business lines have blurred. TI has agreed to pay $25 per share. The all-cash transaction represents a 78 percent premium over National Semiconductor’s stock price before the deal was announced. TI and National Semiconductor have been long-running rivals. TI, a leader in chips for cellphones, said swallowing National Semiconductor would be good for both companies’ sales. TI’s CEO Rich Templeton said the combined companies’ sales team will be 10 times bigger than National Semiconductor’s current sales force. “This acquisition is about strength and growth,” Templeton said in a statement. “National has an excellent development team, and its products combined with our own can offer customers an analog portfolio of unmatched depth and breadth.” Dallas-based TI noted that it makes some 30,000 types of analog chips, while National, based in Santa Clara, Calif., makes 12,000. TI said that it owned about 14 percent of the $42 billion analog market last year, while National Semiconductor owned about 3 percent. TI said the analog business will rise to about 50 percent of the company’s overall revenue when the deal closes, which TI expects will be within the next six to nine months. Last year, they made up about 43 percent of the company’s $14 billion in revenue. The rest was made up of various different kinds of chips. Ashok Kumar, an analyst with Collins Stewart, said he expects the deal will clear antitrust scrutiny because despite consolidation in the analog chip market, “the market is pretty brutal” and pricing is aggressive. He said Texas Instruments’ recent decision to exit the mobile-phone “baseband” business (chips that help phones connect to cellular networks) has put pressure on TI to find ways to replace the lost revenue. The baseband segment brought in $1.7 billion in revenue last year, and is expected to go to zero by next year. TI will continue to make “applications processors,” a different kind of chip that acts as the central brain of cellphones. Kumar called the deal “a match of mutual necessity – for National more than TI.” “National has been lost for quite some time – they didn’t appear to have critical share in any market of consequence,” he said. “TI is not without its own set of problems, but they can more than survive. But the issue they’re facing longer-term is they’re being squeezed out of the handset in the post-PC environment.” TI executives have touted the untapped opportunities for TI in the analog market as a key reason to expand in that area while shrinking parts of the wireless business. Shares of National Semiconductor surged $10.20, or 72.5 percent, to $24.27 in extended trading, after the deal was announced. TI shares fell 65 cents, or 1.9 percent, to $33.46. In the regular session National Semiconductor shares lost 16 cents to close at $14.07, while TI lost 12 cents to $34.11.

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Victory Energy Corporation Appoints Kenneth Hill to Its Board of Directors

April 4, 2011

NEWPORT BEACH, CA–(Marketwire – April 4, 2011) – Victory Energy Corporation ( PINKSHEETS : VYEY ), an oil and gas exploration and development company, today announced the appointment of Kenneth Hill to its board of directors. Mr. Hill currently serves as vice president and chief operating officer for the Company, responsible for managing operations, overseeing contract negotiations, field oversight and administration at the Company’s Austin, Texas location.

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U.S. Rules On Radiation Pills Vary Widely From State To State

