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Marketwire – Management Changes:

LONDON–(Marketwire – March 30, 2011) – Serabi Mining plc ( AIM : SRB ) ( TSX : SBI ) ( TSX : SBI.WT ) is pleased to announce that the Company has completed its Canadian initial public offering of 9,000,000 units (the “Units”) at a price of C$0.55 per Unit (the “Offering Price”) for gross proceeds to the Company of C$4.95 million (the “Offering”). Each Unit is comprised of one ordinary share (an “Ordinary Share”) and one-half of one ordinary share purchase warrant of the Company (each whole ordinary purchase warrant, a “Warrant”), with each Warrant being exercisable to acquire one Ordinary Share at an exercise price of C$0.75 until 2 December 2012. The Company’s Ordinary Shares and Warrants have begun trading on 30 March 2011 on the Toronto Stock Exchange (the “TSX”) under the symbol SBI and SBI.WT, respec

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Serabi Mining Plc ("Serabi" or the "Company") Completion of TSX Listing C$4.95 Million Funding and Board Changes

Probe Mines Limited (CVE:PRB) to Attend PDAC 2011 Mining Convention in Toronto Canada, 2011

March 5, 2011

Probe Mines Limited (CVE:PRB) to Attend PDAC 2011 Mining Convention in Toronto Canada, 2011

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Bass Metals Limited (ASX:BSM) To Exhibit At 2011 PDAC Convention in Toronto, Canada

March 4, 2011

Bass Metals Limited (ASX:BSM) To Exhibit At 2011 PDAC Convention in Toronto, Canada

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Alhambra Resources Limited (CVE:ALH) Participating in The 2011 PDAC International Convention, Toronto, Canada

March 4, 2011

Alhambra Resources Limited (CVE:ALH) Participating in The 2011 PDAC International Convention, Toronto, Canada

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Playfair Mining Ltd. (CVE:PLY) Will be Exhibiting in Booth #2351/2353 at the 2011 PDAC Conference in Toronto

February 26, 2011

Playfair Mining Ltd. (CVE:PLY) Will be Exhibiting in Booth #2351/2353 at the 2011 PDAC Conference in Toronto

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Indo Gold Limited Announce Attendance as Exhibitor at PDAC 2011, Toronto

February 18, 2011

Indo Gold Limited Announce Attendance as Exhibitor at PDAC 2011, Toronto

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LSE buy’s TMX owner of Toronto Stock Exchange

February 9, 2011

LSE buy’s TMX owner of Toronto Stock Exchange

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Obama’s Regulations Review Draws Mixed Responses

January 19, 2011

This story has been updated President Obama’s government-wide review of federal regulations, announced in an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal and with an executive order issued this morning, was immediately pounced on as a political move to curry favor with business interests by both health and safety advocates and conservative critics of the administration. And the true impact of the new agenda remains hard to assess, with the White House disclosing few details, such as which rules will be targeted and how the order will be implemented. Part of the new agenda involves taking a fresh look at old regulations that may be outdated and ineffective due to changes in technology and human behavior, according to an OMB spokesperson. The full impact of the review, which, according to a source close to the discussions, was developed by the administration’s regulatory czar Cass Sunstein and White House officials over the last two years, will only become clear when the Office of Management and Budget issues its guidance, which will be issued to federal agencies within the next few months. Such a document describes how agencies should actually implement the order. The review will exempt some federal agencies independent of the White House and will not impact health care reform and financial regulatory reform, the administration’s two biggest achievements. Obama’s review requires agencies, within 120 days, to determine how they will periodically assess current regulations to figure out which ones to modify, streamline, expand or repeal. Though the focus on burdensome regulations made headlines, it is clear that some rules could be strengthened and toughened, which encouraged some watchdog groups. Financial reform and health care reform will not be in danger, assured White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, who said that a cost-benefit analysis of both overhauls would demonstrate their positive impact. Gibbs did not provide more details on the review, beyond emphasizing “the very commonsense idea that we must protect the health and the safety of the American people without impeding our economic growth.” Though the president wrote that the overhaul is in line with his administration’s work to achieve “the proper balance” between protecting the public and stimulating the economy, his language seemed intended to win the favor of corporate America. Obama said the review was begun to “make sure we avoid excessive, inconsistent and redundant regulation,” which closely matched remarks made by one of the president’s chief nemeses, Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue. Donogue penned a scathing op-ed three months ago denouncing regulations that “are outdated, ineffective, overly complicated and counterproductive.” On Tuesday morning, Donohue welcome the new agenda in a statement praising the president for “restoring balance to government regulations.” Describing the executive order as “a positive first step,” Donohue also stuck the knife in, adding that “it also means repealing or replacing outdated or ineffective regulations” and that the review should include health care and financial reform laws. In addition, the Business Roundtable, a leading lobbying organization, said it welcomed the review, calling it “an important change in direction from the administration. Two weeks ago, in response to new House Oversight Committee chairman Republican Darryl Issa’s letter to business leaders asking them to list regulations they consider burdensome, the group lashed out at the “regulatory tsunami” hindering investment and job creation. Issa, who has become the White House’s chief tormentor, offered some of the kindest words he’s ever directed in the president’s direction: “I applaud President Obama for joining what must be an effort that stretches beyond ideological entrenchments to identify the regulatory impediments that have prevented real and sustained job growth in the private sector. And amid speculation that Obama was also reaching out to the new Republican House majority, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor took some credit for the new agenda, saying in a statement, “Interestingly, though he and his administration didn’t embrace it last year, we have noticed pieces of the plan being incorporated by the president, including trade agreements and rolling back barriers to job creation found in the regulatory system.” The move seemed to be in line with Obama’s recent business-friendly overtures, such as the naming of JPMorgan executive William Daley as his chief of staff and his upcoming visit to the Chamber, and critics remained skeptical. Celeste Monforton, a legal scholar with the Center for Progressive Reform criticized the president for “pandering to the business community,” adding that she was troubled by the new emphasis on regulations as a vehicle for job creation and economic growth. “We have have heard that rhetoric for many years and have not been able to come up with any concrete examples of how worker safety and health hurt business.” Gary Bass, the executive director of watchdog group OMB Watch, who has consulted the White House on transparency issues, says he was blindsided by the announcement and has mixed feelings. Though he was encouraged by the focus on stronger regulatory compliance, calling it “marvelous” and an appropriate response to the BP oil spill, Bass was disheartened by the push for flexibility, explaining that there doesn’t seem to be enough of an emphasis on balancing the burdens of regulations with the benefits of protecting the public. “That presidential memo had the look and feel of coming from the office of advocacy in the Small Business Administration, which was probably drafted by the Chamber.” Bass argued that the order’s emphasis on reviewing current rules is not a new step, since previous administrations did the same thing to little effect. “Clinton’s executive order also called for a look-back so one could argue that none of this stuff is really new,” says Bass. Conservative scholars welcomed the review but were skeptical of Obama’s motives. “The balance beam will move a little, but I doubt it will impact the implementation,” said NYU Law School professor Richard Epstein, a conservative who once made the controversial argument that environmental regulations should be considered similar to eminent domain laws. “The encouraging point is that it is a belated recognition at the general level of not making enemies when it helps to make friends.” Other proponents of cost-benefit analysis were more hopeful about the new agenda, noting that the administration has embraced an aggressive regulatory approach in a way that is economically justified. “I think my overarching impression was that I like the vector he’s on, which is about smart vs. dumb and doing more with less,” says economist Roger Martin, the dean of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management. “Lots of people make arguments that there is too much regulation, but when there are regulations that are really really important, you couldn’t live without them. There have always been some kind of regulations in society, whether it’s rules enforced by village elders or what we have now. It’s about smart versus dumb regulations.” Michael Livermore, the Institute for Policy Integrity’s executive director, claims that the cost-benefit analysis enshrined in Obama’s executive order rewards regulations that benefit society, dismissing conservative arguments that most regulations are burdensome to businesses. “For rules they’ve adopted in which you get more benefit at less cost, the net benefit to society is worth billions and billions.”

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U.S. Criticized Over Chrysler Financial Settlement

January 13, 2011

WASHINGTON (By John Crawley) – The U.S. Treasury may not have fully vetted the settlement of its interest in Chrysler Financial last year and not gotten a strong enough return for taxpayers, a bailout watchdog said in a report on Thursday. The deal most clearly illustrated a broader finding of the bipartisan Congressional Oversight Panel: that the Obama administration may be too enamored of the politically appealing scenario of quickly cutting its stake in the auto business rather than patiently managing taxpayer interests. “Treasury’s efforts have in some cases lacked transparency and accountability,” said former Delaware Senator Ted Kaufman, who headed the group’s last report on the auto sector. Kaufman stressed his group understood the administration faced tough decisions in orchestrating their overhaul and bankruptcy. Despite the criticism, the panel said in the report that the government’s intervention was ambitious and the companies now “appear to be on a promising course.” However, he said taxpayers will likely lose billions on now-public GM, and Treasury may have “left money on the table” in its dealings with private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management over Chrysler Financial, the automaker’s one-time consumer financing arm. Treasury has recovered about half of the $50 billion extended to GM in return for nearly 61 percent of the restructured company, and about $2.2 billion of the $12 billion given to Chrysler in exchange for a 10 percent interest. Treasury assumed 40 percent of Chrysler Financial’s equity as part of a $3.5 billion pre-bankruptcy loan in January 2009 to the lending unit’s parent, Chrysler Holding, which was owned at the time by Cerberus. Treasury settled for $1.9 billion — a loss of $1.6 billion on the loan — in May 2010, transferring the stake to Cerberus, which became the sole owner. Cerberus then agreed to sell the financing business for $6.3 billion to Toronto Dominion Bank in December, raising eyebrows over Treasury’s handling of the settlement. The panel found that Treasury officials apparently conducted “limited valuation due diligence, focusing on the merits of the offer from Cerberus,” the report said. Treasury, the panel said, expected that Chrysler Financial would be wound down, which would limit its value, and noted at the time of settlement the price paid by Cerberus was fair. Chrysler Financial, however, continued to make investments in its business before finding a strategic partner in TD Bank. Treasury disputed the conclusion it may not have fully vetted the Chrysler Financial settlement, saying it conducted several months of due diligence and hired an independent financial adviser to assist in valuation and check for other potential buyers. The panel was appointed by Congress to review bailouts under the Troubled Asset Relief Program. General Motors Co and Chrysler, now under management control of Italy’s Fiat Spa, received bailout and bankruptcy assistance from the Treasury in 2009. Ron Bloom, the administration’s pointman on auto restructuring, said in Detroit this week that the bailouts prevented widespread economic hardship. He also said the Treasury is moving responsibly to exit the business and that turnarounds at GM and Chrysler have “yielded concrete returns remarkably quickly.” Chrysler’s resurgence especially, he said, “has surprised just about everyone.” (Reporting by John Crawley; Editing by Richard Chang) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Chris Martenson, Ph.D.: Alert: QE II Has Lit the Fuse

November 11, 2010

For a very long time I have been calling for , expecting and otherwise anticipating the day that the Federal Reserve would begin openly monetizing government debt. I knew the day would come intellectually, but in my heart I hoped it wouldn’t. But with the Fed’s recent decision to directly monetize the next 8 months of federal deficit spending, that day has finally arrived. I have to confess, while my prediction has proven accurate, I’m still stunned the Fed actually did it. In this report I examine the risks that this new path presents, what match(es) may finally ignite the decades-old pile of dry fuel, what the outcomes are likely to be, and what we can and should be doing in preparation. How is this Quantitative Easing (QE) different from the prior QE? There are two main points of departure between the two QE programs: The level of global support for such efforts Where the money was/is targeted Let’s take the second point first. QE I consisted of all sorts of liquidity efforts that went by various acronyms, but the main act was the accumulation of some $1.25 trillion in MBS and agency debt. Some might note that taking MBS paper off the hands of financial institutions, which then bought treasuries with the cash, is little different than the recently announced QE II program because at the end of the day, money was printed and Treasuries were bought. In this regard, they’re right. But let’s be clear about something: the first QE effort had the specific aim of repairing damaged bank balance sheets . That is, banks and other financial institutions had made some colossally poor and risky financial moves that didn’t work out for them. They needed some help, and the Fed was more than happy to oblige by handing them free money to patch up their losses. Of course they didn’t do this outright by saying, “Here take this money!”; they did it somewhat sneakily. But when the Fed hands you huge piles of money (for your dodgy debt) and then let’s you park that very same money in an interest bearing account at the Fed, there’s really no difference between that and just handing banks free money. No difference at all. If the Fed ever offers you free money that you can then park in an interest bearing account with the Fed, you should take them up on it, and you should do it as much as they will allow. Indeed, that’s exactly what happened. These parked funds are called “excess reserves” and this chart clearly displays the massive program undertaken by the banks and the Fed: Now, it’s also true that the Fed does not pay a lot of interest on this money, just 0.25%, but on a trillion dollars that pencils out to some $2.5 billion a year, handed straight over to the banks. I call this program “stealth QE” because it is nothing more than printing money and handing it over to the banks with a slight bit of complexity thrown in just to put the dogs off the scent. A couple of billion may not sound like much these days, but I raise it to illustrate the many and creative ways that QE I was about getting the banks back to health, and not much else. So QE I (and the ‘stealth QE’ program) was directly aimed at banks to help them repair their balance sheets and make them whole on their terrible decisions and losses. It turned out, though, that fixing the banks did absolutely nothing for Main Street. The rest of the economy remained mired in a rut, with banks either unable or unwilling to make additional loans. They kept their QE lotto winnings and parked them with the Fed. QE II, then is about getting thin-air money to the government which, the Fed rightly assumes, will immediately spend that money and push it out into the economy. Here’s how the head of the Dallas Fed, Richard Fisher, put it in a recent talk he gave: A Bridge to Fiscal Sanity? The Federal Reserve will buy $110 billion a month in Treasuries, an amount that, annualized, represents the projected deficit of the federal government for next year. For the next eight months, the nation’s central bank will be monetizing the federal debt. This is risky business. We know that history is littered with the economic carcasses of nations that incorporated this as a regular central bank practice. There it is in black and white. You might want to read it a couple of times to let it sink in. The Fed is directly monetizing the next eight months of excess(ive) spending by the federal government and is doing it despite being perfectly aware of the extent to which history is littered with the economic carcasses of those who have traveled this path before. Presumably we are supposed to console ourselves with the idea that the Fed will be successful where others have failed, and sometimes failed miserably. Yes, we are talking about the same Fed that fueled that last two destructive bubbles by keeping interest rates too low for too long, failed to see the housing bubble as late as 2007 for what it was, and which apparently entirely lacked the capability to foresee any of the current mess. That Fed. The one run by the gentleman who said this to the House Budget Committee on June 3, 2009, “Either cuts in spending or increases in taxes will be necessary to stabilize the fiscal situation… The Federal Reserve will not monetize the debt .” ~ Ben Bernanke In summary, the difference between QE I and QE II is that QE I went primarily to the banks and QE II is going directly to the government. While this may be something of a semantic difference, it shows that the Fed is changing its strategy again. We might ask: why this shift and why now? How is QE II being viewed outside of the US? In a word, poorly. The German finance minster called the Fed’s application of US monetary policy ” clueless ” and argued that the Fed decision would ” increase the insecurity in the world economy .”

