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(MENAFN – Gulf Times) Alternative routes for Middle East crude wouldn’t compensate for the loss of exports in the event of a possible blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, according to industry experts, …

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Hormuz alternatives ‘may not compensate’ for blockade

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(MENAFN – Gulf Times) World economic leaders turned their fire on the eurozone yesterday at a Davos forum increasingly frustrated by the single currency bloc’s struggle to come to grips with its …

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World leaders slam eurozone foot-dragging on debt crisis

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Google sees ‘android-operated home’

January 12, 2012

(MENAFN – Arab Times) Google’s Android software is best known for powering smartphones, but executive chairman Eric Schmidt sees a future where it could also help devices communicate at …

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Irene shuts down New York

August 28, 2011

(MENAFN – Gulf Times) From the Carolinas to Maine, tens of millions of people were in the path of the giant 830km wide storm that dumped more than 43cm of rain on parts of coastal North Carolina …

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Iran making carbon fibre despite ban

August 28, 2011

(MENAFN – Gulf Times) Iran yesterday inaugurated a plant for producing carbon fibre, which it is banned from importing by international sanctions targeting dual-use materials, the official Irna news …

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UK- Hope of finding Libyan who shot police officer

August 28, 2011

(MENAFN – Gulf Times) Eyewitness reports emerged yesterday identifying a prime suspect in the 1984 killing of a policewoman outside the Libyan embassy, as Britain hopes Muammar Gaddafi’s downfall …

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UK- Warning issued on Nurofen Plus

August 28, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab Times) Thousands of packs of an over-the-counter painkiller could contain a potentially harmful anti-psychotic drug, a watchdog has warned. People here are being warned to check …

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US- Consumer confidence falls in August

August 27, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab Times) US economic growth in the second quarter was slower than previously thought and consumer confidence sank in August, further reducing prospects of a strong pick-up in output in …

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African Union to pledge funds for Horn drought crisis

August 24, 2011

(MENAFN – Gulf Times) African leaders is meeting tomorrow to pledge funds to tackle the famine in Somalia and extreme drought across the Horn of Africa which are putting millions of people at risk …

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Nuts, soy, avocado beat low-fat diet

August 24, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab Times) People who ate a diet rich in foods that lower cholesterol, such as nuts, soy, avocado, olive oil and oats, saw a bigger drop in cholesterol than people on a low-fat diet, said …

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Biden seeks to reassure China on US debt

August 22, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab Times) China’s prime minister expressed confidence Friday in the US economy as he held talks with visiting Vice-President Joe Biden after a historic downgrade of the United States’ …

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Siberian court sets hearing

August 22, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab Times) MOSCOW, Aug 20, (AFP): BP’s problems in the high-stakes Russian oil market mounted Friday with news that a Siberian court had set a hearing into a $3 billion claim by a local …

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UK- PFI model comes under attack in UK

August 22, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab Times) British state borrowing tumbled by more than expected in July, boosted by its banking sector levy and improving local government finances, official data showed on Friday. …

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Banks in race to shed commercial property debt

June 4, 2011

Financial Times – UK Banks in race to shed commercial property debt By Daniel Thomas, Property Correspondent Published: May 19 2011 22:30 | Last updated: May 19 2011 22:30 Banks are fighting to reduce a £224bn exposure …

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Top Business Writer Jumps To NYT

May 10, 2011

Business journalist and author James Stewart is leaving Dow Jones to become a New York Times business columnist. Stewart will succeed Joe Nocera, who left the business desk to become an op-ed writer for the Times. Stewart’s column will appear on Saturdays. In order to take the job, Stewart is walking away from the company that has been his home for the past 27 years in Dow Jones. “I just think the Times is a great institution,” he said.

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New Details About Facebook’s Groupon ‘Killer’

April 26, 2011

Whoops. Looks like The New York Times has a little embargo breaking situation on their hands. (Which we love — chaos!) They’ve just put up a story with the URL: http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/latest-rival-to-groupon-livingsocial-facebook- embargo-till-midnight / (bolding mine). That page is obviously no longer found, but it was live for a bit. And it is a big one: Facebook’s Groupon/LivingSocial “killer”.

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Robert E. Scott: Putting U.S.-China Trade in its Proper Perspective

April 11, 2011

An April 7 column in the New York Times Economix blog highlighted the rapid growth of U.S. exports to China, which look impressive in isolation. But this is a biased and one-sided view — exports have been overwhelmed by the growth of U.S. imports from China and the bilateral trade deficit, as shown in the graph below. When trying to assess the costs and benefits of the U.S./China trade relationship, counting only exports is like judging a baseball game by only counting runs scored by the home team. It might make you feel good, but tells you nothing about who is winning or losing the game. Properly measured, U.S. imports from China were $364 billion in 2010, vs. domestic exports of only $85.8 billion (excluding transshipments of goods from other countries), for a trade deficit of $278.3. Even when goods made in other countries are included with U.S. exports, the deficit in 2010 was $273.1 billion, substantially more than estimates reported by the Times (“$180 to $250 billion”). A sizable share of U.S. exports to China is raw materials used to produce goods that are re-exported back to the United States. Four of the top six industries producing exports are waste and scrap products, semiconductors, resins and synthetic rubber and fibers, and basic chemicals. Sectors such as cash grains (the top export commodity) and waste and scrap support very few U.S. jobs. Such trade may be good for U.S. multinational companies (MNCs), but provides few benefits for the domestic economy. Overall, the large and growing trade deficit with China has displaced millions of U.S. jobs , most in the manufacturing sector which has lost 5.5 million jobs since 2000. The Economix report relies on data published by the U.S. China Business Council, a trade association representing MNCs doing business in China. These firms have profited enormously by outsourcing production to China. China has subsidized these firms through massive currency manipulation, which reduces the costs of their exports by 25 to 40%, and by pouring tens of billions of dollars into subsides of products like steel , glass and paper products . U.S. MNCs should not be allowed to dictate U.S. trade policy. The U.S. needs to get tough and demand that China and other currency manipulators revalue their currencies and end other unfair trade practices. Nibbling around the edges with a WTO case for one sector and import surge protection for another will not get the job done. The U.S. should start by threatening to impose large tariffs on all U.S. imports from currency manipulators.