March 31, 2011

NEW YORK — Potassium iodide pills have played a central role in Japan’s nuclear response. And they’ve contributed to widespread paranoia in the United States, as people fearing exposure to radiation from thousands of miles away have snapped up the substance from drugstore shelves and online vendors. But as a matter of U.S. emergency preparedness policy, the government’s distribution of potassium iodide to people living near nuclear plants is a hazy and voluntary process that varies widely from state to state. Although the Nuclear Regulatory Commission included potassium iodide in its emergency preparedness regulations nearly a decade ago, the decision on whether to distribute the radiation pills to the public was left up to individual states. Twenty-three of the 33 states that have people living within 10 miles of nuclear power plants have chosen to participate in the federal program. The inconsistent standards across the country point to the difficulties in managing public perceptions of a nuclear disaster and reveal a lack of consumer education about how the pills work. State officials who have chosen not to distribute potassium iodide say they worry that residents might be lured into a false sense of security and not evacuate in the case of a disaster. But doctors and other public health advocates have long urged for a more centralized approach on potassium iodide, which can reduce the risk of thyroid cancer for those exposed to radioactive iodine, particularly in infants and young children. Critics have long said that the federal government has shied away from requiring distribution of the pills to avoid any negative stigma attached to living near a nuclear plant. “Everyone agrees with the need for evacuation,” said Dr. Lewis Braverman, a professor at Boston University School of Medicine who coauthored a 2004 National Academy of Sciences report advocating the use of potassium iodide for anyone at risk from radioactive iodine. “But if that doesn’t occur, or if it’s slow, and you’re worried about radioactive iodine in the atmosphere … then I think it should be available.” Potassium iodide is available over the counter in drug stores, but not in great supply. As evidenced by the run on the substance at drugstores in the United States, the pills are often misunderstood. If taken shortly before or after exposure to radiation, potassium iodide can be effective in reducing the risk of thyroid cancer, mostly for people under 40. But they are in no way a panacea for the effects of radiation, since exposure to other radioactive elements can lead to other illnesses, such as lung cancer. Taking the pills effectively fills the thyroid gland with enough iodine to prevent the gland from absorbing radioactive iodine, a harmful isotope emitted from a nuclear reactor. Nonetheless, other countries with extensive nuclear power industries, such as France, have consistent distribution of potassium iodide to households living near nuclear plants. For years, the American Thyroid Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics have pushed for greater and more consistent distribution of the pills. Greater distribution doesn’t mean greater intake, though. States that do participate in the program warn that the pills should only be taken as directed — in case of emergency, while evacuating to a safe distance. Following the 1979 Three Mile Island accident in Pennsylvania, a commission appointed by President Jimmy Carter recommended that the United States stockpile potassium iodide, but the Nuclear Regulatory Commission did not adopt a rule regarding the substance until 2001. The rule now “requires that consideration be given to including potassium iodide as a protective measure for the general public that would supplement sheltering and evacuation.” It applies to states that have populations within 10 miles of a nuclear plant. At the time, the commission told states that there would only be a one-time distribution of the pills; since then the commission has told states they will continue to provide more supplies if they run out. Individual states had to come up with a distribution plan and submit it to the Federal Emergency Management Agency for approval. Methods of distributing potassium iodide vary: some states stockpile it in case of emergency, while others make it available to the public at regular intervals. Officials in states that have chosen not to distribute the potassium iodide to residents point out that the pills only address the thyroid gland, and not other parts of the body that could be harmed by exposure to radioactive elements. They also point out that pills could deter evacuation efforts. “It’s better for them to leave the area and get no exposure to radiation than rely on protection from one kind of radiation,” said Chris Van Deusen, a spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services. Other health officials said they decided not to distribute the pills because of logistical questions: how and when to hand out the pills. “If we’re telling people to get out, but they’d rather get potassium iodide first at some distribution point, it confuses our emergency plan,” said Donn Moyer, a spokesman for the Washington Department of Health, which opted not to participate in the federal program. But the inconsistencies are notable. In Wisconsin, for example, potassium iodide is handed out in a county near two power plants but not near another one. County officials near Wisconsin’s two nuclear power plants along Lake Michigan did not want to distribute the pills. But potassium iodide is distributed in a county on the other side of the state, which is within 10 miles of a nuclear power plant in Minnesota. Minnesota officials did opt into the federal potassium iodide program, so officials in the adjoining Wisconsin county felt it would be inconsistent if they were not also available in Wisconsin. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has not announced any specific policy changes since the Japan disaster, but noted that the commission is reviewing “all aspects of nuclear power plant safety and security regulations.”

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Andrew Reinbach: Fracking Tide Turns — Frackers Get Mean