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Don Tapscott: Macrowikinomics: Time to Stop Tinkering, Time for Collaborative Health Care

November 8, 2010

This article is the second in a series of 12 over the next 3 weeks written by Don Tapscott and Anthony D. Williams authors of the newly released book Macrowikinomics: Rebooting Business and the World. The book is receiving a lot of buzz. Mark Parker, the CEO of Nike calls it “A Masterpiece. An iconic and defining book for our times.” The Economist says it’s a Schumpeterian story of creative Destruction.” The book argues that many of the institutions of the industrial age have finally come to the end of their lifecycle, and now being reinvented around a new set of principles and a networked model. Today’s blog is about rethinking health care. ***** Now that Republicans control the House, they will try to roll back ObamaCare. The president has said, understandably, that he will resist vigorously. But for all its sound and fury, the debate over ObamaCare is distracting us from a more important discussion: the basic model of health care is no longer viable. Indeed, both parties have different views about funding models, when evidence suggests that only much deeper changes in how we manage our own health and well-being can prevent spending from spiraling out of control. Despite the advancements of modern medicine, health care’s business model has remained unchanged for centuries. It assumes that, medically speaking, physicians are smart and patients aren’t. Doctors wait in their office or hospital for sick people to come to them, and doctors treat their patients and tell them what to do, one-on-one, face-to-face. If patients didn’t like what their doctor told them, they could shop around for other opinions if they could afford it. Patients play little or no role in deciding their own treatments plans. As one physician puts it: “Today’s healthcare institutions are like the old media: centralized, one way, immutable and controlled by the people who created and delivered it. Patients are passive recipients.” So it is no surprise that a growing number of physicians and patients want a better model of health care. They envision a system in which everyone involved, including patients, use the Web as a platform to share information, deliver care and build communities around medical interests and health goals. A main benefit, as studies show, is that when patients are more engaged in managing their own health, they are more committed to being healthy. Users of MedHelp, a popular online health community, are able to track over 1500 symptoms and treatments on a daily basis using iPhone apps covering both general health conditions, such as weight loss and allergies, and very specific disorders, such as infertility and diabetes. If patients so choose, this information can be shared on an ongoing basis via the Internet with their doctors or caregivers. This information continuum is much more useful than the readings taken during a visit to the doctor every one or two years. Studies show that constant attention to key indices can help motivate people to change their behavior. People who weigh themselves daily are more successful at weight loss and maintenance than those who weigh in weekly. People on the Weight Watchers diet who attend meetings and use digital tools, such as an iPhone app, to follow their points are 50 percent more successful in reaching their weight loss goals than those who don’t. Several pilot studies aimed at reducing the cost of chronic care confirm that such self-monitoring technology reduces errors, improves communication with doctors and helps patients better manage their illnesses. These advances, in turn, decrease emergency department trips, unnecessary doctor’s office appointments and costly home nurse visits. Since patients with chronic conditions absorb nearly 70% of Medicare spending according to the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Studies, equipping patients with tools for self-management would not only improve health outcomes, but also reduce costs. We also know that loneliness and isolation can be a medical risk factor, another area where the Internet can potentially help. Lonely people get sicker than the population as a whole. They suffer from a wide variety of ailments, ranging from colds to heart attacks. Lonely people with HIV respond less well to antiretroviral drugs. People who are lonely in their old age are twice as likely to develop Alzheimer’s than other seniors who are socially active. Socially isolated women have a greater risk of dying once they have been diagnosed with breast cancer. In the most exhaustive study on social ties and health to date, researchers at Brigham Young University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill pooled data from 148 studies on health outcomes and social relationships — every research paper on the topic they could find, involving more than 300,000 men and women across the developed world — and found that those with poor social connections had on average 50 percent higher odds of death in the study’s follow-up period (an average of 7.5 years) than people with more robust social ties. The overall boost in longevity is about as large as the mortality difference observed between smokers and nonsmokers, according to the authors. And it’s larger than differences in the risk of death associated with many other well-known lifestyle factors, including lack of exercise and obesity. Of course, you can’t legislate social relationships. But according to Dr. Michael Evans at St. Michaels Hospital in Toronto, doctors could do more to encourage patients to seek social support in online health care communities. What’s more, he suggests that patients with chronic conditions represent an untapped workforce that is not currently engaged in improving health care. An estimated 30 percent of the American population has a chronic disease and a further 29 percent of the population knows or cares for someone who has one. Bringing these communities together over the Internet to share health care experiences and outcomes, says Evans, can help speed up research and allow superior medical techniques and treatments to spread faster. Take PatientsLikeMe, a vibrant health care community whose members — 60,000 and growing – suffer from debilitating chronic conditions such as ALS, Parkinson’s and bipolar disorder. Members can share details of their medical history, which many do. They don’t mind the loss of privacy when the alternative is to struggle in isolation with the helplessness, lack of control and fear associated with illness. Exchanging information gives them an invaluable source of support and helps them make smarter decisions. Members participate for free, but the data they contribute is rendered anonymous and then aggregated to inform research conducted by doctors, pharmaceutical and medical device companies. This openness ultimately benefits everyone. New treatments can be evaluated and brought to market more quickly. Patients can learn about what’s working and, in consultation with their doctors, make adjustments to their own treatment plans. “People think we are a social networking site,” says co-founder Ben Heywood. “But we’re an open medical framework. This is a large scale research project.” As the benefits of online engagement become clear, we think the time has come for every American to have their own Personal Health Pages on the Internet, including children and infants. Think of it as the patient’s personal window into his or her own health and the basis for participation in a broader health social network. Adults would own and control their own data, but health care professionals (and perhaps family members) could access it as required with appropriate levels of privacy and security. It would serve as each person’s portal to health care information, link them to organizations such as Weight Watchers or a local health club, and track relevant medical advancements. Much like Facebook, a patient could create a community or join medical “causes”. And just like the App store, low-cost or free applications could help individuals measure their own health, do pre-diagnosis of a sick child or test for possible drug interactions. In the Internet-centric business model, patients become more like partners — they self-organize, contribute to the total sum of knowledge, share information, support each other, and become active in managing their own health. This goes beyond the current catchphrase of health care being “patient centric.” Not only is collaborative health care focused on the patient; the patient co-creates health care and wellness, producing an outcome that is a more evidence-based and cost-effective, i.e., safer, better and cheaper. Of course, without the buy-in of the biggest players — namely government and insurers — we won’t be able to maximize this opportunity and more people will get needlessly sick. Harness these new capabilities, on the other hand, and the medical establishment can join with patients and other stakeholders in making the health care system work for everyone. Follow Anthony Williams on Twitter: www.twitter.com/adw_tweets

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Dr. Leslye Obiora, JD, Former Minister of Mines and Steel for Nigeria, Joins Sunergy Advisory Board and Adds Key High Level Business and Political Contacts in West Africa

November 8, 2010

SCOTTSDALE, AZ–(Marketwire – November 8, 2010) –  Sunergy, Inc (the “Company”) ( PINKSHEETS : SNEY ) is pleased to announce that Leslye Obiora is a tenured and full Professor of Law at the University of Arizona. She recently served as the Minister of Mines and Steel for the Federal Republic of Nigeria and is the recipient of several distinguished awards, including fellowships from the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford, Institute for Advanced Studies Fellowship at Princeton, Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Study Center, and the Djerassi Resident Artist Program. She served as the Coca Cola World Fund Visiting Faculty at Yale University in 2009; she has been the Genest Global Faculty at Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto and the Visiting Gladstein Human Rights Professor at the University of Connecticut. Dr. Obiora is the founder of the Institute for Research on African Women, Children

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White House Calling The Shots On GM IPO: Reuters