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Setting The Record Straight On GE’s Taxes

April 4, 2011

There’s a heated debate over General Electric’s taxes in places ranging from the front page of the New York Times to the blogosphere to, of all places, “The Daily Show.” In the 10 days since the Times touched off this debate, what started out as something resembling a conversation has degenerated into posturing, name-calling, and shrieking. So, did GE really not pay any income taxes on a $5.1 billion U.S. profit last year? Is it really getting a tax refund?

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Robert Lenzner: I Should Have Kept Those Buffalo Nickels

March 29, 2011

It’s a sign of the times, when gold and silver are making new highs in precious metals markets and investors everywhere are worried about the value of their paper money. Those old coins in the bottom of your attic trunk just got marvelously valuable, if two full-page ads in the New York Times this weekend is any proof. You are asked to bring your old Buffalo nickels. I used to have some, but they are long gone. Try to find those old silver quarters and dimes or pre-1966 paper money in “Brand New Condition” and you could collect a small fortune-a very small fortune. Up to $300 for a $100 bill. You’re also being invited to bring in wrist watches (up to $70,000 for a Patek Philippe, $20,000 for a Rolex), sterling pitchers, flatware and candlesticks, gold wedding bands ($100), diamonds (1 carat, $4,000), even costume jewelry, or wheat pennies (whatever they are) at 20% over face value. Five days at eight hotels in NYC area sponsored by Anderson, Carter, Bascom & Assoc., who warn “You should not clean your coins! You may hurt their value! Under the heading “Important Economic Information” there is the suggestion that high prices for your gold and silver may not last forever. “We have studied the investment and collectibles markets for decades, and in the past during times of economic uncertainty (which is happening now), there have been dramatic price declines in many areas of the jewelry, coin, and collectible markets.” Hmmm! I’d like to know when this economic certainty is coming. Doesn’t seem too likely to me, what with global markets, spiking food and fuel prices, political instability, sovereign debt issues, radioactive nuclear plants, and the need to get the U.S. budget into balance.

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GE’s Twitter Campaign Against The New York Times

March 28, 2011

After a damning New York Times story accusing General Electric of having paid $0 in American taxes despite $5.2 billion in domestic revenue, the company is fighting back–by Twitter. In a peculiar gambit, GE’s strategy seems to be to use Twitter –via @GEpublicaffairs , a still uncertified account–to respond to a random assortment of writers at various outlets totally unaffiliated with the New York Times , who just happened to tweet the story at some point. Recipients of @ replies from the GEpublicaffairs account include such figures as Slate ‘s tech columnist Farhad Manjoo, Business Insider editor-in-chief Henry Blodget, and a slew of other writers from places including the National Journal and Atlantic Wire . Though most received the form response “@_____ learn more GE tax facts visit http://bit.ly/ea6Ay2″ followed by nuggets contradicting the Times story, like “GE paid almost $2.7 billion in cash taxes in 2010″ and “GE didn’t receive payment back from govt as a result of the tax benefit,” others, like the Business Insider main account were harangued to “Stop the misleading attacks.” The GE public affairs account calls the Times story “inaccurate,” “erroneous,” and “grossly oversimplified.” But some people GE has reached out to with an @ reply seem less than convinced. Carla Zilka tweeted, “I don’t know if NYT would print false facts re: GE, so someone is not being, ahem, “honest.”" The dispute: what kind of taxes constitute that $2.7 billion GE claims to have paid? @khivi tweeted “@Gepublicaffairs tweets confirm @nytimes that GE paid $0 corporate tax,” to which GE responded “They are separate. Of $2.7B income tax paid, signf portion was US fed. GE also paid $1B+ in payroll, state & local use & property tax.” Henry Blodget, in particular, has engaged in an interrogation of the account. After asking them whether the Times was wrong about GE’s $0 US tax bill, GE Public Affairs responded, “Well, GE paid U.S. $2.7B in cash taxes in 2010.” At this point, he dragged the Times’ Bill Keller into the fight, tweeting, “If I’m not mistaken, GE has now said that the NYT story saying it paid no US taxes last year is flat-out wrong. @gepublicaffairs @nytkeller” Interestingly enough, though, Blodget goes a step further than the official GE response , which, while calling the story “distorted and misleading,” skirts around actually saying the story is “wrong.”

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Scott Bittle and Jean Johnson: Fiscal Follies: Is it Time to Raise Taxes, Simplify Them, or Both?