March 28, 2011

The PR tide seems to be turning against fracking, and predictably, the political rhetoric from the gas industry and its allies is turning nasty. In upstate New York, for instance, Richard Downey, director of a local landowner’s coalition that hopes to lease its land to drillers, recently published an opinion piece in the Oneonta Daily Star playing the class warfare card — claiming pro-drillers are good, truck-driving local folk, while the antis are Volvo-driving, brie-eating NIMBY elitists against anything ruining the view from their estate. Downey himself is a retired New York City teacher, and while his rhetoric seems less than measured, it’s typical of the posture displayed in letters to the editor columns across the state, many of which read like pieces in right-wing blogs — vitriolic, largely fact-free, and wrapped in the flag, A recent editorial in The New York Post , for instance, did everything but claim anti-frackers are led by former Weatherman Bill Ayers, calling anti-frackers “Hard-core lefties and environmental groups” that include the Working Familes Party and MoveOn.org. This characterization of the anti-frackers isn’t even true; in New York’s Marcellus Shale region, for instance, the anti-fracking forces include local families farming the same land since the Revolution. The same is becoming true in states as far apart as Pennsylvania, Arkansas, and Wyoming, where concerns about the effect of hydro-fracking upon ground water supplies are getting more pronounced everyday — together with lawsuits over the same. But the rhetoric is a good indication of how defensive the frackers have become, as a rising tide of media stories about the dangers of fracking to the environment appear alongside reports of serious environmental accidents, and local governments banning fracking within their precincts. Pittsburgh, for instance, passed an anti-fracking ordinance last November. Since then, local townships across upstate New York have done the same — recently joined by Ontario, Canada. And last May in Flower Mound, Texas, no-fracking candidates swept a recent municipal election. In fact, the tide of public opinion is visibly turning against hydro-fracking — and not just in the Marcellus Shale region that begins in northern Alabama and ends near Utica, New York. Generally speaking, early industry assertions that hydro-fracking is perfectly safe have collapsed under a flood of facts about the procedure, leaving deep suspicions about the industry’s intentions and reliability. Enter a Philadelphia PR firm, Gregory/FCA, which charted the turning tide in a recent article it published in its blog, displaying data that made it clear that public opinion is turning against fracking. “Since the beginning of 2010, the positive sentiment in traditional media for Marcellus Shale has fallen dramatically, from a high of +3.1 to a low of -0.3 in January 2011,” wrote Gregory Matusky, the company president, in the report. Matusky follows up that polling data — he says he analyzed millions of media reports to come up with the downward trend — with what amounts to a memo on how to counter media reports like the one from Moundsville, West Virginia that the municipal water supply temporarily ran dry because local gas drillers withdrew so much water from it. Matusky’s main heads: • Publish an ocean of information about the Marcellus Shale. Matusky, who says he has no energy company clients, claims that the Marcellus Shale gas play is generally a good thing, but that the anti-fracking forces “…aren’t under the same time constraint as gainfully employed Americans [and] have…idle time to plant falsehoods, raise suspicions, and demonize the oil and gas industry.” • Never respond to the supposed negatives. Constantly focus the conversations on how domestic reserves of clean energy of natural gas that will reduce our nation’s carbon footprint, says Matusky. • Make it about people. “The people of Marcellus Shale are fierce, noble individuals who have been ignored for generations. The industry needs to…make their stories of economic renewal a mainstay of the storytelling.” How? “The industry should underwrite a [reality] show,” he says. • Dominate the online discussion. “The industry needs to dominate online conversations as a way to positively impact consumers, regulators, influencers, and ironically, the traditional media….” • Connect the dots for the public [about the benefits of natural gas]. • Language is important. Find a better term than fracking, says Matusky; “The very term “fracking” has a negative connotation. Much of what Matusky recommends is already finding its way into the public realm — Downey’s op-ed piece being only one example. Missing from Matusky’s analysis? Whether allowing hydro-fracking in the Northeast is a good business deal. People fighting to keep gas drilling out of their backyards like to point out, for instance, that the West and Midwest are running out of fresh water, and will eventually lead people and industry back to where it is — the Northeast. These people then say that looked at this way, swapping the region’s plentiful supplies of clean water for the money gas drilling will bring is, to all intents, trading its birthright for a mess of pottage. Whether notching up the rhetoric will save the gas industry’s bacon is uncertain at best. Pennsylvania and West Virginia may have already made their deal with the industry, but New York hasn’t, and aside from signs that new regulations covering fracking may be delayed almost indefinitely, two recent bills were introduced in the state legislature that would keep the fracking wolf from the door for some time: Assembly Bill A06541 proposes a 5-year moratorium on hydro-fracking, and Senate Bill S4220 would ban it altogether. Also muddying the water for the energy industry: The Environmental Protection Agency, under fire for having exempted fracking from the Clean Water Act in 2004, is conducting a wide-ranging analysis of all the environmental impacts of hydro-fracking and isn’t expected to issue a report for several years. The newly installed Commissioner of New York’s Department of Environmental Conservation, Joseph Martens, has made conflicting statements that, when parsed, suggest little may be approved in New York until the EPA issues its own regulations. Delay, though, may not turn out to be the best outcome, since it gives the energy industry plenty of time to follow Matusky’s advice and slap some new reality show on the airwaves. Maybe it’ll be called Gas Driller Angels.

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New Home Sales Plunge To Record Low In February