November 1, 2010

NEW YORK/DETROIT (Reuters, By Clare Baldwin, Soyoung Kim and Kevin Krolicki) – Steve Girsky remembers sitting at his kitchen table in New York on the eve of President Barack Obama’s election when he realized that General Motors was going to run out of cash. “I put down my pad,” said Girsky, a banker brought in by the United Auto Workers union to report on GM’s finances. “I turned to my wife and said, ‘Remember this night. This is the night we figured out GM’s going out of business.’” Two weeks later, the same realization was sinking in across America as the chief executives of GM, Ford and Chrysler — and the head of the UAW — flew to Washington to ask Congress for an unprecedented bailout. By November 2008, GM was on a path to become “Government Motors,” with the U.S. Treasury its majority shareholder. As Girsky put it, “the situation got infinitely more complicated” — a controversial $50 billion bailout, a 2009 bankruptcy and an arc that took Girsky, 48, from a well connected industry analyst to the ultimate GM insider: a board member and the senior executive in charge of strategy. Two years after Girsky’s kitchen table reckoning, the agenda for GM remains dominated by the U.S. election cycle as the automaker reaches the final stage of preparation for an initial public offering to pay some of the roughly $40 billion it owes American taxpayers. The Obama administration and GM executives say the White House has stayed good to its pledge to refrain from meddling in the day-to-day management of this 102-year-old industrial enterprise with 600,000 American workers and retirees and 12 percent of the global car market. But a review of key events leading up to GM’s IPO and interviews with people involved inside and outside the company show that the U.S. government has been running key aspects of the landmark stock deal and exerting tight oversight on management decisions seen as crucial to its success. On the biggest questions surrounding the IPO, including its speed and size, the fees paid to the bankers and the potential involvement of offshore investors, the U.S. Treasury has called the shots, people involved in the process say. That in turn has added a layer of complexity to a deal expected to rank as one of the top IPOs of all time by size. It also leaves open the possibility that the Treasury Department will remain an invisible hand that guides other decisions down the line, which could concern some investors. “I’m sure that there will be some institutional investors, and even some individual investors, that it scares away,” said Morningstar analyst David Whiston, who nevertheless sees a good chance for GM to be worth enough to make taxpayers whole on the bailout. GM, its advisers, the banks and the U.S. Treasury declined to discuss the IPO and related issues publicly, citing U.S. securities regulations. Since May, the Obama team has pushed GM and bankers to have the IPO ready for the fall. People familiar with the plans say a road show for investors will begin after congressional elections on Tuesday, which are expected to reflect voter backlash against Democratic incumbents. That timetable represents the first step in an exit strategy for the U.S. investment in GM that was vetted by outgoing White House economic adviser Larry Summers in 2009. The initial plan projected that GM would launch an IPO in late 2010 that would allow the U.S. Treasury to sell 20 percent of its common stock in the automaker, reducing its ownership to below majority at 49 percent. The strategy called for subsequent sales that would get the government out of GM entirely before the end of the next presidential term, according to people involved in the process. Summers “really wanted it understood that the government was going to be out by eight years. I think everybody’s hope and expectation was that we would be out a good deal faster, maybe in the three- to five-year time frame,” said former autos task force chief Steven Rattner. Treasury and the other GM investors, the UAW’s health care trust and Canada, will likely make a call on how much stock to sell in the IPO in the days ahead of the offering, which is expected during the week of November 15. UNDER THE HOOD By many accounts, political considerations have loomed throughout the run-up to the IPO, sources said. In one example, bankers debated whether it would be appropriate to fly on private jets to pitch investors on GM’s road show, given the public backlash when auto CEOs arrived in Washington in 2008 on separate charters to plead for a bailout. The stigma of government ownership also complicated GM’s efforts to market itself. In one case, GM quietly dropped a plan for a commercial for the Chevy Cruze small car that would have featured Sarah Palin, the polarizing Republican politician, and her comic doppelganger, Tina Fey, two people familiar with the proposal said. Coming so close to the November election and the IPO, the ad was seen as edgy, but too controversial given GM’s ownership, they said. For his part, GM Chairman Ed Whitacre, a former AT&T CEO, says the Obama administration has held good to a pledge to let GM run its operations despite a government ownership stake of almost 61 percent. Other insiders also give the White House a clean bill on that claim. Said one: “Obama is not calling with ideas on the color of the Chevy Volt.” “Before I went, I said, ‘We want to run it ourselves.’ They said, ‘Fine.’ They were true to that word; they never interfered one minute. They did exactly what they said. I have to give them an A plus,” Whitacre, 68, told Reuters earlier this month of his interaction with the U.S. autos task force. But before Whitacre took over as GM CEO in December 2009, the task force had been directly involved in decision-making at the automaker and had an active role in the process that led to the board’s decision to fire his predecessor, Fritz Henderson. In the most direct intervention of 2009, the White House scuttled a proposal by GM to leave its glass-towered headquarters in Detroit’s Renaissance Center for the nearby suburb of Warren where it has its engineering and development center, according to Rattner. Whitacre himself chafed at Washington oversight during his brief tenure as CEO and chairman, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. This person said Whitacre felt hemmed in by the team of securities lawyers brought in to ensure that nothing would upset the timetable for Treasury’s planned IPO. THE RETURN OF THE BANKERS By this spring, James Bainbridge Lee was back. Known as Jimmy at his bank JPMorgan Chase and to his many clients, Lee had returned to a familiar spot: negotiating with the Obama administration over a deal stemming from its bailout of the U.S. auto industry. A 35-year Wall Street veteran, Lee was the point man in high-stakes, but failed negotiations between a group of creditors and the Obama autos team to keep Chrysler out of bankruptcy in 2009. Just over a year later, he was jockeying for a piece of the GM IPO, potentially one of the largest and most prestigious IPOs ever. In a reminder of the stakes, the U.S. Treasury had called GM “an icon of American ingenuity, productivity and capitalism” in its initial legal salvo to remake the automaker. At one point in early 2009, Lee, 58, a staunch Republican, also lobbied Rattner to consider reviving plans for a merger of GM and Chrysler. That proposed last-ditch merger from late 2008, dubbed “Project America” by Chrysler planners, was the reason Girsky had been brought in to examine GM’s rapidly deteriorating finances for the UAW. But by 2010, Lee shifted his attention to the GM IPO. “It’s high profile. Jimmy loves high profile,” said one person involved in the deal. As a sign of his enthusiasm, Lee took to showing off pictures of his brand new Corvette ZR1, GM’s fastest production car ever, priced at $120,000. “He’s done that since day one. He’s been shameless about it. ‘Look at the car I bought,’” the person said. The banker’s bake-off for a piece of GM’s IPO took place in the presence of U.S. Treasury officials on May 19 at the office of law firm Jenner & Block, according to participants. Morgan Stanley sent Chairman John Mack, JPMorgan sent Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon, Bank of America sent President and CEO Brian Moynihan and Citigroup had CEO Vikram Pandit dial in by phone. Goldman Sachs’ Lloyd Blankfein was in London so the bank sent President and COO Gary Cohn and co-investment bank head David Solomon instead. The stakes were high: Whitacre was understood to have been pushing a Texas-style big deal to whittle down the government’s stake. That had the potential to make the automaker’s IPO bigger than Visa’s $19.7 billion offering in March 2008. It was clear to all involved in the meetings that Treasury would be run GM’s offering with Lazard as its adviser. GM, in name, would make the call, but Treasury retained veto power over the selection of underwriters. Its role was bolstered by Whitacre’s apparent lack of interest in which banks landed the coveted lead slots, sources said. “It opened a lobbying circus for Treasury,” one source said. Each bank turned in a stack of papers with responses to questions posed by Lazard, including the types of investors to be targeted, credentials, and suggestions for improving GM’s capital structure. The pitches drew in part on each bank’s history in the industry and its work with the Obama Treasury. Morgan Stanley worked with Treasury on analyzing mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and helped sell its stake in Citi. GM’s Vice Chairman Girsky, who represented the interests of the UAW on GM’s board and had emerged as Whitacre’s closest confidant, was also a former Morgan Stanley auto analyst. JPMorgan was one of the largest lenders to the auto industry and had a history with GM going back to its fast-growth days of the 1920s when it began its ascent under President and Chairman Alfred Sloan. It offered to take its fee in GM stock, a move designed to show that its success was literally tied to that of GM. That offer was ultimately discarded by U.S. officials on fears that the stock would appreciate too much and JPMorgan would end up with an outsized fee, sources said. Bank of America played up its retail distribution angle, arguing that the size of the offering and GM’s well known name would entail large sales to individual investors. The bank argued that it was best placed for that work because of its Merrill retail brokerage unit — an acquisition it made during the height of the financial crisis. Goldman Sachs had a tough sell. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in April charged the bank in a civil lawsuit with improperly packaging and marketing a mortgage product. In the three months it took to settle the charges, Goldman’s stock was hammered, at one point losing more than $25 billion of its value. The initial selection process for lead underwriters was complete before Goldman’s July settlement. Sources familiar with the process said the Goldman controversy made the U.S. government reluctant to award the bank a lead role in what would be a closely scrutinized offering. The GM bailout remained unpopular with voters and Wall Street was taking flack for its rising, post-financial crisis pay even as Main Street’s economy sputtered. It was clear that the GM underwriting fees would have to be vetted against that tough political backdrop. Treasury went through Lazard to poll banks on the fee they would be willing to accept. An offering of $10 billion to $20 billion would typically come with a fee of 3 percent to 3.5 percent. Most banks responded that they would underwrite the offering for slightly less, between 2 percent and 2.5 percent. Then Goldman raced to the bottom, announcing it would do the deal for a fee of 0.75 percent. “They probably realized they needed to do something dramatic,” said one person familiar with the pitch. The bid put Treasury in a tough spot, that person said. “How would it have looked if it got out that they didn’t accept the lowest bid?” Led by Ron Bloom, a former Lazard banker and assistant to the United Steelworkers union, Treasury officials used the Goldman bid to lever down its rivals. The potential size of the GM IPO helped cushion the blow. At $10 billion – the low end of the IPO range projected — a 0.75 percent fee means $75 million in fees. By comparison, all U.S. IPO fees in the first half of the year totaled $700 million, according to research firm Freeman Consulting. “I think we’re ready to eat whatever is presented,” said one weary banker, noting that the underwriting business was still below pre-crisis levels. Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan were finally chosen as lead underwriters to help prepare GM’s SEC filing for its IPO. Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Citi, which led the syndication for GM’s $5 billion credit line, were later added as lead underwriters. Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan fought to keep them out of that role, a source said. The IPO, which would return the onetime blue chip GM to the public markets, was dubbed “Project Dawn” by bankers. As a gesture of gratitude to Canada for its role in the bailout, it was decided that the new GM would be dual listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange as well as the New York Stock Exchange, sources said. Then came a twist that underscored the unexpected consequences of the U.S. government’s ownership stake in both banks and car companies. The U.S. Treasury, which owns 61 percent of GM, also owned 12 percent of Citigroup’s common stock. At its core, that set the government up to be potentially both a buyer and a seller of GM stock. The conflict was seen as unlikely to have a major impact on the IPO but was significant enough to have been flagged in a regulatory filing with the SEC. HOW WILL IT PLAY IN QATAR? One of the key questions for GM’s underwriters was whether they would be able to market the deal to sovereign wealth funds, pools of money managed for foreign governments in Asia and the Middle East. The advantages of such an approach were clear. Bankers involved in the deal argued that funds like the Kuwait and Qatar investment authorities could serve as “cornerstone” investors that could buy and agree to hold a big chunk of the deal in an otherwise tough market. But the Treasury was sensitive to the potential backlash. Had U.S. taxpayers bailed out GM to subsidize its purchase by foreign governments in the Middle East, Singapore and China? After all, the GM IPO was expected to be priced at a discount of up to 20 percent from what bank analysts determined would be its theoretical value. By September, the question became more pressing because GM’s partner in Shanghai, Chinese automaker SAIC, had expressed an interest in buying a “single digit” stake, sources said. That trial balloon put the pressure on Treasury to clarify how investors would be treated. After deliberations involving Bloom and Herb Allison, a former Merrill Lynch executive who was then overseeing the Treasury’s bank bailout fund, Treasury delivered its verdict late on a Friday in mid-September. In a statement posted online, the Treasury said the GM IPO would be open to the widest range of investors as it looked to “maximize returns” on its stake. The bankers had a green light to pitch the likes of Kuwait and Qatar. By early October, GM IPO bankers had kicked off meetings with sovereign wealth funds, according to people with knowledge of the proceedings. The meetings, like every aspect of the GM IPO, were supposed to be under the radar given the restrictions set by U.S. securities regulators. But like other key aspects of the deal, news of the initial approach to Singapore and Middle East-based funds leaked. One GM executive was stunned by how quickly information on the GM deal got out despite the SEC-imposed “quiet period.” In May, when the Treasury began interviewing bankers, “our guys would walk out of a meeting with Treasury and then read on their BlackBerrys what had just been said,” he said. The October meetings between GM bankers and Singapore-based GIC and Temasek Holdings, Kuwait Investment Authority, Qatar Investment Authority and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority focused on how GM had been remade by the Obama team’s bankruptcy plan. According to two people familiar with its terms, the pitch to sovereign wealth funds centered on several areas where the Obama autos team had left its stamp on GM. Specifically, investors were asked to consider GM’s strengthened balance sheet after bankruptcy stripped out over $80 billion in liabilities, GM’s market-leading presence in China, and steps the new management team were taking to reverse losses in its struggling European division, Opel, after deciding to keep the unit in late 2009. That loss amounted to $1.5 billion over the past three quarters. Another major positive for GM, sovereign wealth funds were told, was that the automaker had brought costs down so dramatically that it could break even with industry-wide sales as low 10 million vehicles in the United States depending on other assumptions about its market share and the popularity of more profitable trucks. To put that in perspective, the new GM would have made money even in 2008 when the old GM lost a staggering $31 billion. By late 2010, even some of the toughest critics of the GM bailout were ready to open the door to foreign governments buying in at the IPO. Sen. Richard Shelby, a Republican from Alabama, said he stands by his opposition of bailouts, but acknowledged that GM might have to bring in other government investors to buy shares from U.S. taxpayers. “In the best of all worlds, I would say they shouldn’t be allowed to invest, but I don’t know where we get our capital at the moment, or where we are going to get the money to do it,” Shelby told Reuters. Rattner, who left the autos task force in July 2009 because of a securities probe of his former private equity firm, Quadrangle, said he expected sovereign wealth funds would step delicately into any GM investment to avoid a repeat of the controversy over a proposed 2006 deal to sell U.S. ports to a company based in the United Arab Emirates. “I think everyone and the sovereign wealth funds recognize the political sensitivities around that. I don’t think they’ll want to get themselves into a Dubai Ports situation,” he told Reuters. PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES As GM got closer to wooing investors for its IPO, details that normally would not warrant discussion, like whether GM should use private or commercial planes for its road show, cropped up. “It’s fair to say GM is very concerned about appearing extravagant,” said one person. “Even though we always do this, because it’s the only way to really get a road show done properly in an amount of time that minimizes market risk for the seller, this one might be a special case.” Two years earlier, GM, Ford and Chrysler faced public and congressional outrage for using private planes to fly to Washington, D.C. to request bailouts. The backlash was so severe that they later drove from Detroit for a follow-up hearing in hybrids, a move mocked on “Saturday Night Live.” In a sign of government-imposed austerity, when executives from Chrysler and GM hammered out their restructuring at Treasury, Rattner had to pay out of pocket for the take-out deli sandwiches brought in to the crowded meeting rooms at Treasury. As a recipient of taxpayer funds, GM adopted an expense in September requiring most employees to find the lowest-cost economy flight. Senior executives are allowed to fly business class. The GM CEO, vice chairmen and directors are allowed to use charter flights — but only in North America. Whitacre, who took advantage of a provision in his 2007 retirement package from AT&T to fly home to San Antonio most weekends from Detroit when he served as GM CEO, said commercial flights would remain the rule for the IPO. “There are no private planes at GM, so there aren’t many options,” he told Reuters in late September. “You’ll go public or drive.” Nothing has to be set until the road show begins, but if the bankers have their way, the taxpayer-owned automaker will use private jets for the IPO, sources said. Said one person involved in the deal: “It is nuts to think people are going to go wait through security lines. And the possibility you would have a missed flight and that that would affect your ability to sell stock? It would be the stupidest decision on the face of the planet.” “It’s just dumb. It would be so penny-wise, pound-foolish it would be ridiculous,” said the banker. GONE FISHING By the early summer of this year, there were increasing signs that “Big Ed” Whitacre was having less fun in his day job running GM. Whitacre, whose father had been a union-represented railroad engineer, had won points with then-UAW President Ron Gettelfinger for meeting him for breakfast at a diner just down the street from GM’s headquarters. He liked to turn up unannounced at GM plants, often in jeans. At one point, he was turned away by a security guard who said he could not find Whitacre on a list of GM employees. Over time, to some both inside and outside GM, Whitacre sometimes seemed lost — or worse, without much to do — as he wandered the corridors of a company that still employs over 200,000 people worldwide, equivalent to about 10 Googles. At one point, he showed up unannounced at GM’s vehicle development center in Warren and ate lunch in the cafeteria “by himself to see who shows up,” Girsky recalled. The rest of the afternoon he just drifted from meeting to meeting, listening in without a particular plan to the engineers as they worked. “He said, ‘Did you know it takes nine people to validate a wheel?’” Girsky said in June. “‘I had no idea.’” Girsky and Whitacre had become something of an odd couple by mid-2010: the fast-talking New Yorker and the laconic Texan. Both had taken apartments in the Westin Book Cadillac hotel, within walking distance of GM’s downtown Detroit headquarters and they often ate dinner together during the week. Whitacre, an enthusiastic outdoorsman, even brought Girsky along on a weekday trip to Windsor, Ontario, to get a Canadian fishing license so he could fish both sides of the Detroit River, according to a person with knowledge of the trip. On the return back through the tunnel that connects Windsor with Detroit, Whitacre and Girsky were stopped by a border patrol agent who seemed puzzled by their story. “Let me get this straight,” he said. “You work for GM and you took off on company time in a company car to get a fishing license?” Whitacre’s delegate-it-all approach and a tendency to minimize board and government oversight as CEO and chairman also caused other tensions. In April, Whitacre appeared in a TV ad that celebrated GM’s decision to return $7.1 billion in loans due to the U.S. government. Conservative critics pounced on the ad as misleading. They noted that the money was being paid back from a pool of funds left over from the bailout. “We are concerned that GM, under your leadership, has come dangerously close to committing fraud, and that you may have colluded with the United States Treasury to deceive the American public,” Republicans Darrell Issa and Jim Jordan, members of the House oversight committee told Whitacre in an open letter. “There are a lot of people out there who would like to see GM be successful,” said Alexander Edwards, who heads auto consulting for San Diego-based Strategic Vision. “But that (ad) pissed a lot of people off.” BUYING BACK THE BANK Meanwhile, Whitacre, working on the advice of Girsky, was quietly going to work on a high-stakes deal to give GM back its own in-house financing arm. GM’s rivals Toyota Motor Corp and Ford have large captive finance units. GM dealers were complaining loudly that they were having a harder time securing loans for subprime customers and financing leases after GM sold control of its captive finance arm, Ally Financial, formerly GMAC, in 2006. The lack of leasing options in particular were costing sales of higher priced vehicles, dealers complained. As of September, GM had leased just 21 percent of its sales — far lower than the 29 percent lease penetration for Toyota or 28 percent at Honda, according to auto tracking firm CNW. On July 22, Whitacre announced the deal to buy AmeriCredit as an example of the new fast-moving culture of accountability he had tried to foster. “When this opportunity arose, we acted swiftly and decisively,” he said. But not everybody was happy with Whitacre’s big, bold bet, which took barely a month from start to finish. GM did not consult the Treasury during the discussions and the government was troubled at the last-minute notice before the announcement, people familiar with its thinking said. U.S. officials were also concerned about how the deal would affect Ally, which is 56 percent owned by the Treasury and remains a major lender to GM, the sources said. A government bailout watchdog is now reviewing the transaction, triggered by a request from Sen. Chuck Grassley, an Iowa Republican. Neil Barofsky, the special inspector general for the Treasury Department’s corporate bailout program, said in a letter to Grassley that auditors would look into what role Treasury officials played in “reviewing, approving or otherwise participating in the AmeriCredit decision.” Meanwhile, Whitacre was finding the oversight from the securities lawyers brought in to police GM compliance with the government’s fast-track IPO plan grinding. When he told reporters that GM’s second-quarter results would be “impressive” as the automaker readied its IPO filing, it triggered a meeting with the IPO lawyers, a person with knowledge of the meeting said. Whitacre and Bloom also clashed on the size of the IPO. Whitacre was pushing for a big deal and said as much. “We want the government out, period,” he said. “We don’t want to be known as Government Motors.” Bloom, who had to worry that a big offering would mean driving down the price of GM stock and reducing the return for taxpayers, remained cautious. “We’re going to do it in a proper and thoughtful way,” he said in early August. About the same time, Whitacre also made it clear to Treasury and others at GM that he was unwilling to stay on beyond 2010 as CEO. That caused an immediate problem and created a risk that GM would have to disclose in its SEC filing. It also triggered a hasty succession, the third CEO turnover in 18 months. When the board convened in early August at the automaker’s 38th floor executive suite overlooking the Detroit River, GM directors had no idea that Whitacre had readied a bombshell: seven months after becoming “permanent” CEO to replace Henderson, he was quitting. Directors first tried to persuade Whitacre to stay, a person with direct knowledge of the proceedings said. When that failed, the executive session turned to possible successors already on the GM board. The government-imposed IPO timeline meant there was no time for a proper CEO search like the one that Spencer Stuart had helped Treasury conduct for board members in 2009. The board considered Dan Akerson, 62, a former U.S. Navy officer turned head of buyouts at The Carlyle Group, and Girsky, who had no top-level management experience. On August 12, GM stunned the world with an announcement that Akerson would take over as CEO for Whitacre, less than a week before GM filed with the SEC for its IPO. “Whitacre was brought in as the government’s big champion and then he gets frustrated and leaves,” said Logan Robinson, a law professor and governance expert at the University of Detroit Mercy. “It leads to some confusion over who’s in charge.” A GOOD SEAT AT A BAD MOVIE “I tell people — half kidding — I had a good seat at a bad movie,” Girsky told analysts in June in describing his involvement with the early stages of GM’s bailout. How that movie ends is an open question. Executives, suppliers, consultants and bankers point to change in GM’s once notoriously rule-bound and slow-moving culture, a process that accelerated under Whitacre. Other signs include cost cuts and a deepened dedication to quality in new vehicles like the Chevy Cruze, a small car reviewers have praised for a comfortable interior and mileage on par with the Honda Civic. Analysts also agree that the Obama administration’s restructuring gave GM a shot at sustained profits by slashing jobs, plants and debt and allowing it to break even at the worst U.S. sales levels in 25 years. One key measure of GM’s success centers on its improved pricing. For most of the past decade, GM relied on fire sale incentives to move metal and manage inventories because it was locked into a UAW contract that forced it to pay workers nearly full wages whether plants were running or not. But with newer products and more flexibility in its labor contract after the restructuring, GM began to push prices higher — up $3,000, for example, for the average crossover like the Chevy Equinox or Buick Enclave. Consumer Reports, the most influential guide to U.S. car purchasing, gave GM high marks in October for its gains in dependability on a range of new models. They include the Cadillac CTS-V — Whitacre’s ride of choice. GM, analysts say, also has lined up potential successors for Akerson down the road. Mark Reuss, 47, whom Whitacre appointed to a new job running North America, has a reputation as an unrelenting advocate for vehicle quality. He was one of the organizers of an effort that began in 2006 to get senior executives to drive pre-production cars weekly in a bid to iron out problems. They called the improvised effort to hold the line on quality “the knothole rides.” Every new car had to come through that single opening with Reuss and like-minded car guys as gatekeepers on winding drives near the GM test track in Milford, Michigan. “In the past we had meetings,” said Karl Stracke, GM’s vice president of global vehicle engineering. “The guys in the meetings had not always ridden in the cars, and there were finance guys questioning all the time why we need something we knew was important to get performance from the car.” Chris Liddell, 52, a 2009 hire from Microsoft who has acknowledged his desire to become CEO, has also won praise for simplifying the presentation of GM’s financial information and working to shore up financial controls, an area of weakness singled out by the Obama autos team under Steven Rattner. Joel Ewanick, who was hired in mid-year to revive GM’s marketing program in the United States after helping to drive Hyundai’s fast sales gains, has also described a more ordered and disciplined approach to marketing GM’s remaining brands, GM, Buick, GMC and Cadillac. The first major effort under his watch was a new ad campaign for Chevy that unspooled at the start of the World Series. The ads under the theme “Chevy Runs Deep” were crafted to evoke the positive connections an earlier generation of Americans felt for GM cars and trucks. After years of touting the battery-powered Volt as a technological breakthrough and greener than a Toyota Prius, the new ad settles on a simpler pitch. The Volt’s on-board engine, the ad implies, provides a way to have an electric car with extra assurance that you can go wherever the road takes you, an implicit jibe at Nissan’s fully electric Leaf. “This is America, man,” actor Tim Allen narrates in his familiar, guy-next-door baritone. “Home of the highway, last-minute detours and spontaneous acts of freedom.” Despite GM’s gains, the almost certain prospect of U.S. government involvement in the automaker into the next presidential term represents a risk for investors who will be asked to put money into the IPO, analysts say. The decision to push ahead with a November IPO for GM in the face of a “lackluster” market, for example, was clearly a political call by the Obama administration eager to show progress in paying back taxpayers, Morningstar’s Whiston said. “I think it’s going to put an overhang on the stock for a few years,” he said. Even so, he sees GM emerging as worth up to $86 billion, enough to make taxpayers whole on the bailout. Other industry observers worry that GM’s rush to market and the turnover at the top with four CEOs in the past 18 months has developed as a distraction, keeping the automaker from honing the kind of discipline and focus that marked the early turnaround of rival Ford under CEO Alan Mulally. Mulally, a former Boeing executive, is credited with breaking down fiefdoms at Ford. His boss Bill Ford once famously said the company had “more intrigue than czarist Russia.” “GM doesn’t have the kind of clear leadership that Alan Mulally brought to the Ford organization.” said Dennis Virag, president of Ann Arbor, Michigan-based Automotive Consulting Group. “They are making progress, but it’s at a snail’s pace.” Peter Kaufman, president of the Gordian Group and an adviser to dissident bondholders in GM’s restructuring, said many of the questions raised by the government bailout in 2009 were still alive for investors on the cusp of the IPO. “Are they running this company for profit to shareholders or for other, more political, goals?” Kaufman asked. “As long as the government runs this company, that will be a key question.” (Reporting by Clare Baldwin, Soyoung Kim and Kevin Krolicki; Additional reporting by David Bailey, Bernie Woodall and Deepa Seetharaman in Detroit, John Crawley in Washington and Philipp Halstrick in Frankfurt; Editing by Jim Impoco and Robert MacMillan)