March 21, 2011

Americans face two very annoying prospects in the next few weeks. One is that the government may shut down because elected officials can’t agree on a federal budget that begins trimming the country’s routine deficits and spiraling federal debt. The threat of a gridlock-induced shutdown just makes the second annoyance all the more annoying: a lot of us will begin the headache-inducing process of filling out our income tax forms. Even if you pay someone or buy software to help you, there’s still the aggravating exercise of hunting down the paperwork, rummaging through bank statements, and scanning or photocopying all those little perforated W-this and W-that forms just in case something gets lost. It’s a pain. No one likes paying taxes, which helps make one vocal segment of the body politic more influential, namely the group that is ready to rise up against any politician who dares state the obvious : The country will almost certainly have to raise taxes in some form to make any serious dent in our long-term fiscal problems. All the major commissions and independent studies say this. When our organization, Public Agenda, surveyed Beltway insiders last November , three-quarters agreed that both spending cuts and tax increases would be needed to solve the problem . Most crucial perhaps, nearly two-thirds of the public (64 percent) sees a combination of cutting spending and raising taxes as “the best way” to reduce the deficit. Just 31 percent prefer only cutting spending; an infinitesimal 3 percent prefer just raising taxes. Well, what do you expect? As we said, no one actually likes paying taxes. But even with such broad agreement that higher taxes are probably a given, there’s even more agreement that the current U.S. tax system is a mess. Surveys routinely show that 8 in 10 Americans consider the tax code too complex . Since it runs to about 67,000 pages (making War and Peace look like a pamphlet in comparison), you can’t really fault the public’s judgment on this. A study by the Tax Foundation showed that businesses, nonprofit organizations, and individuals put in a total of 6 billion hours calculating their taxes at an estimated cost of more than $265 billion . Not surprisingly, most people support a major revamp. Corporate taxes are a prime example. The official corporate tax rate is 35 percent, pretty high by international standards. But there are so many special provisions that some of our major corporate citizens pay just a sliver of that. According to an analysis by The New York Times , 115 of Fortune 500 companies pay less than 20 percent in federal and other corporate taxes, and some very successful enterprises pay much less. The study calculated Boeing’s tax rate at 4.5 percent. Southwest Airlines paid 6.3 percent; Yahoo, 7 percent, General Electric, 14.3 percent. As the Times’ David Leonhardt said: “Arguably, the United States now has a corporate tax code that’s the worst of all worlds. The official rate is higher than in almost any other country, which forces companies to devote enormous time and effort to finding loopholes. Yet the government raises less money in corporate taxes than it once did, because of all the loopholes that have been added in recent decades.” At least taking advantage of loopholes is legal. The IRS estimates that we lose at least $250 billion a year to outright cheating . Given the recent brawl in the U.S. Congress over attempts to cut $60 billion from the budget, an extra $250 billion a year would be really, really welcome in these tough times. But to get even half of that, the IRS would need more agents, more audits and possibly even more paperwork. Instead, House Republicans have proposed significant cuts to the IRS budget , which may actually drive collections down. So, since we almost certainly have to raise taxes in some manner at some point to get the budget under control, is it actually fair to the American people to do it without reforming our chaotic maze of a tax system? How are we going to persuade people to pay more to a system that has so many holes? Maybe it’s time to trot out that old political motto — never let a crisis go to waste. The Simpson-Bowles budget proposals marry tax simplification to the urgent need to do something about the budget. They recommended a menu of changes that reduce tax rates for both individuals and corporations, but eliminate many of the tax credits and deductions that make the tax code so impenetrable (Yes, they do recommend eliminating the home mortgage deduction, but only for second homes and mortgages over $500,000 ). There’s another sign of détente in the works. The conservative Heritage Foundation has had kind words for Democratic Senator Ron Wyden’s corporate tax reform proposal. And President Obama says that he wants “something smarter, something simpler, and something fairer” for corporate taxes too. The trouble is that the idea of simplifying taxes often draws broad support. It’s when the debate gets down to specifics that things fall apart. Everybody wants taxes to be simpler — until they find the loophole that’s just right for them. That’s when the lobbyists and the lawyers come out of the woodwork battling for the provisions their clients wants. Special interests seem to trump the general interest over and over again when it comes to tax reform. Will the prospect of higher taxes finally spur us to streamline the tax code? We’ll be watching, but in the meantime, we’ll be riffling through our desks looking for a couple of lost 1099 forms.

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WATCH: The Happiest Person In The World

March 8, 2011

Last week, Gallup published its annual Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index , leading The New York Times on a search to find the person who fit the exact demographic specifications. Enter Alvin Wong, who they quickly labeled the happiest man in the world. Only days later, he’s gone viral. The New York Times reports that Mr. Wong has become a bit of a sensation . He’s “gone viral” in Thailand, according to family, with international publications itching for an interview. The Times selected Mr. Wong after asking Gallup, which interviews thousands of Americans to create the index, what the demographic make-up of the happiest person in America might look like. Their answer: [H]e’s a tall, Asian-American, observant Jew who is at least 65 and married, has children, lives in Hawaii, runs his own business and has a household income of more than $120,000 a year. Here’s an excerpt from a video interview with The Honolulu Star-Advertiser : “My mom was always a believer in ‘You don’t do things just for money, you do things because you want to do them, you love to do them.’ This is what’s going to make you get up in the morning and want to do things — and you’re going to go to work happy.” He adds: “If you can’t laugh at yourself, then life is going to be very hard on you.” Watch The Honolulu Star-Advertiser interview here:

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Raymond J. Learsy: Peak Oil. The New York Times’ Op-ed Gets it Right and Wrong

February 28, 2011

On Friday, two weeks after the issue was discussed at length in the Huffington Post, “WikiLeaks Brings Misguided Joy to Preachers of Peak Oil” 02.10.11 the New York Times found the wherewithal to present us with Michael Lynch’s Op-ed, “Drilling For an Oil Crisis” 02.25.11. The Times piece covers virtually the same territory, namely that the Wikileaks revelation of an American diplomat’s dispatch about the constraints of Saudi oil reserves gave false credence to the peak oil theorists and rendered unto the peak oil pranksters erroneous and misguided bragging rights which they happily exploited to push their agenda that oil production has “entered a terminal decline.” The Times’ Op-ed, as did the earlier Huffington Post piece, raises serious doubts about the ‘peak oil’ theory. Lynch hits the issue squarely on the head when he comments about Saudi Arabia “Officials there have discovered approximately 70 major oil fields that they’ve left untapped over concerns that increased Saudi production would cause global oil prices to collapse.” Well and good and so much for the timeliness of the New York Times’ revelations. However, then the Times piece goes seriously off track. Ascribing blame on the ‘peak oil’ crowd’s lamentations that oil’s production has “entered a terminal decline”, bolstered by the Wikileaks revelations, as the motivating factor in the Obama administration’s “throwing federal subsidies – some $8 billion in the 2012 budget at all sorts of unproven, unrealistic and inefficient energy technologies like wind farms and electric cars.” That “we should not let a false panic over disappearing oil reserves lead into rushed government investments.” Wrong, and wrong once again! Concern about disappearing oil, real or imagined plays a role, but the motivating impulse toward alternative energy technologies is far more fundamental. Perhaps, better said it is ‘existential’ touching on the very existence of life on the planet. The environmental threat to our existence and that of generations to come grows every day. Seeking non fossil fuel solutions to our energy needs are not “rushed government investments” as the Op-ed piece pontificates. And they are hardly “rushed.” They are already several generations overdue.