March 23, 2011

WASHINGTON — Sales of new homes plunged in February to the slowest pace on records dating back nearly half a century, a dismal sign for an already-weak housing market. New-home sales fell 16.9 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 250,000 homes, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. It’s the third straight monthly decline and far below the 700,000-a-year pace that economists view as healthy. New-home sales now account for just 5 percent of total home sales so far this year. They typically represent closer to 15 percent in healthier housing markets. There were just 186,000 new homes available for sale in February, the lowest inventory in more than four decades. The median price of a new home dropped nearly 14 percent to $202,100, the lowest since December 2003. The median is now 30 percent higher than the median price of resold homes – twice the typical markup. In response, homebuilders are cutting their selling prices and building more inexpensive homes, pushing down sales prices. They are struggling to compete with a wave of foreclosures, which has lowered the price of previously occupied homes. High unemployment, tight credit and uncertainty over prices have also kept many potential buyers from making purchases. “Falling housing prices of existing homes are robbing demand for new houses and until that changes, the housing market will be in trouble,” said Yelena Shulyatyeva, an analyst at BNP Paribas. Last year was the fifth straight year of declines for new-home sales after they reached record highs during the housing boom. Economists say it could take years before sales return to a healthy pace. Poor sales of new homes mean fewer jobs in the construction industry, which normally powers economic recoveries. Each new home creates an average of three jobs for a year and $90,000 in taxes, according to the National Association of Home Builders. Many builders are waiting for new-home sales to pick up and for the glut of foreclosures to be reduced. But with 3 million foreclosures forecast this year nationwide, a turnaround isn’t expected for at least three years. “We fully expect further price declines in order to help clear inventory from the market although this problem is more acute in the existing home market than the new home market,” said Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist for Miller Tabak + Co. Homebuilders have taken notice. Residential construction has all but halted. Builders broke ground last month on the fewest homes in nearly two years. And building permits, a gauge of future construction, sank to their lowest in more than 50 years. By contrast, sales of previously occupied homes have fallen by a more modest 3 percent in the past year. Prices have dropped more than 5 percent. In February, the median price for a resale was $156,100, according to the National Association of Realtors. New-home sales fell to record lows last month in almost every region of the country. Sales dropped 57.1 percent in the Northeast, 27.5 percent in the Midwest, 14.7 percent in the West and 6.3 percent in the South. Those are record lows in each region except the West, which recorded its lowest sales pace in October. Harsh winter weather that dumped record amounts of snowfall over much of the Northeast and Midwest, along with rare snowstorms in Texas, had an impact on February sales. Given the pace of new-home sales, it would take nearly 9 months to clear them off the market. Economists say a six-month supply of homes is healthy.

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Senate Dems: GOP Cuts Would Cause Surge In Gas Prices

March 22, 2011

WASHINGTON — With gas prices soaring, 45 Senate Democrats signed a letter on Tuesday urging GOP leaders to abandon their proposed cuts to the budget for a key regulator that oversees the food and energy markets, part of a broader effort to reduce government spending. The letter, sent to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) on Tuesday, argued that Republicans should protect funding for the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which would be cut by one-third under a defeated House GOP plan. “The CFTC serves as an important ‘cop on the beat,’ working to protect American consumers by cracking down on manipulation and other market abuses that can drive up oil prices,” the letter reads. “At a time where gas prices are rising and squeezing American families, we have a responsibility to provide our watchdogs the resources they need to fulfill their important oversight and regulatory responsibilities.” For their part, Republican leaders say the responsibility for rising gas prices rests with the Obama administration, which put a freeze on some offshore wells last year following the disastrous oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Boehner spokesman Michael Steel dismissed the letter from Senate Democrats as an attempt to divert the blame for the price of oil. “This is just another attempt to distract from Washington Democrats’ irresponsible opposition to increased American energy production, which would