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GM IPO: Will You Buy Shares In The New General Motors? (POLL)

August 19, 2010

DETROIT (AP) – Thirteen months ago, General Motors was fighting for its life in bankruptcy court. Now, the automaker is laying the groundwork to sell stock to the public once again with the eventual goal of ridding itself of government ownership. General Motors Co. filed the first batch of paperwork required to hold an initial public offering of stock late Wednesday. The 700-page document submitted to regulators laid out reasons, and risks, to investors considering buying GM stock. The filing, called an S-1, was short on specifics. GM didn’t say how many shares would be sold or when, although experts say the IPO could come as early as October. It also didn’t say how many shares GM’s majority owner, the U.S. government, plans to unload. Such a sale would eventually lead to the government shrinking its big stake in the automaker, something GM is eager to see. The company’s outgoing CEO, Ed Whitacre, has said government ownership has hurt GM’s public image and sales. However, GM warned in its filing that the U.S. Treasury would continue to own a “substantial interest” in the automaker following the IPO. More details about the offering is likely to emerge with additional filings in the coming weeks and months. GM did say its stakeholders initially will sell common stock, while the company itself will sell preferred shares, which are like bonds and include dividend payments. GM said it will use proceeds from the preferred stock sale for general business expenses. The filing means GM and its current owners are likely to sell part of their stakes in several offerings that will take months to finish, said Scott Sweet, owner of IPO research firm IPO Boutique. Analysts have speculated that the initial sale could be worth up to $20 billion, but the filing gave no number. GM would have to bring in $70 billion just to pay back all the automaker’s stakeholders. That could come in several sales over months. The U.S. government now owns about 61 percent of GM, which it got in exchange for giving the company $50 billion in survival aid last year. GM has repaid $6.7 billion, and the remaining $43.3 billion was converted to the ownership stake. Other stakeholders include a United Auto Workers health-care trust and the Canadian government. Demand for GM’s new shares isn’t known. In the coming weeks, the company will pitch itself to big investors such as pension, mutual and hedge funds. Many of the shares will go to those larger players, but small investors will also get a chance to buy in. There are risks. The IPO market is weak. And GM, which lost about $100 billion in the five years leading up to last year’s bankruptcy, is hardly a sure bet. Still, a quick run through bankruptcy court cleansed GM of burdensome debt. It closed 12 factories and its labor costs were cut dramatically through deals with the United Auto Workers union. Helped by those cost cuts, GM earned a healthy $2.2 billion in the first half of this year despite depressed U.S. auto sales. It’s set up to do better if sales rebound, especially in fast-growing countries like Brazil and China, where GM plans to launch nearly 20 vehicles in the next two years. The company gave investors a lengthy list of risks on Wednesday, including restructuring costs and concerns about the competitiveness of its vehicles. For example, the Chevrolet Volt, its highly anticipated electric car due for release this year, requires battery technology “that has not yet proven to be commercially viable. There can be no assurances that these advances will occur in a timely or feasible way.” Even new executives were listed as risk factors. GM acknowledged that incoming CEO Daniel Akerson and Chief Financial Officer Chris Liddell have “no outside automotive industry experience” and said it was important for the management team to “quickly adapt and excel” in their new roles. Both, however, have extensive experience with successful companies. Akerson held top posts for telecommunications firms and Liddell served as CFO of Microsoft Corp. GM said the company was dependent upon global car and truck sales and said “there is no assurance that the global automobile market will recover in the near future or that it will not suffer a significant further downturn.” The company said it had no plans to pay dividends on its common stock and future dividends would be determined by its board of directors. The company said it will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker “GM,” the symbol under which it traded before it entered bankruptcy. Shares will also trade in Canada on the Toronto Stock Exchange, but the ticker symbol hasn’t been determined. Francis Gaskins, president of IPOdesktop.com, said GM’s decision to sell preferred shares rather than common stock is a sign that it is having trouble attracting interest from investors and felt the need to sweeten the offering with the preferred dividends. “Only a company that’s not strong would do that,” he said. “It’s a tip-off that the investment community needs something special.” The new preferred shares will be converted to an unknown number of common stock sometime in 2013, the filing said. GM also said in the filing that said outgoing CEO Ed Whitacre, who leaves Sept. 1, will get a compensation package worth around $9 million. He gets a $1.7 million annual salary and the rest in stock. ___ AP Auto Writer Dan Strumpf contributed to this story from New York.

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GM IPO: Automaker Will Be Listed On U.S. And Canadian Exchanges

August 18, 2010

(Reuters) – General Motors Co will list its shares on the New York Stock Exchange and Toronto Stock Exchange after its initial public offering, a source familiar with the matter said on Wednesday. The filing for GM’s IPO with U.S. securities regulators is expected on Wednesday, two people involved in the top U.S. automaker’s preparations for going public said.

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Ujwal Arkalgud: Marketing Needs To Stop Its BS and Wake Up

July 23, 2010

Social technologies have transformed the fundamental way in which organizations interact with their audiences. They have given employees a voice (whether companies like it or not!) and have become an organizations’ gateway into understanding culture[1]. Additionally, Social technologies have also empowered audiences, who today are highly knowledgeable, have a strong voice, and are impervious to traditional marketing B.S. Unfortunately most organizations and most marketers do not understand this phenomenon. The net result — they fail to make real connections with real people. Take the traditional focus group for example. In it’s simplest form, a focus group is a research method that’s typically used to understand a consumer’s reaction to a product/service. Focus groups are essentially after-the-fact testing grounds. They don’t really provide market researchers with any real insight into the needs of consumers. What’s more, they give marketers the ability to get away with ridiculous ideas and concepts. Remember the Arnell Group’s Tropicana Packaging debacle? This design was put through extensive focus group testing. Here’s an explanation they offered in regards to the carton’s design: Historically, we always show the outside of the orange. What was fascinating was that we had never shown the product called the juice…the idea of course is to have a consistency between the purity of the juice, which is coming directly from the orange, the cap which you squeeze every day and of course the carton. – Peter Arnell Tell me that doesn’t sound ludicrous! Here’s a link to an article that explains the design of Pepsi’s new logo. I think some of this is so over the top that even a television show like “The Office” is put to shame! For my Canadian readers, I want to include the example of a recent Niagara Tourism ad campaign that took cheap shots at the city of Toronto and then invited Torontonians to come visit. Again, focus group tested and certified! Real research is about immersing ourselves in our audiences’ culture. It’s about spending time with consumers and understanding their world. That’s where ethnography steps in. Ethnography is about understanding needs before they exist. Fundamentally, it’s a form of qualitative research where data is gathered by observing audiences in their natural surroundings and conducting intuitive in-dept interviews. So why are most organizations not adapting quickly enough? Well, for one, it requires a massive shift in organizational culture. Responsibility also goes to educational institutions, especially business schools, who haven’t really evolved either. At the end of the day, audiences have moved on and their expectations have changed. The next five years will see drastic changes in the way organizations engage with their audiences. It’s not a choice anymore. These are the ‘ cluetrain ‘ years. [1] “The body of ideas, emotions and activities that make up the life of the consumer” (quote from Chief Culture Officer ).

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Avison Young CEO Mark Rose On The Record About U.S. Expansion

July 20, 2010

Avison Young’s appetite for growth shows no signs of waning. The Toronto, Ontario-based company has been snapping up real estate services firms as it continues its U.S. expansion, most recently adding Hodges Management and Leasing Co. in Atlanta to bolster…

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U.S. Trade Deficit Widens To Highest Level In 18 Months

July 13, 2010

WASHINGTON — The U.S. trade deficit widened in May to the highest level in 18 months as a rebounding economy pushed up demand for imports of foreign-made cars, computers and clothing. The trade deficit increased 4.8 percent to $42.3 billion, the largest imbalance since November 2008, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday. American exports of goods and services rose 2.4 percent but this increase was outpaced by a 2.9 percent rise in imports. American manufacturing has been a standout performer so far in this recovery, benefiting from a global economic recovery. But the concern is that export sales will be hurt by the European debt crisis, which has dampened growth prospects in Europe. Through May, the U.S. trade deficit is running at an annual rate of $474.8 billion, up by 26.6 percent from $374.9 billion deficit for all of 2009. That had been the lowest annual trade gap since 2001, another year when the country was in recession. The rise in the May deficit came despite the fact that oil imports dropped by 9.1 percent to $27.6 billion as both the price of oil and the volume of shipments declined slightly. The 2.4 percent rise in exports in May compared to April pushed sales of American goods and services to $152.3 billion, the highest level since September 2008. While sales of soybeans, wheat and other farm products were down in May, demand for American-made autos, industrial machinery, medical equipment and commercial aircraft all increased. Imports rose 2.9 percent to $194.5 billion, the highest level since October 2008, reflecting big gains in imports of cars, computers, oil drilling equipment and industrial machinery. The deficit with the European Union rose 7.5 percent to $6.2 billion as imports from Europe rose by 3.2 percent, ouptacing a 1.9 percent rise in U.S. exports to that region. The concern is that American exports could falter in coming months if a debt crisis in Europe pushes that region back into recession. The debt troubles have also caused the value of the euro to weaken against the dollar this year, making American goods less competitive in the 16 nations that use the euro currency. The deficit with China rose to $22.3 billion, the largest imblanace since last October and a 15.4 percent jump from the April deficit. So far this year, the U.S. deficit with China, the largest imbalance with any individual country, is up 10.2 percent from the same period a year ago. The rising deficit with China at a time of high unemployment in the United States is increasing pressure on the Obama administration and Congress to adopt a tougher stance in trade disputes with China. Last week, the Obama administration declined to cite China in a report to Congress as a country that was unfairly manipulating its currency to gain trade advantages. That disappointed American manufacturers who believe the Chinese yuan is undervalued by as much as 40 percent. On June 19, just before leaders of the Group of 20 major industrial countries met in Toronto, China announced it was going to allow more flexibility in its currency. But critics contend that the yuan has risen in value only slightly since that time. Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., has vowed to push for an early Senate vote on legislation that would impose sanctions on Chinese imports to the United States if Beijing does not accelerate its currency reforms.

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BLADE Network Technologies Appoints Michael Lethbridge as Its First Canada Country Manager

July 13, 2010

SANTA CLARA, CA–(Marketwire – July 13, 2010) –  BLADE Network Technologies, Inc. (BLADE), a trusted leader in data center networking, announced the appointment of Michael Lethbridge as the company’s first country manager for Canada. Michael has extensive sales management experience with Canadian IT companies such as SunGard Availability Services (Canada), McData Corporation and EMC Corporation of Canada. A native of Canada, Michael will work from BLADE’s Toronto office.

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Courtney Reum: On a Plane With Young Entrepreneurs

July 9, 2010

I would never feel right saying that going on a Virgin America flight has become old hat (especially when Sir Richard Branson is on board), but flying Virgin is not my brother Carter and my “first rodeo” as they say. We have been fortunate to partner with Virgin for over a year now and thus our brand VeeV Acai Spirit has been the alcohol du jour for such launches as Ft. Lauderdale, Orange County and Boston to name a few. Having said that, Virgin America’s recent Toronto launch flight was arguably the most rewarding both personally and professionally. Yes, there were the requisite celeb friends like Stacy Keibler, Gregory Smith (whom I sat next to on the flight and is a great guy), and new artist Drake (who somehow was the namesake of the aircraft that made the maiden voyage) but this flight stood out for other, more altruistic reasons: The new Virgin America / Virgin Unite Young Entrepreneurs Program. Virgin America Airlines partnered with Virgin Unite, the non-profit foundation of the Virgin Group, to launch the Young Entrepreneurs Program. The goal is to work with non-profit organizations to help young people from difficult backgrounds start and grow businesses as a pathway out of poverty. Virgin selected a handful of green entrepreneurs to help out with mentoring, coaching and job shadowing to give these budding entrepreneurs a leg up in the future. The location: Virgin America’s flight to Toronto! The young entrepreneur mentees were: Huong Chen, 19 of Always Adamo Sabrina Branco, 16 of Sabrina’s Sweet Treats Eric Foster, 22 of AllHighSports.com DeShawn Davis, 23 of Dream Ear Productions In addition to my brother Carter and me, the other mentors were: Eric Ryan, Co-Founder of Method Products Jason Pomeranc, Founder of the Thompson Hotel Group Tony Cohen, President of Global Edge Investments Clint Greenleaf, Founder of Greenleaf Book Group Rob Kurtz, Executive Editor of AOL Small Business Each young entrepreneur was paired up with a more seasoned veteran (hard to think of myself that way but so be it). As part of the festivities, we listened to “plane pitches” from these young entrepreneurs en route to Toronto and tried to provide these aspiring go-getters with mentoring and practical advice. They gave us a list of “suggested” topics such as the origins of our business, challenges we faced, whom we seek out for guidance, funding, how we market our products, etc. At first this seemed liked a tall order given that most of us had gotten up circa 4 am to catch the flight from LAX to SFO with the likes of Sir Richard Branson, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and others. However, given the cause (and that there was a film crew on board that was capturing footage for a future documentary about the program), I quickly wiped the sleep from my eyes and attempted to say something coherent and beneficial. Carter and I were paired with Huong from Always Adamo. Her idea was to create couples t-shirts that had designs that needed both people wearing the t-shirts to be understood and have meaning. She enlightened me that this had already become a phenomena in Asia and she wanted to be the first to truly bring it to the US. As any good entrepreneur would tell you, in the beginning it’s all about having a unique and differentiated proposition. Asking “how” (as in ‘how will I do that?’) just leads to a defeatist state of paralysis that will never cultivate action and ultimately great innovation. With that in mind, I thought Huong’s idea was unique and had a shot. She was shy at first but still very friendly, which helped the conversation flow. She had done her homework and prepared a list of questions that she politely peppered me with one after another. Carter focused on the VeeV story and I focused on her idea in order to not be duplicative while we chatted for over an hour on the flight and then again at the red carpet festivities in Toronto. I’m looking forward to staying in touch with Huong and seeing where her business goes from here. After speaking with my other fellow mentors, I think most of them had similar experiences. The young entrepreneurs were green, but they were so energetic and spirited it gave us all something to believe in and look forward to… and at the very least, we all agreed that they were much more polished than we were at their age. I think that this program will continue to evolve over the coming months/years, but I’m genuinely excited to watch it grow and contribute in some small way to a program that could truly be transformational.