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Murdoch Buys His Daughter’s Company

February 21, 2011

LONDON — Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. has reached a deal to buy Shine Group, a television production company founded by the business magnate’s daughter Elisabeth, for 415 million pounds ($673.3 million). The company said Monday it signed a non-binding letter of intent and will proceed with the necessary regulatory filings to acquire Shine, the producer of popular British shows like “Masterchef” and “Merlin.” In a joint statement, Rupert Murdoch praised Shine’s “outstanding creative team” and said he expects his daughter to join News Corp.’s board once the deal is complete. Elisabeth Murdoch, a former managing director of Sky Networks who left her father’s company in 2000 to start Shine, said the alliance will help prepare her company for future growth. “I could not be happier or more proud that from such modest beginnings Shine will join such an extraordinary group of companies,” she said in the statement. News Corp. is one of the world’s largest media empires, and owns the Times and Sun newspapers in Britain, the Fox News Channel and the Wall Street Journal. News Corp. and Shine said they will continue to negotiate the final terms of the agreement, which will be subject to approval from both companies’ boards, the audit committee and the receipt of an independent fairness opinion. The companies did not say when they expect the deal to be completed. Once the deal closes, Shine Group will report to Chase Carey, News Corp.s’ deputy chairman, president and chief operating officer.

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Report Reveals Significant Findings On Supreme Cout Justices Offering Receptive Ear To Business Interests

December 19, 2010

The chamber’s success rate is but one indication of the Roberts court’s leanings on business issues. A new study, prepared for The New York Times by scholars at Northwestern University and the University of Chicago, analyzed some 1,450 decisions since 1953. It showed that the percentage of business cases on the Supreme Court docket has grown in the Roberts years, as has the percentage of cases won by business interests.

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Stealing From The Dead, Denying The Living

November 21, 2010

More often than not, life insurers make good on policies, paying $38 billion in death benefits on individual policies last year. But what happened to Sheila Weissberger was not unusual. The claims of thousands of beneficiaries are denied or disputed every year — more than 5,000 last year alone — many for allegedly flawed applications, a Times review found.

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Fed Calls For DividendRelated Stress Tests

November 21, 2010

The Federal Reserve has called for another round of stress tests on banks that wish to raise dividends or redeem or repurchase stock reports The New York Times

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Robert Teitelman: Sorkin on the transparency dilemma

November 9, 2010

Like a drum major, Andrew Ross Sorkin leads his marching band to DealB%k’s new page right after Itineraries in today’s New York Times. Welcome to dead-tree media. In his Tuesday M&A column, Sorkin tackles a big issue, transparency, though it’s a little hard to tell where he comes down on it. He’s for it, of course; only communists and denizens of dark markets could possibly be against transparency. But it’s confounding. Sorkin himself admits that he once thought that allowing companies to announce news off their websites was a swell idea. After all, the Internet, birthplace of DealB%k (do we all have to use that damn “%” now?), represented the closest thing to ubiquity that we have. But then Microsoft tried it out, and while the globe still spins, Sorkin got a call from the chairman and CEO of PR Newswire and Business Wire, both of which are threatened by the development, complaining of confusion and delays. Let’s sort this out. There undoubtedly was some confusion, although it’s not necessarily clear that, as Sorkin says, “the system doesn’t work nearly as well [as the old].” Any change requires adjustment. And the biggest problem, slight delays, would seem to affect mostly the high-frequency trading crowd, which has done more to bring opacity back into equity trading than any other group this side of the dark market folks. Should we worry that some high-frequency traders might have to wait? Should the standards of dissemination be set by the cutting edge of speculative trading? And most importantly, have we confused dissemination with transparency? These are difficult questions. Sorkin cites Regulation Fair Disclosure, or Reg FD, which the Securities and Exchange Commission launched in 2000 to “combat selective disclosure.” When Reg FD became effective, the howls, mostly from the media (notably The Wall Street Journal), were loud and strident. The then-mainstream business media worried that banning “selective” disclosure meant that sources would dry up; and indeed orchestrated deal placements did fizzle out. Generally, nearly everyone hated Reg FD except the lawyers: Companies didn’t know what the rules really meant, analysts felt able to cater to some clients and not others (Eliot Spitzer was lurking as well), and investors felt the policy would simply be used to justify disseminating less information. It was a hassle, but while it’s hard to tell whether Reg FD made the world better or worse, the situation has long since settled down. Still, Reg FD did represent a subtle shift, which is exacerbated by the Web-based transmission of information. First, Reg FD was not about transparency as content, but about transparency as a sort of equality of dissemination: No one should have an advantage by getting information first. Second, Reg FD was an acknowledgment by the SEC that fair-trading was important; it was an attempt to level the playing field between institutions and individuals (the fact that it appeared at the height of the dot-com bubble is important). In that sense, Reg FD was a response to abundant Internet data, which gave the appearance of leveling the informational disparity that had long defined the two groups. And of course even then, the Internet had all but destroyed the timeliness and relevance of market quotes and data in the business pages of hard-copy newspapers. In short, Reg FD attempted to set rules for markets defined not by long-term investors, but by short-term speculators. The debate over Internet disclosure took this further. Transparency is not just the equal dissemination of information; it’s immediacy of access: No one should struggle to find information. The issue now is not that newspaper stock pages are rendered obsolete, but that media websites, fed by PR Newswire and Business Wire, find themselves scrambling to pick up information from corporate websites. They’re like everyone else out there. The advantage here goes to those who can quickly and easily monitor corporate sites, which may (or may not be) Reuters, Bloomberg, The Wall Street Journal or The New York Times, but could as easily be any organization with sophisticated RSS feeds. (Meaning, of course, day traders remain at a disadvantage.) Sorkin now finds himself uncomfortably caught between the omnipresence of the Web and traditional news intermediaries, like PR Newswire and the Times itself. The issue capsulizes the mounting difficulties of transparency in an age of increasingly rapid-fire speculation — and not just for traditional news organizations. Regulators have spent so much time and effort chasing the chimera of the level playing field that they have lost any sense of improving “transparency-as-content” in an age that, through intensive technology and innovation, has made it harder and harder to understand what’s going on out there. More and more, we are struggling to regulate a thin slice of trading time that has little to do with traditional investing and everything to do with capturing the tiny perturbations of stocks, most of which have no “meaning” at all. Meanwhile, derivatives, dark markets, the interconnectivity of markets, remain enormous black boxes. Robert Teitelman is editor in chief of The Deal.