lower gas prices, reduce our dependence on foreign energy, and create American jobs,” Steel told HuffPost. “American families know talk is cheap but gas is not — and the Democrats who run Washington have no plan to help.” House and Senate leaders have struggled to reach an agreement on government funding for the remainder of the fiscal year, partly because of riders lumped in with the funding bill that would block money for Planned Parenthood, last year’s health care law, the Environmental Protection Agency and consumer financial protection. The two chambers must compromise before a current stopgap measure expires on April 8. The House Republican bill, which the Senate voted down on March 9 , would require the CFTC to lay off about a third of its staff. Some economists and consumer advocates are concerned that aggressive Wall Street speculation in energy markets is helping to drive up the price of food and gas around the world. “So long as you have money available to banks at zero cost, no long-term productive outlets for investment, and the capacity to make money by manipulating commodity pools, the situation is ripe for speculative excess,” University of Texas economist James Galbraith told HuffPost last month. Oil prices have been soaring in recent months , eclipsing $100 a barrel, which has sent the price of gas to over $3.50 a gallon and nearly $4 in California. A report prepared for the April meeting of the Group of 20 leading world economies by the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development attributes rising prices primarily to increases in real demand, rather than financial speculation. Yet the increase in prices has also tracked speculation’s rise, prompting the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization to cite “growing linkage with outside markets, in particular the impact of ‘financialization’ on futures markets” as a “root cause” of food price volatility in a September meeting. According to CFTC Commissioner Bart Chilton, the number of Wall Street bets on energy prices has increased by 64 percent since June of 2008, when heavy speculation helped push oil prices near $150 a barrel, driving gas near $5 a gallon. The CFTC has long overseen a small part of these markets, with roughly $5 trillion a year in trading. But under the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill signed into law by President Barack Obama, the agency is now responsible for policing a $500 trillion industry. CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler has said regulators will be unable to implement reforms without a significant increase in funding. The Obama administration has proposed boosting the CFTC’s annual budget by 77 percent, from $168.8 million to $298.8 million. That number is small relative to other major regulators — The Securities and Exchange Commission, another key monitor of Wall Street trading, received $1.12 billion last year. In February, Sen. John Boozman (R-Ark.) told HuffPost that speculation in commodities markets was a “legitimate concern,” arguing that it not only affected energy prices, but food prices as well. “The reality is, as commodity prices go up, there’s only a finite amount for food aid and things. People really are going to start dying,” Boozman said. As for Obama’s drilling policies, the president defended his record on drilling earlier this month, stating during a press conference that domestic oil production is at a seven-year high and the administration is willing to dip into oil reserves if necessary. Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.), chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources committee, likewise defended Obama during a floor speech last week. He said energy experts have dismissed claims that the administration’s drilling policies led to higher gas prices, arguing uncertainty in the Middle East is a more likely culprit. “First, we need to enable further expansion of our renewable fuel industry, which is currently facing infrastructure and financing constraints,” Bingaman said. “Second, we need to move forward the timeline for market penetration of electric vehicles. Finally, we need to make sure we use natural gas vehicles in as many applications as make sense based on that technology.” Democrats have made oil prices a key talking point during negotiations over the budget, arguing that Republican measures weaken efforts to expand alternative fuel sources. The House GOP budget cut funding for energy efficiency and renewable energy by $786 million from current levels and reduced the Department of Energy’s loan guarantee budget by $250 million. “We find it equally troubling that your preferred budget would cut billions of dollars in investments in critical programs focused on developing new alternative fuels and clean energy technologies, undermining our competitiveness and increasing our trade deficit with oil producing nations,” Democrats wrote in the letter. “We urge you to reverse these policies that will only set our nation backward, and put America’s independence from foreign oil even further out of reach.”