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Olivier Blanchard: Global Economy: Continuing Recovery But Clouds on the Horizon

July 8, 2010

The macroeconomic forecasts in the IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook update reflect two opposing forces. Looking back, say over the first half of the year, numbers about economic activity have come in strong, indeed somewhat stronger than we had forecast. These would give reasons to be more optimistic than we were earlier. Looking forward, however, strong clouds have appeared on the horizon. They present real dangers and serious policy challenges, and give reasons to be less optimistic than we were earlier. Assessing the balance of these two forces is a difficult exercise. Our forecast for world growth in 2010 is about 4½ %, a bit higher than our April forecast of around 4¼ %. This revision largely reflects the stronger activity during the first half of the year. Our forecast for 2011 is broadly unchanged, at about 4¼ %. As always, these world growth rates hide a large difference between and within advanced and emerging and developing economies. Our growth forecast for advanced countries is 2.6% for 2010 and 2.4% for 2011. These low growth rates imply that high unemployment will remain a central issue for some time to come. Our growth forecast for emerging and developing economies is much higher, 6.8% in 2010 and 6.4% in 2011, an upward revision of 0.5% for 2010 and a small downward revision of 0.1% for 2011. Let me develop these two themes, a continuing recovery, but clouds on the horizon. The world economy expanded at an annualized rate of over 5 % in the first quarter of 2010. Growth was stronger than expected in most countries, including the United States, Europe, Japan, Brazil, and India. And, in most cases, it has reflected stronger private demand, which is a good sign for the future. The most recent indicators suggest some slowdown of demand, but it is too early to assess how significant this slowdown may be. The clouds started building over Greece , but quickly extended to Europe, and threaten to cover the entire global economy. Worries about fiscal solvency in Greece turned into worries about fiscal solvency elsewhere. Worries about fiscal solvency have triggered worries about the solvency of banks. These in turn have led to financial turbulence, disruptions in market financing and a freeze in the interbank market in Europe. Our baseline forecasts are constructed under the assumption that policy responses will be adequate, and will limit the effects on the real economy. Even in this case ,however, they are likely to have four main macroeconomic implications. The first, which we have already observed, is a depreciation of the Euro . The second is a tightening of bank lending , especially, but perhaps not only in Europe. The third is the need for fiscal consolidation , which, even if well executed, is likely to affect demand and growth adversely in the short run. The fourth is a near-term reallocation of capital flows . For the rest of these remarks, let me focus on the last two implications, fiscal consolidation, and capital flows. The current policy focus in advanced countries is to put in place fiscal consolidation plans. While fiscal stimulus was necessary to stem a potentially catastrophic collapse of output in 2008 and 2009, countries must return to a sustainable fiscal path. The question is when, and at what speed. We believe that the key here is to put in place a credible roadmap”to stabilize the ratio of debt to GDP over the medium term, with the goal of decreasing it substantially over the longer term. In fact, at the recent G-20 Summit in Toronto, advanced economies committed to fiscal plans that will stabilize or reduce government debt to GDP ratios by 2016, which is in line with our recommendations. We believe that credibility can be achieved in two ways: First by passing reforms which improve the medium and long term outlook, such as increases in the retirement age in line with higher life expectancy. Second, by putting in place fiscal rules, such as limits on the growth of spending over time. The adjustment should start soon, but too much front-loading, too sharp a cut in deficits this year or next year, would be counterproductive. The recovery in advanced economies is still fragile, and monetary policy (already very accommodative) cannot yet be used to significantly offset the adverse short run effects of fiscal consolidation. Current plans for 2011, which imply an average decrease in the cyclically adjusted deficit in advanced G-20 countries, of about 1.25% strike us as roughly appropriate. However, what is still missing in many countries are ambitious reform to entitlement systems and, in many cases, better fiscal rules. Let me finally turn to capital flows. Before problems in Europe came to the fore, capital flows to emerging market countries were steadily increasing. Events in Europe have led to a partial reversal. While fiscal worries in advanced countries have made emerging market countries relatively more appealing, higher risk aversion on the part of investors has led them to repatriate funds, leading to a decrease in capital flows to emerging markets. We expect this reversal to be temporary, and we see the trend as one of continuing strong capital flows to emerging market countries. These inflows present emerging market countries with a difficult challenge, namely how to best deal with them. Two considerations are important here. The first is that these flows are largely driven by good fundamentals, and likely to be long lasting: limiting their overall size through controls, or fighting their effect on the exchange rate through reserve accumulation, may prove difficult and eventually self defeating. The second is that many emerging market countries would benefit from a shift from external to internal demand. This would allow them to maintain growth in the face of lower exports to advanced countries, and to better satisfy domestic needs. To achieve this requires both structural reforms and exchange rate appreciations. In this respect, the decisions by China to boost internal demand and allow for more flexibility of the yuan are welcome. To summarize, while we remain cautiously optimistic about the pace of recovery, there are clear dangers and policy challenges ahead. How Europe deals with fiscal and financial problems, how advanced countries proceed with fiscal consolidation, and how emerging countries rebalance their economies, will determine the outcome. From iMFdirect blog

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Jeffrey Rubin: The G8: The World Economy’s Biggest Brake

July 6, 2010

If it’s true that the economies of the EU and US are headed for a double dip , what will put them into a second recession is exactly what got them out of the last one. Only a year ago, G8 leaders were congratulating themselves as their coordinated stimulus packages jointly lifted their economies out of the worst recession of the postwar period. A year later, at their recent summit in Toronto, that virtue has suddenly become a vice. They have all pledged to halve their deficits over the next three years, some through brutal budget cuts. The problem, of course, is that precious few of those economies could survive without fiscal life support, let alone swim upstream against a torrent of huge budget cutbacks. Of late, the major Western European economies have hardly grown at all, and even those economies that have seen a modest recovery, like the US’s, now show widespread signs of weakness, just as many of President Obama’s stimulus measures are about to run out of gas. Energy- and resource-rich member states like Russia and Canada are the exceptions, benefitting from the ongoing industrial revolutions in China and India, and the lift they give to commodity prices. (If the OECD still accounted for three quarters of world oil consumption, as it did in the mid-1990s, would oil still be trading at over $70 per barrel?) Simply turning off the stimulus tap risks halting economic growth in most developed economies today. But clobbering yourself with the type of austerity budgets passed in the UK and Greece is a sure-fire way to get your economy shrinking in a hurry. In the UK’s case, the budget will take out as much as 6 per cent of GDP over the next three years, including a 2 per cent cut next year. Greece has pledged even more, sacrificing a tenth of its GDP on the altar of deficit reduction. How long governments can stick to this scale of fiscal austerity remains to be seen. Bond markets should rightly question their staying power once the economic toll starts to show where it really counts–job losses. But at the same time, growth-snuffing fiscal action may not cure budget deficits as readily as bond traders expect. Another recession’s hit on on tax revenues could overwhelm the impact of even the cruelest of spending cuts, leaving your bottom line no better off, and possibly even worse. And the chances of your economy being bailed out by strong consumer demand abroad fades with every trading partner who takes the same fiscal path you have chosen. It looks more and more as though the G8 nations (or at least the core G6, excluding the petro-states of Russia and Canada) will become stagnant economies hauling huge fiscal burdens. What was once the engine of global economic growth is now its biggest brake.

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Eric Margolis: The World’s Biggest Debtor Urges More Debt

July 5, 2010

Broken store windows have been repaired, burned out cars and debris removed. Security barriers that turned much of downtown Toronto into a fortress are gone, and so has a small army of police and security agents. The hooligans have decamped. To everyone’s relief, the G8/G20 economic summit held in Toronto and a lake resort two hours north is over. An army of police and bands of rioters have been replaced by one million visitors feting Toronto’s annual Gay Pride extravaganza, the world’s largest gay jamboree. Watching this sober, conservative city dissolve into a gay bacchanal is always entertaining and surreal. Sustained immigration transformed “Toronto the Good” from a dour Scots Presbyterian backwater into the world’s most multicultural metropolis of over four million in which racial and ethnic groups co-exist in tranquility. Cantonese, Mandarin and Punjabi are now the most spoken languages in Canada after English and French. American visitors look with awe on Toronto’s clean streets, polite citizens, and services that are a model of good urban management. The late actor, Peter Ustinov, was once asked his opinion of Toronto. After a moment’s thought, he replied, “New York City — run by the Swiss.” The G8/G20 Toronto economic summit cost a staggering $1.1 billion, the most expensive economic meeting in anyone’s memory. That’s over $500 million per day. This gold-plated summit was designed to boost the standing of Canada’s unpopular, prime minister, Stephen Harper who runs a shaky minority government. When politicians get in trouble at home, they invariably turn to international affairs to burnish their faded images. Harper, a born-again Christian fundamentalist from Alberta is closely allied to Israel’s hard-right government and a disciple of George Bush. Harper is trying to give himself the image of a senior international statesman and basking in the glory of Canada’s banks that rode through the 2007-2008 financial crisis with flying colors because they sensibly refused to follow America’s financial debauchery and chicanery. These days, world leaders have become caught up in frantic rounds of unending political and economic meetings that are as exhausting as unproductive and costly. All the work for these meetings is accomplished in advance by staffs using phone, email, fax and video conferencing. The carefully-cultivated notion that presidents and prime ministers can fly into a city, meet around a large table for two days, and resolve thorny, complex economic and political issues is a public relations myth. Heads of states attend these summits for two good reasons unconnected to the actual agreements achieved. First, such meetings give voters the impression their leaders are actually making progress in dealing with the global financial/economic crisis. Activity is equated with achievement. Second, safety in numbers. It is by now perfectly clear that savage cuts must be made to the bloated budgets of the G8 industrial nations. The debt binge of the past decade left a mountain of dangerous obligations for private parties and governments. The time to “de-leverage,” as Wall Street calls puncturing the debt bubble, is at hand. The heart-stopping scare of 2007-2008, and risks that a global financial melt-down could again occur, are forcing most governments to slash spending. Many major European governments have announced plans for deep budget cuts to bring their debt loads down, it is hoped, to a sustainable 3% of GDP. This is causing voters to scream and, in the case of beleaguered Greece and Spain, demonstrate and riot. Politicians, caught between threats of financial melt-down and angry voters, seek the safety of numbers in these economic summits, adopting a common front they hope will convince voters that slashing spending is what everyone is doing. The International Monetary Fund used to perform this helpful mission by mandating spending cuts that politicians did not have the courage to enact. What the G8 really need, of course, is a short-term economic dictator who will slash spending and ignore ensuing protests. France offers a particularly interesting example of the current financial squeeze. While vowing budget cuts and adding only two years to its absurdly low retirement age of 58-60 years (or 50 in the case of certain professions), the Sarkozy government has been dithering and coy about making really painful cuts. France’s total private and government debt has reached over 300% of GDP. Spending cuts are urgent. But 55% of French workers are directly or indirectly employed by the government. For labor public unions, “l’etat, c’est nous.” As a result, cutting down these public sector unions that dominate and often terrorize France risks political suicide for whatever government holds power. In fact, public sector unions are now the biggest problem facing the G8. These unions became bloated during the days of credit addiction, when cheap loans created a bubble economy. Today, they can no longer be afforded, but their power remains immense. So G8 leaders are also trying to form a common front against these entrenched public unions that are undermining the economies in which they operate. Greece offers the most striking example. But the biggest of all the debtors, the United States, was notably understated at the Toronto conference. President Barack Obama flew in on Air Force One, a Boeing 747, at vast expense and much air pollution, to urge higher spending (and thus more debt) to stimulate economies. European nations rejected this plan by debt-addicted America. Treating the malady of too much debt with more debt does not make sense — except to the hopelessly addicted. The biggest fear at Toronto was that while Washington fulminates against China, it was doing nothing to curb its mammoth debt, and continuing to inflate the debt bubble, thus endangering the world economy. In the US, government debt per person, calculates the Economist , has soared from $16,000 per person in 2001 to $34,000 today. Government debt has reached a frightening 360% of US GDP. In Britain, government debt trebled in the same period. Britain’s new Tory government has announced plans to slash some $9 billion of spending. But as the US economy continues to stumble, and risk another fall back into severe recession, President Obama could not summon the political courage or Congressional votes to substantially cut government spending or to curtail the parasitic drain on the economy of America’s bloated financial industry which has become the real power in Washington. Obama failed to cut America’s gigantic, trillion-dollar military budget, which represents close to 50% of total global military spending. Instead, he increased it. The U.S. is financing its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan (now costing $7 billion monthly), and growing military operations in Pakistan and Yemen, on borrowed money, leaving the bill for the next generation of unlucky taxpayers. Add another $33 billion this year for Obama’s Afghan “surge.” A nation addicted to financial gambling and war will have a very hard time bringing itself back to fiscal reality. The world’s battered economy can’t be healed until its biggest debtor reforms its ways — but there is no sign this will happen anytime soon.

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Leo W. Gerard: U.S. Politicians Deny the Obvious Injury; U.S. Manufacturing Bleeds

July 1, 2010

In the film, Monte Python and the Holy Grail, King Arthur severs both of the Black Knight’s arms during a sword fight, but the Black Knight attempts to battle on. The king admonishes him: “You’ve got no arms left.” The knight refutes that: “Yes I have.” “Look,” at the obvious, the king tells him. “Just a flesh wound,” retorts the knight, who clearly is suffering a state of denial. Similarly, in the trade clash between China and America, the Asian giant has gravely wounded the United States. China knows it. U.S. voters of all political stripes know it. But too many American politicians, like the Black Knight, are in denial. Their deliberate blindness, and resulting inaction, has enabled China to continue devaluing its currency, the Renminbi, against the dollar, a practice that makes its exports artificially cheap in U.S. markets and U.S. exports to China wrongfully overpriced. China announced just before the G-20 summit in Toronto that it would allow the value of the Renminbi to float up on world markets – and then permitted the currency that is undervalued by as much as 40 percent against the dollar to rise an underwhelming one half of one percent. Political inaction also has facilitated China’s flouting of international trade rules forbidding government subsidies to manufacturers. The Chinese subsidies result in falsely low-priced Chinese goods flooding U.S. markets and submerging U.S. manufacturers. Main Street Americans see the obvious. They said so in a poll conducted late in April by The Mellman Group for the Alliance for American Manufacturing (AAM). The likely voters – who identified themselves as Republican, Democrat, Tea Party and Independent – said Washington must focus on manufacturing because it is crucial to America’s economic strength. Large majorities said the U.S. should strengthen domestic manufacturing and develop a national manufacturing policy. Unfortunately, too many politicians who loll in the rarefied world of Washington, D.C. — so far from Main Street, so very far from an actual factory — don’t see it. So they’ve failed to solve the problems. A report issued this week by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) details the trade difficulties encountered by one American industry – paper manufacturers. Its struggles mirror those that have maimed many other U.S. manufacturers, including pipe mills and tire plants. The report, “No Paper Tiger: Subsidies to China’s Paper Industry from 2002-09,” notes that in 2008, China overtook the United States to become the world’s largest producer of paper and paper products. This score by China is the solid evidence for the gut feeling Americans expressed in the Mellman poll for AAM. A significant majority told the pollsters they believed the U.S. had lost to China the position of world’s strongest economy. Americans didn’t need a report to spell out for them what their families and neighborhoods had suffered over the past decade. They’d experienced the closing of more than 10 percent of U.S. manufacturing plants in their communities from 2001 to 2009 – a loss of 42,404 factories. In the paper industry alone, 159,000 of their relatives and neighbors lost their jobs as paper mills closed or cut production during the seven-year period covered by the “No Paper Tiger” study. A woman from Los Angeles told the Mellman pollsters that this relentless loss of manufacturing capability enfeebles America: “When you consume more than you produce, you become dependent, and we are consuming more from other countries than producing our own. . .truly we have become weak and in order to strengthen the economy, I think we need to produce more.” The U.S. will, however, continue to produce less, the “No Paper Tiger” report makes clear, if Washington doesn’t act against predators violating international regulations. The report explains that China’s government granted at least $33 billion in subsidies to paper manufacturers to accomplish the country’s rapid rise to global leader in paper production. In its central government-controlled economy, China gives paper companies money and breaks, much of which is improper under international trade regulations. For example, some paper companies get “loans” that they don’t have to repay. The government provides tax breaks, artificially low-priced electricity and underpriced raw materials. This explains how Chinese paper companies increased capacity by an average of 26 percent every year since 2004 even as prices for paper fell internationally and costs for raw materials for paper production in China rose steeply. China’s rule-violating subsidies and deliberate currency devaluation explain the low price of Chinese paper. Labor costs don’t account for it. That’s because labor is such a tiny percentage of the price of paper – in both the U.S. and China. In China, it’s 4 percent of production cost; in the U.S. it’s 8 percent. By contrast, Chinese paper manufacturers confront expensive problems that the American industry does not. In China, obtaining raw materials for paper making is complicated and costly because the country has among the smallest forestry resources in the world per capita. In addition, the “No Paper Tiger” report says, the Chinese industry is relatively inefficient. In the U.S., the paper industry is highly efficient and has easy access to abundant natural resources. The U.S., a market economy, simply does not routinely prop up manufacturers the way China does. The “No Paper Tiger” report says that if nothing changes, U.S. paper manufacturers will continue to lose money, close mills and bleed jobs. The U.S. could be reduced to serving as nothing more than the supplier of raw materials for Chinese paper production, as if America were an undeveloped third world country incapable of manufacturing on its own. China’s subsidization of its paper manufacturers isn’t unique. It supports many of its industries. Chinese government intervention in the market accounts for a significant portion of the manufacturing loss in America. That loss diminishes American security. America is losing her arms. Denying it doesn’t help.