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Video: Nisenholtz Says New York Times Online Strategy Will Work

November 5, 2010

Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) — Martin Nisenholtz, senior vice president of digital operations at the New York Times Co., discusses the company’s Internet business model. He talks with Bloomberg’s Emily Chang on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Nisenholtz Says New York Times Online Strategy Will Work

November 5, 2010

Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) — Martin Nisenholtz, senior vice president of digital operations at the New York Times Co., discusses the company’s Internet business model. He talks with Bloomberg’s Emily Chang on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Nisenholtz Says New York Times Online Strategy Will Work

November 5, 2010

Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) — Martin Nisenholtz, senior vice president of digital operations at the New York Times Co., discusses the company’s Internet business model. He talks with Bloomberg’s Emily Chang on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Yvette Kantrow: Junk history

October 18, 2010

What is it about the 1980s that makes the decade so irresistible to journalists covering Wall Street? Despite everything that the financial world has been through these past decades — the rise and fall of leveraged buyouts, the tech boom and bust, the spectacular bursting of the housing bubble followed by a global meltdown — the media can’t seem to help itself from going back to the ’80s for archetypes of finance. Whether it’s a post-prison Gordon Gekko packing them in at the cineplex or the prevalence of the word “barbarian” in press accounts of Henry Kravis’ $100 million donation to Columbia Business School, images from the ur-decade of go-go dealmaking still abound — even if they don’t exactly fit the situation at hand. Case in point: a page one Business Day story in The New York Times that anoints Jim Casey, the head of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.’s junk bond operation, a latter-day Michael Milken and his firm the second coming of Drexel Burnham Lambert. Despite the fact that Milken wound up in jail and Drexel spectacularly imploded — facts the story acknowledges in a brief paragraph that begins with an apologetic “of course” — the comparison is meant to be flattering. “The market for high-yield securities, as junk bonds are more politely known in the business, is booming as never before,” the story breathlessly reports. “And Mr. Casey, one of today’s junk-bond kings, is in the midst of a run unlike anything Mr. Milken saw from his X-shaped trading desk in Beverly Hills.” Casey, for his part, seems happy to help the Times paint him as something of the second coming of Milken: “Other than 1988 at Drexel, this is the best time I’ve ever seen, and it’s getting better,” he tells the paper, which gushes that Casey worked for the junk bond king himself. Further down in the story we learn that Casey joined Drexel post-college in the summer of 1987, placing him at the firm at the beginning of its end. But he wistfully recalls the glory days: “It was a great place; we had 70 to 80 percent market share.” The story eventually fesses up that Casey’s current firm, J.P. Morgan, lacks such a near-monopolistic share; in fact, we’re told Bank of America has edged it out of the top spot on the global high-yield league tables. We also learn the other ways that today’s junk market differs from the one Drexel controlled, including the fact that most of the junk being issued is to refinance debt rather than to fund corporate takeovers. But all that doesn’t seem to really matter in this story, which can’t hide its nostalgia for the “swagger” of Milken’s day, and “the scrappy types who populated the junk-bond desks.” It relishes the “trash talk” spewed by the “junkyard’s” three main competitors and celebrates the aggressiveness of “the new kings of junk.” The story is a startling reminder that for all the media’s professed disdain for Wall Street, it’s still intoxicated by Milken and his latter-day doppelgängers, even if they don’t conduct their business from an X-shaped desk. Meanwhile, on the same day the Times business section waxed wistfully about ’80s Wall Street, a piece on its op-ed page called for a return to an even earlier time: pre-1970, when Wall Street consisted of private partnerships whose executives were personally liable for the risks they took. Written by “House of Cards” author William D. Cohan, the piece calls for the creation of a mechanism in which the top 100 executives at Wall Street’s major firms be liable “not just [for] their unexercised stock options or restricted stock, but every asset they have in their possession: from their cars to their fancy homes to their bulging bank accounts.” And he wants the firms to create this mechanism, in the form of a new security, themselves. As appealing as it might be to imagine, say, Dick Fuld stripped of worldly goods, as Cohan implies would have happened if his scheme had existed when Lehman Brothers collapsed, it’s less appealing to imagine all the businesses that might not have been financed over the past 40 years if Wall Street had not migrated from private partnerships of yore to limited partnerships and public corporations. Indeed, the new kings of junk that the Times business section is so enthralled with may very well be scrappy. But would they be willing to expose their own net worths to the vagaries of something called junk? Doubt it. Yvette Kantrow is executive editor of The Deal magazine.

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NY Times To Prepay Slims 250M Loan

October 4, 2010

New York Times is planning to pay off a 250 million loan from Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim three years ahead of schedule

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Fed Holds On Policies Signals Readiness For QE Despite Recession End

September 27, 2010

The Federal Reserve announced on Tuesday that it would not introduce new steps to boost the lethargic US economic recovery but maintained existing supports and suggested that government debt purchases may be on the horizon according to The New York Times

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Damien Hoffman: AOL Continues Driving Wrong Way with New, Bigger Ads

September 16, 2010

AOL has a packed mausoleum of successful products that dropped dead. In the beginning, they had a monopoly on internet access. Then they had the absolute hottest social app, Instant Messenger (IM). Now, the company is driving up a WRONG WAY and heading for a head-on collision with their online content. IMHO, there are two camps of companies on the web. The first are those who understand where the web is headed. The other camp is full of those who want to keep jamming old square models into circular holes. The perfect example of the latter is AOL’s new strategy to annoy readers with more big and disruptive ads. According to the Wall Street Journal , the new ads will be “roughly four times as large as the ads that typically appear on the border of AOL Web pages.” That means four times less valuable content (the user wanted) and four times more billboard in your face. A quick look at the screenshot to the left exemplifies the stupidity of large ads. You tell me where the value is for the user. Personally, as soon as these things pop up I surf away. There are too many options for getting content. I don’t need to have a horrible user experience to get it. Moreover, this screenshot represents the OLD internet. On that internet, users had very little choice regarding content and format. On the NEW internet, there are RSS feeds, reader apps, plugins to block ads, and many more cool ways to have a valuable user experience on the web. The companies that will dominate the web in the future are those that understand how to deliver value to both users and advertisers. Companies that offer the garbage to the left as “custom, high impact ads” to advertisers will see the high impact on their readership — in the WRONG DIRECTION. Media thought leader Larry Kramer has a new book that AOL execs must read now : C-Scape: Conquer the Forces Changing Business Today . Larry offers excellent case studies showing that winning companies think about current and future user behavior, not old behaviors which were limited because of nascent technological capacities. In this case, AOL once again proves they are out of touch with how to turn an awesome user-base into a sustainable business. If the captains of AOL’s ship continue destroying their own user experience and asset value, I recommend getting out of their car.