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Canadian Aurcana to reopen Texas silver mine

March 20, 2011

Canadian Aurcana to reopen Texas silver mine

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Donald Trump 2012? Political Operatives Say Billionaire Exploring Mechanics Of Running Competitive Campaign

March 19, 2011

NEW YORK — Donald Trump boots contestants off his TV show with a famous two-word catch phrase: “You’re fired.” He may want the chance to say the same to President Barack Obama. The real estate tycoon with the comb-over hairdo and in-your-face attitude plans to decide by June whether to join the field of GOP contenders competing in 2012 to make the Democratic incumbent a one-term president. Trump insists he’s serious. He rejects skeptics’ claims that he’s using the publicity to draw viewers to “Celebrity Apprentice,” the NBC reality program he co-produces and hosts. “The ratings on the show are through the roof. I don’t need to boost the ratings,” Trump told The Associated Press in a recent interview. “But the country is doing so badly. I wish there was someone in the Republican field I thought would be incredible because that’s what we need right now.” If he runs, Trump would follow a well-worn path of wealthy businessmen who have sought the White House before. Recent examples include Christian Broadcasting Network founder Pat Robertson in 1988, tech mogul Ross Perot in 1992 and publishing executive Steve Forbes in 1996. Michael Bloomberg, the billionaire New York City mayor, also has hinted at national political ambitions even as he says he won’t enter the race. Trump is prepared to spend as much as $600 million of his personal fortune on the race. “Part of the beauty of me is that I’m very rich,” he told ABC’s “Good Morning America.” He flirted with presidential campaigns in 1988 and 2000, but never did run. So what makes the 2012 race any different? Several political operatives in Washington and elsewhere say privately that Trump has reached out to them repeatedly in recent weeks to learn about the mechanics of running a campaign, asking questions about how much money he would need, what type of an organization he would have to build – and whether he could win. Publically, Trump has taken several steps to suggest he’s not joking. He delivered a well-received speech to the Conservative Political Action Committee conference last month in Washington. He’s done interviews with reporters in Iowa, the first-in-the-nation caucus state, and is planning a trip in June to leadoff primary state New Hampshire for a presidential candidate’s rite of passage – appearing at a political breakfast series called Politics and Eggs. Last week, Michael Cohen, one of his top business advisers who is running a draft-Trump website, met with GOP activists in Iowa. Some people close to Trump also say they think he just might take the plunge this time. “I think he’s looking at it fairly seriously, and he has the money and liquidity to do it. He’d make a very strong candidate,” said Dick Morris, a Democrat-turned-Republican strategist whose father was Trump’s lawyer for many years. “He’s kind of sui generis, in his own category. He’s someone who’s accomplished things and won’t take any crap.” Republican pollster John McLaughlin said the themes Trump is stressing would find a receptive audience among GOP primary voters. “He has a message that’s resonating: American decline, China rising, and that America needs to turn things around,” McLaughlin said. “It’s not a politically correct message and it will appeal to Republicans … and could put him in major contention.” Famously brash, Trump minces few words when talking about his beliefs: _China “has taken all of our jobs.” The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, the Mideast oil cartel, “is ripping us right and left. … You’re going to see $5 a gallon gas pretty soon.” _Japan, recovering from an earthquake and tsunami and trying to avert a nuclear disaster, has “ripped us off for years” as a trading partner. _Obama should be pressed to disclose the original birth certificate. “When you look at what happens today, you look at the misconduct, the fraud and forgeries, you really want to see proof,” Trump told the AP. Obama was born and grew up in Hawaii, and his 2008 campaign issued a certification of live birth – an official document from the state. _The “birther” movement has legitimate concerns, Trump told ABC. “The reason I have a little doubt, just a little, is because he grew up and nobody knew him.” Trump certainly has the strong opinions of a candidate. But would the thrice-married billionaire known for his extravagant hotels and golf courses brave the mundane rituals of retail campaigning and the intense examination his business empire and personal wealth would draw? “People thinking of running have to file a personal financial disclosure within 30 days of registering with the FEC. Does anyone really think that Donald Trump, under penalty of perjury, would file such a document?” campaign finance lawyer Jan Baran asked. A candidacy also could present legal troubles given Trump’s web of business interests. While Trump is not formally connected to Cohen’s draft effort, he allowed Cohen to use a Trump corporate jet for the trip. Trump booster and billionaire pharmaceutical executive Stewart Rahr paid for the trip, which led to a Federal Election Commission complaint from a supporter of Texas Republican Rep. Ron Paul. Trump, 64, insists he’s prepared for the scrutiny. “I always heard if you’re very, very successful, you can’t run for high political office – too many victories, fights and enemies,” Trump told the AP. “And yet that’s what this country needs. We can’t have any more of what we’re having.” Trump’s past could dog him. His divorce from first wife, Ivana, over his affair and subsequent marriage with actress Marla Maples made him a New York tabloid staple in the 1990s. He’s been married since 2005 to Melania Knauss, a former model from Slovenia who is 24 years his junior. His three marriages produced five children, and he has two grandchildren. He is known for finding ways to inject himself into news of the day. Last summer, for example, he offered to buy the building set to be turned into an Islamic center near ground zero in New York City. His politics are all over the map. He mulled an independent White House bid in 2000. He’s made political contributions to many Democrats over the years, including New York Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada. Last year, Trump gave $50,000 to American Crossroads, a GOP-aligned group that spent millions to defeat Democrats nationwide. The biggest question facing Trump may be not whether Republican voters will overlook all that. It may be whether he even wants to ask them to. ___ Online: Trump biography: http://tinyurl.com/nguhxj

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Nathan Newman: How Amazon’s Unfair Practices Are Worsening State Budget Crises