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‘Cautious’ U.S. Consumers Could Fuel Debate Over Deficits

June 28, 2010

WASHINGTON — A tepid gain in consumer spending last month could fuel a debate over whether the United States and other governments should further stimulate their economies to sustain the recovery. A report that Americans spent cautiously in May came after world leaders meeting in Toronto over the weekend pledged to reduce government deficits by cutting spending and raising taxes. They did so despite warnings from President Barack Obama that scaling back spending too fast could derail the global recovery. U.S. lawmakers are wary of approving more stimulus spending in light of record-high budget deficits. As a result, millions of Americans could lose unemployment benefits and states could be forced to lay off tens of thousands of workers. “In our view, it is way too early to apply the fiscal brakes,” said Zach Pandl, an economist at Nomura Securities. Cutting off unemployment benefits “is a dangerous way to cut deficits when the economy is still fragile.” Economic growth, which leads to higher tax receipts and less spending on social programs, is the best way to reduce the deficit, Pandl said. Other economists note that wages and salaries rose 0.5 percent in May, a second consecutive month of strong gains. That is a sign that the recovery can survive without government propping it up. If the trend in income growth continues, “consumers’ spending power will be bolstered, which will in turn drive economic growth, necessitating less government support,” said Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak. One thing is certain: Americans are being careful with their money. Consumer spending rose 0.2 percent last month after no change in April, the Commerce Department said Monday. Consumer spending accounts for about 70 percent of economic activity. But the consumer hasn’t been driving this recovery. Instead, it has depended more on business and government spending, along with exports. In the four quarters following the steep 1981-82 downturn, consumer spending rose by an average of 6.5 percent per quarter. By contrast, even as the economy has grown for the past three quarters, consumer spending rose an average of only 2.5 percent per quarter. If consumption remains sluggish, the economy may not grow fast enough to generate jobs and quickly bring down the 9.7 percent unemployment rate. Some economists are concerned the economy could slow later this year if government cuts back on stimulus spending. Pandl said Nomura is lowering its forecast for third-quarter economic growth to 2.2 percent from 2.6 percent based on the assumption that Congress will not extend federal unemployment benefits. Up until last month, jobless workers who exhausted their 26 weeks of state benefits had been able to qualify for up 73 weeks of additional federal benefits. But Senate Republicans have blocked an extension, citing concerns over the deficit as their main reason. That means about 2 million out-of-work Americans could lose their benefits by the middle of July, the Labor Department estimates. The Senate has also balked at providing stimulus money to cash-strapped state governments. Thirty states had been counting on federal support to help balance their budgets. Without the money, governors warn they’ll have to lay off tens of thousands of workers. The debate over how big a role governments should play featured prominently at the G-20 summit. World leaders agreed to cut deficits in richer countries in half by 2013, although they gave themselves some wiggle room to meet that goal. Obama, who has been pushing for an extension of unemployment benefits in the U.S., said countries had to proceed at their own pace in either emphasizing growth or cutting deficits. “We can’t all rush to the exits at the same time,” Obama said. Income is rising as employers slowly add jobs. That could make up for lost unemployment insurance and other benefits. Personal incomes rose for the sixth time in seven months, boosting household finances. The savings rate, or the percentage of income that wasn’t spent, bumped up to 4 percent. Paychecks gained from recent increases in the average work week, as well as temporary census hiring. “This supports our view that a rebound in labor income growth will support consumer spending” even as government payments fade, said Peter Newland, an economist at Barclays Capital. Americans spent more on services in May, likely the result of greater use of electricity as the weather warmed up. Money spent on goods actually declined. Many economists expect consumer spending to grow by about 3 percent in the current quarter, the same as the first quarter. The government said Friday that the nation’s gross domestic product, the broadest measure of economic output, rose 2.7 percent in the January-to-March period, slower than previously estimated. Employers added 431,000 jobs in May, but the vast majority were temporary census positions. Private employers added only 41,000 jobs. About 250,000 of census jobs are expected to end this month.

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Video: EBF’s Ravoet `Deplores’ Lack of G-20 Unity on Bank Rules

June 28, 2010

June 28 (Bloomberg) — Guido Ravoet, secretary general of the European Banking Federation, talks about banking regulation proposals from the Group of 20 summit. Leaders meeting in Toronto yesterday said countries should adopt higher capital standards by the end of 2012, though banks can phase in capital increases during a transition period. He speaks from Brussels with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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DK Matai: G20 Toronto Digest – Key Tweets, Achievement & Result?

June 28, 2010

The highlights of The Fourth G20 leaders summit in Toronto are presented as a series of tweets. Canada’s PM Stephen Harper concludes G20 Toronto Summit Bank Capitalisation . In future banks should keep enough capital on their balance sheet to withstand aftermath of Lehman Brothers’ in 2008 http://ow.ly/23YYD Bank Levy . Market reform efforts to introduce a common tax on banks to shield taxpayers from bailouts in future splinter http://ow.ly/23YHM BP . Obama and Cameron agree BP must not collapse post Gulf oil gusher as company starts week with shares at 14yr low http://ow.ly/23Y1h China Revaluation . China gave in, set strongest yuan exchange rate in years on Monday after Beijing came under renewed pressure on w/e http://ow.ly/23Yvq Consequences . Europeans score win — Leaders agree to halve public debt by 2013 — What are the consequences for world recovery…? http://ow.ly/23Ye3 Deficit Reduction . Leaders Pledge To Halve Deficits By 2013: Wary of slamming on stimulus brakes too quickly; shaken by euro debt crisis http://ow.ly/23Ynx Differences Emerge . Differences on 1. exit strategy for global economic stimulus – US and India caution – and 2. universal tax to bail out banks http://ow.ly/23Yzp Economic Clash . An economic clash of civilisations — pits Obama’s stimulus efforts against European calls for austerity budgets http://ow.ly/23YCi Friendly Talks . British PM Cameron and US President Obama agree to differ in ‘friendly’ talks on economic policy, ie, spending cuts http://ow.ly/23RaI Nuclear Deal . Canada signs nuclear deal with India that’ll see uranium exported to India and wide-ranging pledge to increase trade http://ow.ly/23YU9 Oil Gusher . Toronto summit discusses BP oil gusher – recent accident shows the need for better marine environment protection http://ow.ly/23YKv Private Sector . S Korea wants to be bridge between G20 and non-G20 Govs and Orgs: Post Gov lead comes private sector lead in future http://ow.ly/23YF1 Quiet Diplomacy . UK PM Cameron, preaching austerity, brings new G20 style – Cameron prefers what he calls ‘quiet diplomacy’ http://ow.ly/23Yaa US-India . President Obama, ‘…when the Indian PM speaks people listen particularly because of his deep knowledge of economic issues…’ http://ow.ly/23YXj Vandalism . Torontonians try to make sense of vandalism: ‘To see this destruction is beyond unfortunate,’ Queen St businesswoman http://ow.ly/23Ytp Winners and Losers . Winners and losers at summit: Top priority to strengthen shaky economic recovery and clean up debt burdened finances http://ow.ly/240gG Background Established in 1999, following the Asian financial crisis in 1997, the G20 has convened annual meetings of finance ministers and central bank governors from Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Republic of Korea, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the United Kingdom, the United States and the European Union. In 2008, G20 leaders met for the first time in Washington, DC, to develop a coordinated response to the global economic crisis or The Great Unwind manifest as the collapse of Lehman Brothers. The Washington Summit was followed by summits in London in April 2009, Pittsburgh in September 2009 and Toronto in June 2010, where leaders have designated the G20 as the premier forum for international economic cooperation. Achievement Over the course of the four G20 summits — Washington, London, Pittsburgh and Toronto — world leaders have crafted a co-ordinated global response to the financial and trade crisis, including The Great Unwind (2007-?) and The Great Reset (2008-?). They: 1. Implemented stimulus measures to restore confidence; 2. Agreed on actions to strengthen financial regulation; 3. Committed to reform international financial institutions; and 4. Agreed to promote trade and resist protectionism. Result? The G20 interventions are widely regarded as having been effective in mitigating the impact of the global economic crisis, while encouraging a quicker transition to recovery than could otherwise have been expected. The key question ringing in our ears is, “What are the consequences of synchronised world wide measures to cut sovereign budget deficits and debt going to be for the world economic recovery?” It remains to be seen how effective the Toronto G20 summit’s simultaneous embrace of austerity will prove to be in sustaining the green shoots of global growth. It is entirely plausible that draconian deleveraging measures implemented worldwide could stunt economic growth. As the Republic of Korea, G20 Chair for 2010, hosts the fifth summit in November in Seoul, the financial markets may have delivered a verdict!

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Video: Spence Says G-20 Silence on Structural Change `Worrying’

June 28, 2010

June 28 (Bloomberg) — Michael Spence, co-winner of the Nobel Prize in economics in 2001 and a consultant at Pacific Investment Management Co., talks about the agreement at the Group of 20 meeting in Toronto to improve fiscal stability and financial regulation. Spence speaks from Milan with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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U.S. G20 Message: Stimulus Money Is Vital To Economic Recovery, Don’t Pull Back Yet

June 26, 2010

TORONTO — World leaders must work together to make sure the global recovery stays on track, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Saturday. Geithner made his remarks as President Barack Obama has warned his counterparts from the Group of 20 nations to not reel in measures to stimulate their economies too quickly. The United States fears doing so could endanger the global recovery. Nations like Germany, Britain and others are shifting their focus on cutting deficits – especially in the wake of Greece’s debt crisis, which rattled world markets. Asked if the global economy could slip back into another “double dip” recession, Geithner said the answer to that question hinges on decisions made by world leaders. “It is within the capacity of the people who are going to be in those rooms together in the next few days to avoid that outcome,” he said. But Geithner’s insistence that nations continue stimulus spending to avoid another global recession w as not bolstered by America’s own actions at home . On Thursday, Senate Republicans defeated a jobs bill that included unemployment extensions, provisions for the elderly and poor, state funding for medicaid, and various tax cuts. Republicans threatened to filibuster the legislation and because Democrats were short of the 60 votes needed to overcome the legislative block, they did not vote on the bill. But Geithner did not mention the failed stimulus bill at home as he told politicians from the world’s largest economies that global economic recovery depended upon government spending. Geithner told the Toronto audience that one of the mistakes made in the 1930s was that countries pulled back their recovery efforts too soon, prolonging the Great Depression, he said. He said the United States doesn’t want to see that happen again. “What we want to do is continue to emphasize that we are going to avoid that mistake,” he said. “It’s only been a year since the world economy stopped collapsing … it will take some time to heal.” Although the world economy has recovered from the worst financial and economic crisis since the 1930s, many challenges remain, Geithner said. “The scars of this crisis are still with us,” Geithner told reporters. “If the world economy is to expand at its potential, if growth is going to be sustainable in the future, then we need to act together to strengthen the recovery and finish the job of repairing the damage of the crisis.”

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Video: Barroso Says the EU’s Economic Fundamentals `Are Good’: Video

June 25, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — European Commission President Jose Barroso said the European Union’s economic “fundamentals are good.” Barroso, speaking yesterday in Toronto where leaders from the Group of 20 countries are gathering this weekend, also said China’s plan to provide more currency flexibility was a “move in the right direction.” Bloomberg’s Sara Eisen reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Eizenstat Discusses G-20, Financial Rules Overhaul: Video

June 25, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Stuart Eizenstat, a partner at Covington & Burling, talks about the outlook for the meeting of Group of 20 leaders in Toronto this weekend and the U.S. financial regulatory overhaul bill. Eizenstat, a former deputy Treasury secretary, talks with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Eizenstat Discusses G-20, Financial Rules Overhaul: Video

June 25, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Stuart Eizenstat, a partner at Covington & Burling, talks about the outlook for the meeting of Group of 20 leaders in Toronto this weekend and the U.S. financial regulatory overhaul bill. Eizenstat, a former deputy Treasury secretary, talks with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Brittan Says G-20 Will Balance Deficit-Stimulus Debate: Video

June 25, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Leon Brittan, vice chairman of UBS Investment Bank, talks about the outlook for the meeting of Group of 20 leaders in Toronto this weekend and the debate between the need for budget-deficit cuts and calls for economic stimulus. Brittan speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Nomura’s Newton Sees Investors Focussing on U.S. Deficit

June 25, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Alastair Newton, a senior political analyst at Nomura International Plc, talks about the budget deficits in the U.S. and Europe as the Group of 20 leaders gather in Toronto to discuss economic policy. Newton speaks with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Video: HSBC’s Bloom Sees Market `Turn Against Dollar’ by 2011

June 25, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — David Bloom, global head of currency strategy at HSBC Treasury & Capital Markets, talks about the outlook for the dollar as the Group of 20 gathers to meet in Toronto to discuss economic policy. Bloom speaks with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Video: HSBC’s Mahendran Discusses G-20 Summit, Yuan, Euro: Video

June 24, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Arjuna Mahendran, the head of investment strategy for Asia at HSBC Private Bank, talks with Bloomberg’s Haslinda Amin about the European debt crisis and the outlook for the euro. Mahendran, speaking in Hong Kong, also discusses the outlook for the Group of 20 summit in Toronto, the shift in China’s currency policy, and the nation’s demand for foreign assets. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Adams Says U.S. Needs China’s `Real Action’ on Yuan: Video

June 24, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Tim Adams, a former U.S. Treasury undersecretary and now managing director of the Lindsey Group, a Fairfax, Virginia-based investment consulting company, talks with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat about the shift in China’s currency policy and its implications for the nation’s relations with the U.S. Adams, speaking from Washington, also discusses the outlook for the Group of 20 summit in Toronto, U.K.’s budget, and U.S. and European fiscal policies. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Financial Reform Conference: Auto Dealers Beat Obama, Win Exemption From Consumer Protection Agency

June 22, 2010

WASHINGTON (AP) — In the end, the political clout of 18,000 auto dealers scattered nationwide was too much even for President Barack Obama. House and Senate negotiators putting final shape to a sweeping overhaul of Wall Street regulations all but agreed Tuesday to exclude auto dealers from the oversight of a consumer financial protection bureau. “The political reality is that those of us who have fought against an auto dealer carve-out can’t prevail,” Representative Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill. The House bill approved last December contained an exemption for auto dealers, among others, from lending regulations issued by the proposed consumer agency. The Senate did not, but the sentiment was there. In a 60-30 nonbinding vote last month, senators called for the auto dealer loophole. Under a compromise offered by Senate Democrats Tuesday, auto dealers would still be covered by federal truth-in-lending rules that would have to conform to regulations adopted by the consumer agency. The Federal Reserve, which oversees truth-in-lending regulations, could adopt different rules but would have to explain its decision. At the same time, the Federal Trade Commission would be given authority to write new rules for auto dealers under accelerated procedures. But the bottom line would be that auto dealers would be exempt from direct supervision by the consumer financial protection bureau. The exclusion would not apply to auto dealers that provide their own financing, such as Carmax, or to giant auto lender GMAC. The Senate compromise, if accepted by House negotiators, would be one of President Barack Obama’s most high profile losses in his efforts to overhaul Wall Street regulations. The main contours of the House and Senate bills generally match the administration’s goals, but Obama has personally lobbied against efforts to carve auto dealers out of the consumer agency’s jurisdiction. The administration has even made a national security case, arguing that military personnel have been especially prone to predatory lending schemes by car dealers. Auto dealers have used their high visibility in their local communities to fight inclusion in the bill. They say they only process the loans and then turn them over to other lending institutions to administer and service. The National Auto Dealers Association continued to press for the House exclusion, objecting to the Senate proposal’s requirement that the Fed’s truth-in-lending rules hew to those issued by the consumer agency and that the FTC be given the authority to write auto dealer rules on a fast track. The discussion on excluding auto dealers is one of many negotiations under way in a joint House-Senate panel that is working out differences between the House and Senate bills. Panel members must still iron out some of the most difficult differences, including how to regulate the complex securities known as derivatives and how far to go in restricting the investment activities of banks. On Tuesday, Rep. Barney Frank, the joint committee chairman, and Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd prodded the panel to conclude its work by Thursday in time for Obama’s appearance before the Group of 20 nations in Toronto this weekend. “It would be a grave error for the U.S. to do things where we could be gamed by other countries,” Frank, D-Mass., said. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner made a similar point while testifying before the Congressional Oversight Panel, an independent committee established to look over Treasury’s financial rescue fund. Geithner stressed the need for the United States to shape a consensus on international financial regulations. “The reforms Congress is about to enact will be a good model for the world and will give us enormous credibility in trying to, again, pull the world to those higher standards,” he said.