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Video: Falkenrath Sees Microsoft Caught Up in Russia Repression: Video

September 13, 2010

Sept. 13 (Bloomberg) — Richard Falkenrath, a principal at Chertoff Group and a Bloomberg Television contributing editor, talks about a story in the New York Times that Russian security services have tried to quell dissent by confiscating computers under the pretext of searching for pirated Microsoft Corp. software. Falkenrath speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Manisha Thakor : You’re A Dead Woman…In The Pink Ghetto

September 9, 2010

“So far in 2010 The New York Times has published 698 obituaries. Only 92 of those were of women.” I came across this startling statistic on Catalyst’s blog (a must read for anyone who is interested in global women’s economic empowerment). They in turn were highlighting a moving and thought-provoking article in the Harvard Business Review written by Bill Taylor , co-founder of Fast Company magazine. What’s the cause of this obit gap? At first blush you might say – well, women live longer. But, nope, that’s not it. It comes down to the money, honey. As Bill succinctly put it, “As a society and business culture, we still tend to equate money with success… Which helps to explain why so many wealthy males get New York Times obituaries, while women who died with smaller bank accounts, but who may have led richer lives, don’t get the attention they deserve.” It’s been three days since I read Bill’s excellent article, and I still can’t get this statistic out of my head. One could argue that with the passing of a few more years, the ranks of women who will have had enough time to climb high enough on traditional ladders of corporate success to have “earned” an obituary in The New York Times will have risen. But will the passage of time really solve the problem? Bill states, and I concur, that he’d “much rather read about the passing of a gifted educator, or a committed neighborhood leader, or a beloved nun, than yet another starched-shirt banker or lawyer. These unsung heroes and grassroots innovators don’t live forever — even if their ideas and impact do.” However, my concern is that for too long women have been the unsung and UNPAID heroes during key periods of societal change and transition. Our nation is clearly in the midst of one of those defining moments. As we reboot, reset, and restart – my dream is that we don’t, once again, leave women to live out their years in the pink ghetto … giving it our all, working our backsides off, and yet still struggling to make ends meet at the end of the day. What’s the answer? That’s a big question that will require a multi-faceted response. But one piece must be increased financial education. I meet entirely too many fantastic women doing incredible work for a pittance of pay. If more women (and men) grasped the enormity of the havoc brought about by pay inequality (on both a gender and career basis) we’d see some seismic societal shifts. Where to start to get money smart? Three websites I love are DailyWorth.com , LearnVest.com *, and SmartAboutMoney.org . * FTC Disclosure: I currently serve as the “Investing Expert” for LearnVest.com Want more financial love? You can follow Manisha on Twitter at @ManishaThakor and sign up for her email updates here . Starting in Fall 2010, Manisha will teach an innovative online course on “Financial Literacy 101″ for woman though www.Sympoz.com . Manisha Thakor, personal finance expert for women, can be reached via her website, www.ManishaThakor.com .

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Leslie Margolin, Former Blue Cross President, Speaks Out Against Insurance Giant’s Plan To Spike Rates

August 10, 2010

Leslie Margolin, who recently resigned as president of Anthem Blue Cross in California, is speaking out against a plan put forth by the health insurance company earlier this year to increase the cost of individual coverage plans by as much as 39 percent. Margolin claims she urged the insurance giant to reconsider its intention to spike its rates and to explore alternative solutions to lower the cost of care, the Los Angeles Times reports . “I thought the rates were too high,” explained the former Blue Cross president. “I thought the impact on our membership was too significant.” But back in February, when Margolin testified before California lawmakers on the plan to boost premiums, the then-Blue Cross executive sang a slightly different tune. “I will do anything I can do to take costs out of the system,” she explained , stopping short of condemning the plan. California Assemblyman Dave Jones, the Democratic chair of the Assembly Health Committee, made it clear he wasn’t content with the response. “Have you no shame?” he charged . The Times reports that since then, Margolin says she pushed Blue Cross parent company WellPoint Inc. internally to withdraw, or at minimum reduce, the rate increases. She also recommended the insurance company issue an apologize to its health care customers over the plan. “We have impacted individual consumers in ways that were so significant for those individuals,” she said in March. “And for that, I personally feel very, very sorry.” The change in attitude exhibited by Margolin now seems likely to have been a sizable factor in her recent split from WellPoint. Last month, in announcing she would step down from her post, Margolin, as well as WellPoint, signaled that the split was a mutual decision. In a statement, the insurance company called the outgoing executive “a champion of innovative initiatives that improve patient safety and quality outcomes.” But now, a familiar with the developments leading up to Margolin’s resignation, tells the Times that it was the former president’s shift in management style that prompted her to be forced out form her post. “Her undoing was that she rocked the boat and wanted to do things a different way,” said the individual, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “She wasn’t a good corporate soldier.”

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‘Army’ Of Former Regulators Join Lobbying Ranks After Financial Reform Bill

July 28, 2010

Nearly 150 lobbyists registered since last year used to work in the executive branch at financial agencies, from lawyers for the Securities and Exchange Commission to Federal Reserve bankers, according to data analyzed for The New York Times by the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan research group. In addition, dozens of former lawyers for the government, who are not registered as lobbyists, are now scouring the financial regulations on behalf of corporate clients

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Video: Hunter Says Stress Tests Don’t Account for Restructuring: Video

July 23, 2010

July 23 (Bloomberg) — Constance Hunter, managing director and chief economist at Aladdin Capital Management LLP, and Marcus Mabry, an editor at the New York Times, talk about European Union-wide stress tests results released today. They speak with Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Henry Blodget: Murdoch’s First Newspaper Paywall Not Off to a Great Start