March 18, 2011

I love Amazon. Our family is a Prime member and, living in New York City without a car, we order from Amazon what feels like every other day. And their service is fabulous, with usually next-day diaper delivery for our new baby and customer service where you reach a real human being instantly. And pretty much a no-questions-asked return policy. So with such great service and wide popularity with its customers, why does Amazon feel it can only compete with an unfair tax advantage? As I detailed here , Amazon is unfortunately leading the political charge against states seeking to require online retailers to collect sales taxes on goods sold in their states. Just this past week, Amazon terminated its whole Illinois affiliate program , where local websites link to Amazon, in order to evade a recently passed Illinois law that required online retailers market in the state to pay sales taxes if they had people in the state marketing on their behalf. Losses of state and local sales tax revenue from online retailers evading the tax will total an estimated $11.4 billion by 2012, according to this University of Tennessee study . That adds up to hundreds of thousands of teachers that states will need to fire, community health clinics closed across the nation, and cutbacks in public safety in all our communities. Why Won’t Amazon Compete on a Level Playing Field: I live in New York which passed a similar law, and Amazon chose not to terminate its affiliate program here, so I pay sales tax on Amazon purchases. But that hasn’t stopped me and other state residents from using Amazon, since even with sales tax, it often provides better value than competitors locally. But why should Amazon ever get the unfair competitive advantage of not having to collect sales taxes? A basic principle of tax policy is that the same product should be taxed the same whoever sells it. Customers should never be making decisions based on evading taxes; otherwise, less efficient retail strategies may be adopted based on the tax system rather than on the inherent value of the service. Online Tax Evasion Shifts Tax Burden onto Low-Income Families: And it’s just economically unfair to make it more expensive to shop at a local store than to shop online. Online shoppers at places like Amazon are wealthier than people who only shop locally. So if online shoppers aren’t paying the sales taxes needed for local schools and hospitals, that means the tax burden shifts from wealthier residents to poorer residents. Most people don’t realize lower-income families pay a higher percentage of their income in state and local taxes than the wealthy , so the rise of online shopping and tax evasion is just making a bad situation worse. Excuses for Online Sales Tax Loophole aren’t Persuasive: And the following are just a few quick rebuttals to Amazon and other online retailer arguments as to why they deserve their loophole. I’m going to tap a report by Michael Mazerov at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, who has been birddogging Amazon for years on this issue, for many of these arguments: Myth: Online Retailers Don’t Benefit from Sales Taxes: First, Amazon contracts with delivery trucks using roads paid with tax dollars and their users benefit from state investments in broadband expansion in states across the country. Second, the sales tax isn’t paid by Amazon; it’s paid by its customers, who live and benefit from the wide range of services paid for with local and state tax dollars. Myth: Collecting taxes from multiple states is too complicated: In a database-driven world, which Amazon and online retailers specialize in, matching different tax rates to different customers is just not very challenging. And since Amazon already collects sales taxes on behalf of companies like Target, who have a physical presence in most states and are obligated to collect all sales taxes, it actually has the infrastructure in place. In fact, it calculates and collects sales tax in some states on behalf of approximately 5,000 independent merchants that sell items on its website, despite its public complaints of how tough it would be to collect from its own customers. Myth: Tax Avoidance is not a Big Part of Amazon’s Strategy: The reality is that Amazon has created multiple corporate subsidiaries to try to evade state taxes. For example, Amazon subsidiary A-9, based in California, is responsible for the ongoing refinement of the search engine customers use to find items on Amazon’s website — obviously a key asset for a company that sells 24 million different products – yet Amazon doesn’t pay sales tax in that state. It has inventory warehouses in Arizona, Indiana, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Virginia structured as separate corporations, so that Amazon ships its own goods using its own warehouses in those states, yet claims it has no physical presence. And then there are just the gross political deals, such as the one currently being proposed in South Carolina, where Amazon will build its own warehouse in that state, yet will receive a special tax break from the state explicitly allowing it to evade taxes. The state Chamber of Commerce and conservative groups are condemning this $40 million giveaway to Amazon as a grossly unfair deal for the company. Need a Federal Solution: Ultimately, even the laws like New York’s and Illinois’s will only address part of the problem of online retailing. What’s needed is a federal law requiring all retailers selling goods in any state to collect and remit sales taxes to the home state of each customer. A Main Street Fairness Act has been introduced repeatedly over many years, but is now needed even more desperately by state governments facing massive deficits. Crossposted from TechProgress

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Chase Tests $5 ATM Fee

March 17, 2011

Bank customers could face $5 ATM fees. In Illinois, JPMorgan Chase is testing $5 fees for non-customers, in Texas, it’s $4. If the trial runs make enough money, the fees could be rolled out nationwide, the Wall Street Journal reports. HSBC has already hiked rates, charging all non-customers $3 for using the banks’ machines. TD Bank, and PNC Bank are now charging their own own customers $2 for using out-of-network ATMs, unless they sign up for accounts with monthly fees as high as $25, the paper reports. Faced with losing billions of dollars in revenue once new regulations limiting debit card and overdraft charges kick in as part of the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, banks are looking for new ways to make money. The same scramble led Chase to consider a $50 spending limit for debit cards. Banks are increasingly charging both for using their ATMs if you’re not a customer, and using another banks machines if you are. Banks made $7.1 billion from ATM fees last year, the WSJ reports, $3 billion from charging their own customers for using out-of-network ATMs. “It’s easy to compare debit cards by looking at the monthly fee, so banks are going to try to minimize the monthly fees and load you with fees in different ways — and ATM fees are going to become one of the most popular ways to do that,” Odysseas Papadimitriou, CEO of CardHub.com told CNNMoney . Banks justify charging you to get hold of your own money with claims that ATM networks are expensive to build and maintain. But, the WSJ reports, most of the 425,000 ATMs in the U.S. are not owned by banks, they’re owned by the companies who place terminals in delis, bars and casinos.