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Yuan Gain Limited to 1.9% This Year on Euro Drop, Survey Shows

June 20, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 20 (Bloomberg) — The yuan’s appreciation may be limited to 1.9 percent against the dollar this year as the euro’s slump hurts exporters, a survey of economists showed after China signaled an end to a two-year peg. The currency will probably climb to 6.7 per dollar by Dec. 31, according to the median estimate of 14 analysts interviewed after the People’s Bank of China said yesterday it will allow greater “flexibility.” The central bank ruled out “large- scale appreciation” and said it will prevent “excessive” moves. Gains may be limited because the yuan already strengthened 16.5 percent against the euro this year, eroding earnings for Chinese exporters in the European Union, the nation’s largest market. U.S. Senator Charles Schumer said lawmakers will push ahead with proposals for trade sanctions until they are convinced the advance is fast enough to allow fair competition. “The yuan’s appreciation against the dollar may be limited over the next six months after the Chinese currency gained significantly against the euro,” said Ma Jun , a Hong Kong-based economist for Deutsche Bank AG, who predicts a gain of 1.9 percent. U.S. politicians can only “declare this a partial victory,” he added. The outlook for appreciation in the survey is stronger than that indicated by forwards. The six-month non-deliverable contract jumped 0.5 percent on June 18 to 6.7596 per dollar, reflecting bets the yuan will rise 1 percent from the spot rate of 6.8262. Day One Chinese authorities have prevented the currency from strengthening against the dollar since July 2008 to help exporters cope during the global financial crisis. The currency appreciated 21 percent in the three years after a peg to the dollar was scrapped in July 2005 and replaced by a managed float against a basket of currencies including the euro. The yuan may advance 0.2 percent to 6.815 tomorrow and 0.4 percent this week, according to the median estimate of six analysts who gave forecasts. The central bank sets the reference rate for yuan trading at around 9:15 a.m. every day and allows the currency to fluctuate up to 0.5 percent from the fixing. “The PBOC will probably keep the reference rate stable on Monday,” said Lu Zhengwei , an economist at Industrial Bank Co. in Shanghai, who predicts a 0.1 percent gain this year. “It needs to watch the market’s responses to the flexibility statement. Market participants won’t make bold moves either. They are waiting for more signals from the PBOC.” The central bank, which has accumulated $2.4 trillion in currency reserves intervening in currency markets, said it will maintain the trading band and curb inflows of short-term speculative capital. Depreciation Possible Authorities will “ensure the exchange rate’s fluctuation is controllable and prevent the possibility of market forces causing excessive adjustment in the rate,” the central bank said in a statement today. “We can’t exclude the possibility of yuan depreciation,” said Shen Jianguang , Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd.’s chief economist for Greater China, who said a 2.5 percent drop is possible this year if the dollar-euro rate is unchanged. Even so, he added, China needs to show flexibility in its currency before the Group of 20 summit in Toronto on June 26-27. Textiles makers stand to lose the most from appreciation and some would “face bankruptcy” with profit margins as low as 3 percent, Zhang Wei , vice chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, said in March. Europe’s debt crisis has added to pressure on their earnings. Swift Umbrella Co., based in the southern Chinese province of Fujian, was forced by European buyers to cut prices 6 percent this year, Xu Youchuan, sales manager, said in a June 2 interview. Balance of Payments China’s narrowing balance-of-payments gap indicates that there’s no basis for “large-scale appreciation” in the yuan, the central bank said yesterday. The current-account surplus, for trade in goods and services, narrowed 32 percent to $297.1 billion in 2009, government data show. Exports have been rebounding, exceeding imports by $19.5 billion in May, from a $1.68 billion surplus in April and a deficit of $7.24 billion in March. Overseas sales jumped 48.5 percent in May from a year earlier, customs bureau data show. Benefits From Gains The World Bank said last week that a stronger currency would help China cool inflation , which accelerated to a 19-month high of 3.1 percent in May, higher than the government’s full- year target of 3 percent. Yuan gains would also give more room for Asian currencies to strengthen after the euro’s record depreciation prompted exporters from Taiwan to South Korea to call for currency controls to protect their earnings. Companies focused on the Chinese market, including Beijing- based computer maker Lenovo Group Ltd. and Shanghai-based China Eastern Airlines Corp. , said in March that they would gain from lower import costs and stronger consumer purchasing power. “A 3 percent gain against the dollar won’t have any major impact on exports this year,” said Chen Chao, ICBC Credit Suisse Asset Management Co.’s chief economist. “Whether the yuan will rise or fall against the dollar will depend on the dollar’s movement against other currencies.” — Judy Chen , Belinda Cao, Bob Chen, Frances Yoon, Yanping Li. Editors: Sandy Hendry , Paul Panckhurst To contact the reporters on this story: Judy Chen in Shanghai at Xchen45@bloomberg.net .

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China’s Hu Buys Time on Yuan Valuation by Announcement Before G-20 Summit

June 20, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 21 (Bloomberg) — Chinese President Hu Jintao may have succeeded in removing the yuan’s valuation from debate at this week’s Group of 20 leaders’ summit, economists and political analysts say. How much time he’s bought depends on how flexible the currency will become. Days before China’s central bank announced on June 19 that the yuan’s “flexibility” would increase, officials said the currency’s value was not a suitable item for discussion at the G-20 meeting in Toronto. Hu will meet with President Barack Obama and other world leaders at the June 26-27 summit to discuss items ranging from the global response to the European sovereign-debt crisis to increasing the influence of developing countries in the International Monetary Fund. U.S. lawmakers threatened to thwart China’s wish to keep the yuan off the meeting’s agenda. House Ways & Means Chairman Sander Levin , a Michigan Democrat, said on June 16 that China needed to act by the end of the summit or risk U.S. legislation which could levy penalties on Chinese imports. “I think the announcement is in a sense preemptive and will probably keep currency off the agenda at the G-20 meeting, a well advertised Chinese goal,” said Nicholas Lardy , a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. “My view is that they have at a minimum bought some time.” Constructive Step Obama, in a statement, called China’s decision a “constructive step.” U.S. lawmakers said China’s move was insufficient. Senator Charles Schumer , the New York Democrat who is co- sponsor of legislation that would allow for duties on Chinese imports, said he was dissatisfied with a statement that didn’t indicate the timing or amount of adjustment. “We hope the Chinese will get more specific in the next few days,” Schumer said on June 19. “If not, then for the sake of American jobs and wealth, which are hurt every day by China’s practices, we will have no choice but to move forward with our legislation.” Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa, the Finance Committee’s ranking Republican, said the Obama administration and Congress “need to keep the pressure on until China takes concrete actions to appreciate its currency exchange rate in a meaningful way.” China’s central bank yesterday reaffirmed it would maintain the yuan’s 0.5 percent daily trading band and said greater yuan flexibility would help cut the trade surplus and reduce the reliance on exports as a driver of growth. Lawmakers’ Ire The yuan has been held at about 6.83 to the dollar since mid-2008. The currency appreciated 21 percent in the three years after a peg to the dollar was scrapped in July 2005 and replaced by a managed float against a basket of currencies including the euro and the Japanese yen. The persistent surplus has been a driving force of Washington lawmakers’ ire. China is the second-biggest trading partner of the U.S. after Canada and the U.S. is China’s biggest single-country export market. Two-way trade last year amounted to $366 billion, with China recording a $226.8 billion surplus, according to U.S. Commerce Department data. Should the yuan resume its appreciation against the U.S. dollar, which was suspended in July 2008 as world economic growth slowed, then China can “avoid becoming a target in the spotlight” at the G-20, said Li Cheng , head of research at the John L. Thornton China Center at the Brookings Institution in Washington. China’s Agenda That will allow China to focus on its own agenda at the meeting. Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai told reporters on June 18 that China wanted to discuss new quotas for the IMF that would boost the power of developing countries, promote the overhaul of global financial regulations, speak out against trade protectionism and pay more attention to economic development in poorer countries. Zhang Tao , head of the central bank’s international department, said at the same briefing that Europe’s sovereign debt crisis was also a high priority for discussion. China, by moving on its currency ahead of the Toronto summit, has shifted attention to the budget deficits of developed nations, said Eswar Prasad , a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former head of the China division at the International Monetary Fund. Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao said June 18 that China’s fiscal debt was about 20 percent of gross domestic product. That compares with almost 100 percent in the U.S. Trade Surplus Still, Hu’s respite may be cut short if China’s trade surplus rises and the yuan only makes a small appreciation of about 2-3 percent against the dollar in the coming months, Lardy said. Reports this month from the U.S. and China highlighted concern that trade imbalances, which reached record levels before the global financial crisis, may be reemerging. Chinese exports climbed 48.5 percent in May from a year earlier. In the first four months of the year the U.S. posted a $71.0 billion trade deficit with China, up 5.7 percent from the year-ago period. “China could come under renewed pressure,” Lardy said. — Michael Forsythe in Beijing, with assistance from Rebecca Christie and Ian Katz in Washington and Li Yanping in Beijing. Editors: John n Brinsley , Paul Panckhurst . To contact the reporter on this story: Michael Forsythe in Beijing at mforsythe@bloomberg.net ;

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Yuan Gain May Be Limited to 1.9% by Year-End as Euro Slump Cools Exports

June 20, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 20 (Bloomberg) — The yuan’s appreciation may be limited to 1.9 percent against the dollar this year as the euro’s slump hurts exporters, a survey of economists showed after China signaled an end to a two-year peg. The currency will probably climb to 6.7 per dollar by Dec. 31, according to the median estimate of 14 analysts interviewed after the People’s Bank of China said yesterday it will allow greater “flexibility.” The central bank ruled out “large- scale appreciation” and said it will prevent “excessive” moves. Gains may be limited because the yuan already strengthened 16.5 percent against the euro this year, eroding earnings for Chinese exporters in the European Union, the nation’s largest market. U.S. Senator Charles Schumer said lawmakers will push ahead with proposals for trade sanctions until they are convinced the advance is fast enough to allow fair competition. “The yuan’s appreciation against the dollar may be limited over the next six months after the Chinese currency gained significantly against the euro,” said Ma Jun , a Hong Kong-based economist for Deutsche Bank AG, who predicts a gain of 1.9 percent. U.S. politicians can only “declare this a partial victory,” he added. The outlook for appreciation in the survey is stronger than that indicated by forwards. The six-month non-deliverable contract jumped 0.5 percent on June 18 to 6.7596 per dollar, reflecting bets the yuan will rise 1 percent from the spot rate of 6.8262. Day One Chinese authorities have prevented the currency from strengthening against the dollar since July 2008 to help exporters cope during the global financial crisis. The currency appreciated 21 percent in the three years after a peg to the dollar was scrapped in July 2005 and replaced by a managed float against a basket of currencies including the euro. The yuan may advance 0.2 percent to 6.815 tomorrow and 0.4 percent this week, according to the median estimate of six analysts who gave forecasts. The central bank sets the reference rate for yuan trading at around 9:15 a.m. every day and allows the currency to fluctuate up to 0.5 percent from the fixing. “The PBOC will probably keep the reference rate stable on Monday,” said Lu Zhengwei , an economist at Industrial Bank Co. in Shanghai, who predicts a 0.1 percent gain this year. “It needs to watch the market’s responses to the flexibility statement. Market participants won’t make bold moves either. They are waiting for more signals from the PBOC.” The central bank, which has accumulated $2.4 trillion in currency reserves intervening in currency markets, said it will maintain the trading band and curb inflows of short-term speculative capital. Depreciation Possible Authorities will “ensure the exchange rate’s fluctuation is controllable and prevent the possibility of market forces causing excessive adjustment in the rate,” the central bank said in a statement today. “We can’t exclude the possibility of yuan depreciation,” said Shen Jianguang , Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd.’s chief economist for Greater China, who said a 2.5 percent drop is possible this year if the dollar-euro rate is unchanged. Even so, he added, China needs to show flexibility in its currency before the Group of 20 summit in Toronto on June 26-27. Textiles makers stand to lose the most from appreciation and some would “face bankruptcy” with profit margins as low as 3 percent, Zhang Wei , vice chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, said in March. Europe’s debt crisis has added to pressure on their earnings. Swift Umbrella Co., based in the southern Chinese province of Fujian, was forced by European buyers to cut prices 6 percent this year, Xu Youchuan, sales manager, said in a June 2 interview. Balance of Payments China’s narrowing balance-of-payments gap indicates that there’s no basis for “large-scale appreciation” in the yuan, the central bank said yesterday. The current-account surplus, for trade in goods and services, narrowed 32 percent to $297.1 billion in 2009, government data show. Exports have been rebounding, exceeding imports by $19.5 billion in May, from a $1.68 billion surplus in April and a deficit of $7.24 billion in March. Overseas sales jumped 48.5 percent in May from a year earlier, customs bureau data show. Benefits From Gains The World Bank said last week that a stronger currency would help China cool inflation , which accelerated to a 19-month high of 3.1 percent in May, higher than the government’s full- year target of 3 percent. Yuan gains would also give more room for Asian currencies to strengthen after the euro’s record depreciation prompted exporters from Taiwan to South Korea to call for currency controls to protect their earnings. Companies focused on the Chinese market, including Beijing- based computer maker Lenovo Group Ltd. and Shanghai-based China Eastern Airlines Corp. , said in March that they would gain from lower import costs and stronger consumer purchasing power. “A 3 percent gain against the dollar won’t have any major impact on exports this year,” said Chen Chao, ICBC Credit Suisse Asset Management Co.’s chief economist. “Whether the yuan will rise or fall against the dollar will depend on the dollar’s movement against other currencies.” — Judy Chen , Belinda Cao, Bob Chen, Frances Yoon, Yanping Li. Editors: Sandy Hendry , Paul Panckhurst To contact the reporters on this story: Judy Chen in Shanghai at Xchen45@bloomberg.net .

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Roach, O&rsquoNeill Say China Yuan Move Shows Confidence in Recovery

June 20, 2010

By Gopal Ratnam and Timothy R. Homan June 20 (Bloomberg) — China’s decision to allow a more flexible yuan shows the country’s leaders are convinced the world economic rebound is durable, said economists Stephen Roach and Jim O’Neill . “This move is a vote of confidence in the global recovery,” Roach , Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia Ltd. said in an e-mail. “Markets are going to like” the decision, said Jim O’Neill, chief global economist for Goldman Sachs Group Inc. China’s central bank said the decision to “increase the renminbi’s exchange-rate flexibility” was made after the world’s third-largest economy improved. Chinese authorities had prevented the currency from strengthening since July 2008 to help exporters cope with sliding demand triggered by the global financial crisis. The announcement yesterday may help restore investor confidence shaken by the European debt crisis, O’Neill said in an interview in St. Petersburg, Russia. “It could be that China is doing its bit to rescue the world markets,” he said. “It may allow for attention to be diverted from the obsession with the European monetary union and the sovereign currencies in Europe.” China’s decision, a week before Group of 20 leaders meet in Toronto to consider ways to safeguard the economic recovery, may deflect criticism that its undervalued currency has added to lopsided global flows of trade and investment. The announcement signals an end to the currency’s two-year-old peg to the dollar. ‘Not a Panacea’ Even so, Roach said the shift “is not a panacea for an unbalanced global economy.” Countries such as China with trade surpluses will have to take steps to stimulate private demand, he said, while countries such as the U.S. “need to show a credible commitment to fiscal consolidation and take actions that would boost personal saving.” The People’s Bank of China ruled out a one-time revaluation, saying there is no basis for “large-scale appreciation,” and kept the yuan’s 0.5 percent daily trading band unchanged. The yuan is a denomination of China’s currency, the renminbi. The currency appreciated 21 percent in the three years after a peg to the dollar was scrapped in July 2005 and replaced by a managed float against a basket of currencies including the euro and the Japanese yen. China’s announcement could be seen as a signal that the “worst of the financial crisis is over, China is growing very strongly, that this is an auspicious time to go back to the policy that had initially been announced,” Nicholas Lardy , a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, said in a telephone interview yesterday with Bloomberg News. Gains Unclear Lardy said it’s unclear how much the currency will be allowed to strengthen. “I think if they had in mind some indication of a specific amount, they might have announced that today. I would not anticipate a second announcement; the markets are just going to see.” O’Neill predicted the yuan will appreciate 1 percent when markets open June 21 and predicts a 5 percent appreciation by year’s end. Chinese exports have helped drive growth in the world’s third-largest economy. China’s overseas sales jumped 48.5 percent in May from a year earlier, the biggest gain in more than six years. Exports exceeded imports by $19.5 billion, from $1.68 billion in April and a deficit of $7.24 billion in March that was the first in six years. Increasingly Confident “The Chinese are increasingly confident they can make this adjustment to a domestic-driven economy rather than the one relying on exporting low-value-added stuff to the rest of the world,” O’Neill said. It remains to be seen if China’s decision is a “symbolic move or a true shift in China’s currency policy that will result in significant currency appreciation,” Eswar Prasad , a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington and a former IMF economist, said in an e-mail. Still, “this move signifies recognition by Chinese officials that a more flexible exchange rate is in China’s own interest,” Prasad said. Changes in China’s exchange rate may not have an impact on the bilateral trade balance, John Frisbie , president of the U.S. China Business Council said in an e-mail. “Much of what we import from China is stuff that we imported from elsewhere before,” Frisbie said. “If we didn’t import it from China, we’d likely just import it from somewhere else.” To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net Gopal Ratnam in Washington at gratnam1@bloomberg.net .