July 20, 2010

Some early numbers are leaking on Rupert Murdoch’s London Times paywall experiment. After a month of forced free registrations and two weeks of a full paywall, Dan Sabbagh at Beehivecity.com says these are the numbers : 150,000 registrations ( PaidContent says this is 12% of the online reader base ) 15,000 paid subscriptions Another 12,500 paid iPad subscriptions Apparently, the 15,000 paid subscriptions figure is considered “disappointing.” And it is disappointing — from the perspective of those hoping to save newspapers by erecting paywalls. The first burst of paid subscriptions — from folks who just can’t imagine life without the Times — are likely to be the biggest burst that the paper gets. But if we’re charitable and assume that the 15,000 online subs and 12,500 iPad subs grow to include the 150,000 folks who have registered (unlikely), this still would not produce a big revenue base. At 2 pounds a week, the average online subscriber would produce 100 pounds of revenue a year. 150,000 of them would produce 15 million pounds of revenue. 15 million pounds of revenue would be nice for a company used to living on, say, $5 million of revenue. But it wouldn’t even begin to offset the cost of the Times’ huge newsroom. Meanwhile, what has the new paywall done to online traffic? So far, it has dropped by two-thirds. That, apparently, is actually better than expected. One editor feared it would collapse by 90%. Now check out the dozens of magazines that are coming back to life –>

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Robert Scheer: There’s Just No Pleasing Some Robber Barons

July 14, 2010

The flight from reason that now marks American public discourse came home for me last Friday when I found myself on public radio debating whether Barack Obama is anti-business. The “news hook” for KCRW’s “Left, Right & Center” show, which I have co-hosted for 15 years, was an absurd spate of charges from Obama’s former big-business allies that he had become their enemy. If only it were so. One of those who has been complaining is billionaire publisher Mort Zuckerman, who now finds in a White House he once supported “hostility” to the business culture he credits with the country’s greatness. I assume he is not talking about the belated efforts to hold BP accountable for the cost of the oil spill that our pro-drilling president once thought not possible. And then there was Jeffrey Immelt, CEO of General Electric and once friendly to Obama but now alarmed by new regulations. He was one of the many CEOs cited by Fareed Zakaria in The Washington Post as evidence of “Obama’s CEO problem.” General Electric is a company that got into deep trouble when it stopped worrying about making better light bulbs and came to devote much of its business through GE capital to fancy financial products. With GE having been saved by the taxpayers, one wonders what the conglomerate has to complain about. Or Wall Street donors now stiffing the Democrats and claiming Obama is hostile to them. All this comes at the very time that Wall Street lobbyists stand poised to win a sweeping victory preventing a reversal of the radical deregulation that made the banking debacle possible. The “Volcker rule,” restoration of the New Deal-era barrier between investment and consumer banking that Obama had pledged to support, is gutted. As a disappointed Paul Volcker told Louis Uchitelle in an interview for The New York Times, he would rate the reforms just a B and not even a B-plus. Leading Wall Street economist Henry Kaufman told the Times: “The legislation is a Rube Goldberg contraption, and there are long timelines before the Volcker rule is fully implemented.” Game over, Wall Street won big-time, and the Bush-Obama policy has made the financiers whole while largely ignoring the deep plight of the true victims of the economic collapse, the unemployed and the foreclosed. The argument that Obama is anti-business is nothing more than the old propaganda trick that the best defense is a good offense, so blame the victims for your crimes. The high-tone intellectual argument for that position was supplied by Harvard professor Niall Ferguson, a transplanted Thatcherite, at the same Aspen, Colo., gathering where Zuckerman spoke. At a conference on ideas paid for and attended by the rich and well-positioned, Ferguson argued that the high rate of unemployment is not due to the Wall Street high rollers whose funny-money games wiped out 8 million jobs but rather the extension of the government’s unemployment insurance program: “The curse of long-term unemployment is that if you pay people to do nothing, they’ll find themselves doing nothing for very long periods of time. Long-term unemployment is at an all-time high in the United States, and it is a direct consequence of a misconceived public policy.” Yes, except that the public policy that was so terribly misconceived was that of radical deregulation, launched by the Reagan Revolution and implemented by President Bill Clinton, not the pathetic palliative of unemployment checks. Notice that the attacks on Obama are not about his having followed George W. Bush’s example of throwing money at Wall Street, the cause of the meltdown and the run-up of the national debt, but rather the much smaller amount spent on ameliorating the pain that the titans of finance caused for ordinary citizens. And of course there is never a word of self-criticism on the part of folks like Ferguson, Immelt and Zuckerman for their own roles in having cheered on the radical deregulation that made this mess not only possible but inevitable. Not so Volcker, once the darling of fiscal conservatives when he tamed inflation during the Carter and Reagan years, and when as Fed chair and later as an influential observer he failed to stand publicly against the move to radical deregulation. As was reported in the Times interview, “In retrospect, Mr. Volcker regrets not challenging the widely held assumptions that underpinned much of this. `You had an intellectual conviction that you did not need much regulation–that the market could take care of itself,’ he says. `I’m happy that illusion has been shattered.’” Unfortunately, that illusion has not been shattered for many of the elite in this country, as evidenced by their rage against Obama’s too modest steps in the right direction.

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Estimated Cost Of TARP Sharply Reduced

July 10, 2010

The final tab for the Department of the Treasurys Troubled Asset Relief Program will be a fraction of the 350 billion earlier estimated reports The New York Times

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Biggest Mortgage Defaulters Are The Rich, Wealthy

July 9, 2010

More than one in seven homeowners with loans in excess of a million dollars are seriously delinquent, according to data compiled for The New York Times by the real estate analytics firm CoreLogic.

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Laurence J. Kotlikoff: America’s Insolvency Is No Myth — Krugman’s Latest Pretense

July 6, 2010

I wish I were as sure of anything as Paul Krugman is of everything. But it’s his unfounded moral superiority that really goads. In his July 2nd NY Times column, Myths of Austerity, Krugman writes “When I was young and naïve, I believed that important people took positions based on careful considerations of the options. Now I know better. Much of what Serious People believe rests on prejudice, not analysis.” I agree with this last sentence, but I’d substitute “Paul Krugman” for “Serious People.” What I and other economists expected, when Krugman was chosen to write for the Times, was impartial, fact-based analysis, showcasing economics’ ability to shed real light on critical issues of the day. We also expected him to act like a professional economist and represent fairly alternative policy positions before drawing his conclusion. Instead, we’ve been served a highly political, pretentious rant, of which this column is a fine example. I share Krugman’s social concerns, but his ratio of politics and frequent personal attacks to economics is appallingly high. In his column, Krugman derides those who are rightfully alarmed by America’s demonstrable fiscal insolvency and pushing for immediate policy adjustments as “policy elites” trafficking in “figments of imagination,” and engaged in “sheer speculation,” with no basis “on either evidence or careful analysis.” The Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO) 75-year fiscal forecast (called the Alternative Fiscal Scenario) is no figment of imagination. This year’s forecast, appeared two days before Krugman’s piece and shows that the U.S. is in terrible fiscal shape – worse than Greece. Perhaps Krugman missed it.