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Texas Economic Miracle Beginning To Tarnish

March 17, 2011

AUSTIN, Texas — Some in Texas had talked tough about solving the state’s budget problem by austerity alone, but lawmakers finally faced a hard fact: Texas is in serious financial trouble. The severity of the state’s $27 billion budget crisis was evident in the furrowed brows, sad eyes and pained expressions of legislators. They fidgeted in their seats as hundreds of teachers, parents and disabled people explained in testimony in recent weeks how proposed budget cuts would ruin their lives. Legislatures elsewhere are facing budget problems, but most are blending cuts with asset sales, increased fees and tax modifications to soften the impact. Texas prides itself on lean government so Republicans here promised to solve the crisis here by budget cuts alone. Then rhetoric hit reality this week. The result was the latest and most vivid example of a state taking steps it had fiercely resisted. The Republican committee chairman’s southern accent turned plaintive as he urged legislators who had campaigned on preserving the state’s $9.2 billion Rainy Day Fund to now break that promise to ease the budget pressure. “If you want to close this shortfall through cuts alone, you have to either (completely) cut payments to Medicaid providers, cut payments to school districts or lay-off a substantial number of state employees,” said state Rep. Jim Pitts, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. “You would have to do these things immediately.” Magnifying the difficulty of the move here was that Pitts and other conservatives knew they had to get the state’s – and perhaps the nation’s – most outspoken advocate of budget cutting — Gov. Rick Perry — to climb down from the no-spending pledge with them. It took a week of convincing, but Perry, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and Speaker Joe Strauss – all Republicans – issued a statement on Tuesday approving a $3.2 billion withdrawal from the reserve fund to plug the budget hole, in addition to making $1 billion in cuts. That deal will solve the budget problem – until Aug. 31. Lawmakers still need to cut another $23 billion from the next two-year budget. “In other words, the state only has about three-fourths of the money it needs to continue doing what it is doing now,” explained F. Scott McCown, director of the Center for Public Policy Priorities, an advocacy group for the poor. “And every single thing the state does now is something that the governor previously agreed it ought to be doing.” Several months into the current legislative session, the government fiscal crisis across the nation is proving as difficult for states with a tradition of austerity as for those more accustomed to spending. Other conservative states are struggling with how to pay for keeping tough-on-crime corrections policies in place. Perry, the state’s longest serving governor, has signed every budget over the last 10 years and praised lawmakers for spending only what’s necessary. Last week lawmakers pressed Perry’s budget experts to help cut $4 billion from the current budget, but neither side could reach the goal. So Perry relented, but his support for tapping the Rainy Day Fund now came with an ultimatum about the budget that begins Sept. 1. “I remain steadfastly committed to protecting the remaining balance of the Rainy Day Fund, and will not sign a 2012-2013 state budget that uses the Rainy Day Fund,” Perry warned. So the dilemma may return. The Texas Public Policy Foundation, one of the most influential conservative groups in Texas, opposed this week’s concession and will fight any future solutions involving spending. “We are disappointed to learn that Texas will likely resort to using its Rainy Day Fund this early in the legislative session,” said Talmadge Heflin, director of the group’s Center for Fiscal Policy. “Those who seek to empty the fund because it is raining today have not checked the long-range weather forecast.” That Republican leaders’ posture in the financial crisis came in stark contrast to their campaign rhetoric. “Texas is better off than practically any state in the country,” Perry said in September, well after the coming problem was identified. When asked about the budget deficit in December, Perry dismissed the question as speculative. Even though Texas’ budget shortfall is among the worst in the nation, Perry says Texas remains an example for other states. Last week, he touted a Federal Reserve Bank statement forecasting that Texas could add more than 264,000 jobs in 2011. Proposed budget cuts, though, could lay-off 100,000 school employees, 60,000 nursing home workers and eliminate 9,600 state jobs this year. Democrats question why Perry and Republican lawmakers would tap the Rainy Day Fund to pay bills to creditors due in August, but not to save jobs. Using the fund, which is made up of revenue from oil and gas taxes, could “mitigate the cuts to our children’s education, the zeroing out of pre-kindergarten, the zeroing out of college scholarships for all freshman starting in 2012 and 2013,” Democratic state Rep. Mike Villarreal said. But there is little for Democrats to do. Republicans hold every statewide office in Texas, two-thirds of the state House seats and 19 out of the 31 seats in the Senate. The main political division is between veteran conservatives and ultra-conservative Tea Party Caucus members. State Rep. Debbie Riddle, a caucus member, said her constituents expect her to slash state spending. In the end, though, she voted to spend the Rainy Day Fund. “I don’t think there is one of us … who has not had our heart hurt and even broken in two with a lot of the testimony we have heard,” she said. To tap the Rainy Day Fund “is a long step for me, and I imagine it is for others here, too.” Pitts, the appropriations committee chair, acknowledged that making $23 billion in cuts for the next budget would be devastating. Pitts said. He added that he has a plan that he doesn’t want to make public yet. But if it involves the Rainy Day Fund, the question will be whether he can rally enough conservative support for it when the time comes.

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