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Yves Smith: Time to Investigate Lloyd Blankfein and Hank Paulson

June 30, 2010

The New York Times has unearthed a damning tidbit about the bailout of AIG: When the government began rescuing it from collapse in the fall of 2008 with what has become a $182 billion lifeline, A.I.G. was required to forfeit its right to sue several banks — including Goldman, Société Générale, Deutsche Bank and Merrill Lynch — over any irregularities with most of the mortgage securities it insured in the precrisis years. Yves here. How one reacts to this depends in no small measure as to how one views the salvage operation. For all intents and purposes, the rescue of AIG was merely a way to save the banks; the credit default swaps had been too big a source of faux capital (via risk-shifting for US firms, and for Eurobanks, as part of a regulatory arbitrage) to let the insurer go. So any effort by the officialdom to aid the banks, most notably by paying out 100% on credit default swap exposures (which had already been written down by counterparties to less than par) was simply an effort to funnel more cash to the banks. Since we’ve had massive backdoor bailout mechanisms in addition to the overt ones, this orientation should come as no surprise. But then we get to the funny business. Why a broad waiver? Why shouldn’t AIG (and by extension, taxpayers) not recover in the event of fraud? And we turn again to the ambiguous standing of AIG. By all rights, it ought to be owned by the government. The reason it isn’t is that we don’t do nationalization in America, and full ownership would require AIG’s debts to be consolidated with government debt. So another way to read this requirement is that the Fed and Treasury were opposed to having fraud at the banks exposed, period. That is a very troubling stance for bank regulators to take. And experts agreed: “Even if it turns out that it would be a hard suit to win, just the gesture of requiring A.I.G. to scrap its ability to sue is outrageous,” said David Skeel, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania. “The defense may be that the banking system was in trouble, and we couldn’t afford to destabilize it anymore, but that just strikes me as really going overboard.” “This really suggests they had myopia and they were looking at it entirely through the perspective of the banks,” Mr. Skeel said. Yves here. Also note that the banks mentioned by the Times account for a significant proportion of the Maiden Lane III exposures (the $62.9 billion CDO portfolio; note this does not include all CDO guarantees assumed by the Federal Reserve; seven Goldman Abacus trades stayed with AIG and were salvaged via credit extensions to AIG). An analysis by Andrew Dittmer and Tom Adams showed the significance of Merrill, Goldman, and SocGen (percentages based on par amount): 1. Merrill as both packager and counterparty 7.7% 2. Goldman as both packager and counterparty 7.4% 3. Merrill as packager, Goldman as counterparty 9.6% 4. Goldman as packager, SocGen as counterparty 15.9% We thought these interrelationships were potentially significant; they account for 40.6% of the Maiden Lane III exposures. Then add in: 5. Anyone else with a pulse as packager, SocGen as counterparty 11.0% 6. Anyone else with a pulse as packager, Goldman as counterparty 5.5% That bring you to 56.5% of the total. Goldman, either as packager or as swap counterparty, was involved in 38.4% of the Maiden Lane transactions, plus had additional AIG exposure through seven Abacus trades (we only have tranche exposure on three of these transactions): Abacus 2004-1 Abacus 2004-2 Abacus 2005-2 Abacus 2005-3 Abacus 2005-CB1 Abacus 2006-NS1 Abacus 2007-18 Yves here. The time is long overdue that Lloyd Blankfein’s early and extensive involvement in the AIG rescue be investigated in detail. The legal waiver no doubt was particularly beneficial to Goldman, and given that it is now being sued by the SEC, it is fair to ask if he put the idea of the waiver forward. It is highly unlikely to have occurred to the Fed and Treasury officials unprompted, particularly given the fevered pace at which the AIG rescue was cobbled together. Moreover, while the Fed was being advised to take a tough posture towards the banks, it was Treasury, then under former Goldman CEO Hank Paulson, who was bending over backwards: For its part, the Treasury appeared to be opposed to any options that did not involve making the banks whole on their A.I.G. contracts. At Treasury, a former Goldman executive, Dan H. Jester, was the agency’s point man on the A.I.G. bailout. Mr. Jester had worked at Goldman with Henry M. Paulson Jr., the Treasury secretary during the A.I.G. bailout. Yves here. And in an astonishing lapse, Jester still owned Goldman stock . By any standard, he should not have been involved at all in the process, much less in a crucial role. But because he was a contractor, and not a government employee, this arrangement was kosher. Not surprisingly, Jester opposed measures that would require Goldman and other banks to take any pain. The Times reminds readers it pays to be a bankster: All of this was quite different from the tack the government took in the Chrysler bailout. In that matter, the government told banks they could take losses on their loans or simply own a bankrupt company; the banks took the losses. Yves here. The Audit the Fed investigation will shed even more light on the AIG rescue, but the seamy dealing of Treasury means that investigations need to extend into its role as well. But it will take a public hue and cry for that to come to pass.

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Video: Galante Sees Slow Growth Hindering G-20 Deficit Goals: Video

June 28, 2010

June 28 (Bloomberg) — Donald Galante, senior vice president of fixed income at MF Global Ltd., talks about the Group of 20 leaders’ plan to cut global deficits. Galante and Marcus Mabry, associate national editor at the New York Times speak with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Scholastic Names Shane Armstrong Executive Vice President, Scholastic Corporation and President, International Growth Markets

June 24, 2010

Former Executive of Times Publishing of Singapore to Lead Scholastic’s International Operations

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Scholastic Names Shane Armstrong Executive Vice President, Scholastic Corporation and President, International Growth Markets

June 24, 2010

Former Executive of Times Publishing of Singapore to Lead Scholastic’s International Operations

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