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Roach, O&rsquoNeill Say China Yuan Move Shows Confidence in Recovery

June 20, 2010

By Gopal Ratnam and Timothy R. Homan June 20 (Bloomberg) — China’s decision to allow a more flexible yuan shows the country’s leaders are convinced the world economic rebound is durable, said economists Stephen Roach and Jim O’Neill . “This move is a vote of confidence in the global recovery,” Roach , Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia Ltd. said in an e-mail. “Markets are going to like” the decision, said Jim O’Neill, chief global economist for Goldman Sachs Group Inc. China’s central bank said the decision to “increase the renminbi’s exchange-rate flexibility” was made after the world’s third-largest economy improved. Chinese authorities had prevented the currency from strengthening since July 2008 to help exporters cope with sliding demand triggered by the global financial crisis. The announcement yesterday may help restore investor confidence shaken by the European debt crisis, O’Neill said in an interview in St. Petersburg, Russia. “It could be that China is doing its bit to rescue the world markets,” he said. “It may allow for attention to be diverted from the obsession with the European monetary union and the sovereign currencies in Europe.” China’s decision, a week before Group of 20 leaders meet in Toronto to consider ways to safeguard the economic recovery, may deflect criticism that its undervalued currency has added to lopsided global flows of trade and investment. The announcement signals an end to the currency’s two-year-old peg to the dollar. ‘Not a Panacea’ Even so, Roach said the shift “is not a panacea for an unbalanced global economy.” Countries such as China with trade surpluses will have to take steps to stimulate private demand, he said, while countries such as the U.S. “need to show a credible commitment to fiscal consolidation and take actions that would boost personal saving.” The People’s Bank of China ruled out a one-time revaluation, saying there is no basis for “large-scale appreciation,” and kept the yuan’s 0.5 percent daily trading band unchanged. The yuan is a denomination of China’s currency, the renminbi. The currency appreciated 21 percent in the three years after a peg to the dollar was scrapped in July 2005 and replaced by a managed float against a basket of currencies including the euro and the Japanese yen. China’s announcement could be seen as a signal that the “worst of the financial crisis is over, China is growing very strongly, that this is an auspicious time to go back to the policy that had initially been announced,” Nicholas Lardy , a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, said in a telephone interview yesterday with Bloomberg News. Gains Unclear Lardy said it’s unclear how much the currency will be allowed to strengthen. “I think if they had in mind some indication of a specific amount, they might have announced that today. I would not anticipate a second announcement; the markets are just going to see.” O’Neill predicted the yuan will appreciate 1 percent when markets open June 21 and predicts a 5 percent appreciation by year’s end. Chinese exports have helped drive growth in the world’s third-largest economy. China’s overseas sales jumped 48.5 percent in May from a year earlier, the biggest gain in more than six years. Exports exceeded imports by $19.5 billion, from $1.68 billion in April and a deficit of $7.24 billion in March that was the first in six years. Increasingly Confident “The Chinese are increasingly confident they can make this adjustment to a domestic-driven economy rather than the one relying on exporting low-value-added stuff to the rest of the world,” O’Neill said. It remains to be seen if China’s decision is a “symbolic move or a true shift in China’s currency policy that will result in significant currency appreciation,” Eswar Prasad , a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington and a former IMF economist, said in an e-mail. Still, “this move signifies recognition by Chinese officials that a more flexible exchange rate is in China’s own interest,” Prasad said. Changes in China’s exchange rate may not have an impact on the bilateral trade balance, John Frisbie , president of the U.S. China Business Council said in an e-mail. “Much of what we import from China is stuff that we imported from elsewhere before,” Frisbie said. “If we didn’t import it from China, we’d likely just import it from somewhere else.” To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net Gopal Ratnam in Washington at gratnam1@bloomberg.net .

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Osborne Said to Plan Bank Tax in U.K. Budget That May Hurt Economic Growth

June 19, 2010

By Gonzalo Vina June 19 (Bloomberg) — U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne is pushing ahead with plans to tax banks in his first budget, according to three people with knowledge of the plans, an announcement to go along with spending cuts that may prompt forecasters to lower economic-growth estimates. The tax, which may be imposed on assets or liabilities, could raise at least 2 billion pounds ($3 billion), one of the people said. Osborne has said the June 22 budget statement would set the stage for the deepest spending reductions since the 1980s. The bank-tax announcement would come days before Osborne and Prime Minister David Cameron travel to Toronto to meet Group of 20 leaders. G-20 finance ministers this month declined to endorse a global bank tax, while the U.S. and European governments said they would introduce some levy on lenders. “This is something we have said we would like international agreement on but will go ahead in any event with our bank levy,” Cameron told reporters in Brussels on June 17. The Treasury has already reaped benefits from taxing banks, as a one-off tax on bank bonuses introduced last year by Osborne’s predecessor, Alistair Darling , raised 2.5 billion pounds. Osborne’s budget, which he’ll deliver to the House of Commons, will have as its main focus implementing the deficit- reduction program that the coalition’s policy agreement described as “the most urgent issue facing Britain.” “The decisions we make will affect every single person in our country,” Cameron said June 7, discussing the looming cuts. “The effects of those decisions will stay with us for years, perhaps decades to come.” Growth Forecast His policies may lead the Treasury’s forecasting watchdog to trim its growth outlook for the British economy. The Office for Budget Responsibility estimated June 14 the economy would expand by 1.3 percent this year and by 2.6 percent in 2011, assuming previous plans to squeeze the budget by 40 billion pounds by 2015. Osborne says he wants faster and deeper cuts to balance the books. The deficit will narrow from 155 billion pounds in this fiscal year to 71 billion pounds by April 2015, or 3.9 percent of gross domestic product, the budget office said, without taking into account new measures. Net debt will increase to 74.4 percent of GDP, the OBR also forecast. To contact the reporter on this story: Gonzalo Vina in London at gvina@bloomberg.net

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China Signals End to Yuan&rsquos Two-Year Peg to Dollar

June 19, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 19 (Bloomberg) — China said it will allow a more flexible yuan, signaling an end to the currency’s two-year-old peg to the dollar a week before a Group of 20 summit. The decision to “increase the renminbi’s exchange-rate flexibility” was made after the economy improved, the central bank said in a statement on its website, without indicating a time-frame for the change. It ruled out a one-off revaluation, saying there is no basis for “large-scale appreciation,” and kept the yuan’s 0.5 percent daily trading band unchanged. “The recovery and upturn of the Chinese economy has become more solid with the enhanced economic stability,” the People’s Bank of China said in the statement. “It is desirable to proceed further with reform of the renminbi exchange-rate regime and increase the renminbi exchange-rate flexibility.” The decision may help deflect criticism of China when G-20 leaders meet on June 26-27 in Toronto and ease pressure from U.S. lawmakers, who have urged President Barack Obama to use the threat of trade sanctions to force policy change. A more flexible currency would give China more freedom to decide on monetary policy and reduce inflationary pressures by lowering import costs, the World Bank said in a report last week. U.S. politicians “can declare this a partial victory,” said Ma Jun , a Hong Kong-based economist for Deutsche Bank AG. “The impact of this reform on the real economy over the short-term will be limited, because the yuan is unlikely to move significantly against the currency basket.” Winners and Losers Chinese authorities have prevented the currency from strengthening since July 2008 to help exporters cope with sliding demand triggered by the global financial crisis. The currency appreciated 21 percent in the three years after a peg to the dollar was scrapped in July 2005 and replaced by a managed float against a basket of currencies including the euro and the Japanese yen. The yuan is a denomination of China’s currency, the renminbi. Companies focused on the Chinese market, including Beijing- based computer maker Lenovo Group Ltd. and Shanghai-based China Eastern Airlines Corp. , said in March that they would gain from lower import costs and stronger consumer-purchasing power should the yuan appreciate. Textiles makers would stand to lose the most and some would “face bankruptcy” as their profit margins are as low as 3 percent, Zhang Wei, vice chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, said in March. China’s inflation rate jumped to a 19-month high of 3.1 percent in May, higher than the government’s full-year target of 3 percent. Central bank dollar buying has left the nation with $2.4 trillion in currency reserves , the world’s largest holding. Crisis Policies “China has ended its crisis-mode exchange-rate policy as the economy recovers strongly and inflationary pressure continues to build,” Li Daokui , an adviser on the People’s Bank of China’s policy board, said in an interview. “The yuan’s future trend depends on the euro’s movement, and the trends of other major currencies.” Yuan 12-month forwards rose the most this year yesterday, gaining 0.5 percent to 6.7125 per dollar. The contracts reflect bets the currency will appreciate 1.7 percent from the spot rate of 6.8262. They had been pricing in appreciation of 3.2 percent on April 30 before a slump in the euro and a worsening of Europe’s debt crisis eased pressure for appreciation. “The central bank’s statement means China’s exit from the dollar peg,” said Zhao Qingming , an analyst in Beijing at China Construction Bank, the nation’s second-biggest bank by market value. “If the euro continues to remain weak, it could also mean that the yuan may depreciate against the dollar.” Treasury Response U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner praised China’s decision today to allow more currency flexibility and said the pledge needs to be followed by “vigorous” action to help strengthen the global economy. “We welcome China’s decision to increase the flexibility of its exchange rate,” he said in a statement released today in Washington. “Vigorous implementation would make a positive contribution to strong and balanced global growth.” Geithner on April 3 postponed an April 15 deadline for a semiannual review of the currency policies of major U.S. trading partners, which may have resulted in China being labeled a currency manipulator. China owned $895.2 billion of U.S. Treasuries as of the end of March, the largest holdings. Today’s announcement is “a gesture to the U.S., but without a specific timetable,” said Tao Dong , a Hong Kong-based economist at Credit Suisse Group AG. “The pressure is on China now to move its exchange rate ahead of the G-20 summit.” Currency Basket China’s overseas sales jumped 48.5 percent in May from a year earlier, the biggest gain in more than six years, according to customs bureau data June 10. Exports exceeded imports by $19.5 billion, from $1.68 billion in April and a deficit of $7.24 billion in March that was the first in six years. China’s narrowing balance of payments gap indicates that there’s no basis for “large-scale appreciation” by the yuan, the central bank said in the English version of its statement. The Chinese version said no “large-scale volatility” Twelve of 19 respondents surveyed by Bloomberg in April predicted the central bank would allow the currency to float more freely this quarter, while the rest saw a move by year-end. Eleven ruled out a one-off revaluation, while fifteen predicted a wider daily trading range. “Continued emphasis would be placed to reflecting market supply and demand with reference to a basket of currencies,” the statement said. That suggests a looser link to the dollar, said Ben Simpfendorfer , chief China economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, in Hong Kong. “China has to offer something ahead of the G-20,” he said. “Greater flexibility allows them the option to appreciate against the dollar, perhaps during periods of dollar weakness.” To contact the reporters on this story: Judy Chen in Shanghai at Xchen45@bloomberg.net .

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China Signals End to Yuan’s Two-Year Dollar Peg as Its Economy Recovers

June 19, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 19 (Bloomberg) — China said it will allow a more flexible yuan, signaling an end to the currency’s two-year-old peg to the dollar a week before a Group of 20 summit. The decision to “increase the renminbi’s exchange-rate flexibility” was made after the economy improved, the central bank said in a statement on its website, without indicating a time-frame for the change. It ruled out a one-off revaluation, saying there is no basis for “large-scale appreciation,” and kept the yuan’s 0.5 percent daily trading band unchanged. “The recovery and upturn of the Chinese economy has become more solid with the enhanced economic stability,” the People’s Bank of China said in the statement. “It is desirable to proceed further with reform of the renminbi exchange-rate regime and increase the renminbi exchange-rate flexibility.” The decision may help deflect criticism of China when G-20 leaders meet on June 26-27 in Toronto and ease pressure from U.S. lawmakers, who have urged President Barack Obama to use the threat of trade sanctions to force policy change. A more flexible currency would give China more freedom to decide on monetary policy and reduce inflationary pressures by lowering import costs, the World Bank said in a report last week. U.S. politicians “can declare this a partial victory,” said Ma Jun , a Hong Kong-based economist for Deutsche Bank AG. “The impact of this reform on the real economy over the short-term will be limited, because the yuan is unlikely to move significantly against the currency basket.” Winners and Losers Chinese authorities have prevented the currency from strengthening since July 2008 to help exporters cope with sliding demand triggered by the global financial crisis. The currency appreciated 21 percent in the three years after a peg to the dollar was scrapped in July 2005 and replaced by a managed float against a basket of currencies including the euro and the Japanese yen. The yuan is a denomination of China’s currency, the renminbi. Companies focused on the Chinese market, including Beijing- based computer maker Lenovo Group Ltd. and Shanghai-based China Eastern Airlines Corp. , said in March that they would gain from lower import costs and stronger consumer-purchasing power should the yuan appreciate. Textiles makers would stand to lose the most and some would “face bankruptcy” as their profit margins are as low as 3 percent, Zhang Wei, vice chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, said in March. China’s inflation rate jumped to a 19-month high of 3.1 percent in May, higher than the government’s full-year target of 3 percent. Central bank dollar buying has left the nation with $2.4 trillion in currency reserves , the world’s largest holding. Crisis Policies “China has ended its crisis-mode exchange-rate policy as the economy recovers strongly and inflationary pressure continues to build,” Li Daokui , an adviser on the People’s Bank of China’s policy board, said in an interview. “The yuan’s future trend depends on the euro’s movement, and the trends of other major currencies.” Yuan 12-month forwards rose the most this year yesterday, gaining 0.5 percent to 6.7125 per dollar. The contracts reflect bets the currency will appreciate 1.7 percent from the spot rate of 6.8262. They had been pricing in appreciation of 3.2 percent on April 30 before a slump in the euro and a worsening of Europe’s debt crisis eased pressure for appreciation. “The central bank’s statement means China’s exit from the dollar peg,” said Zhao Qingming , an analyst in Beijing at China Construction Bank, the nation’s second-biggest bank by market value. “If the euro continues to remain weak, it could also mean that the yuan may depreciate against the dollar.” Treasury Response U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner praised China’s decision today to allow more currency flexibility and said the pledge needs to be followed by “vigorous” action to help strengthen the global economy. “We welcome China’s decision to increase the flexibility of its exchange rate,” he said in a statement released today in Washington. “Vigorous implementation would make a positive contribution to strong and balanced global growth.” Geithner on April 3 postponed an April 15 deadline for a semiannual review of the currency policies of major U.S. trading partners, which may have resulted in China being labeled a currency manipulator. China owned $895.2 billion of U.S. Treasuries as of the end of March, the largest holdings. Today’s announcement is “a gesture to the U.S., but without a specific timetable,” said Tao Dong , a Hong Kong-based economist at Credit Suisse Group AG. “The pressure is on China now to move its exchange rate ahead of the G-20 summit.” Currency Basket China’s overseas sales jumped 48.5 percent in May from a year earlier, the biggest gain in more than six years, according to customs bureau data June 10. Exports exceeded imports by $19.5 billion, from $1.68 billion in April and a deficit of $7.24 billion in March that was the first in six years. China’s narrowing balance of payments gap indicates that there’s no basis for “large-scale appreciation” by the yuan, the central bank said in the English version of its statement. The Chinese version said no “large-scale volatility” Twelve of 19 respondents surveyed by Bloomberg in April predicted the central bank would allow the currency to float more freely this quarter, while the rest saw a move by year-end. Eleven ruled out a one-off revaluation, while fifteen predicted a wider daily trading range. “Continued emphasis would be placed to reflecting market supply and demand with reference to a basket of currencies,” the statement said. That suggests a looser link to the dollar, said Ben Simpfendorfer , chief China economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, in Hong Kong. “China has to offer something ahead of the G-20,” he said. “Greater flexibility allows them the option to appreciate against the dollar, perhaps during periods of dollar weakness.” To contact the reporters on this story: Judy Chen in Shanghai at Xchen45@bloomberg.net .

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Obama’s Letter To G20 Urges World Leaders To Continue Stimulus

June 18, 2010

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is appealing to the world’s major economies not to waver in their efforts to support a sustained rebound from the near collapse of the global economic system in the fall of 2008. “We must act together to strengthen the recovery,” Obama said in his letter to other leaders of the Group of 20 major industrial countries, written in advance of next week’s summit meeting in Toronto. But Obama’s appeal for unity underscored a number of divisions that have developed between the major powers. Many European nations, rattled by the debt crisis that had engulfed Greece, have started to trim their own budget deficits while China has rejected calls by the United States to allow its currency to rise in value as a way to boost sales of American and other foreign products in China. Obama referred in an oblique way to those disagreements in the letter, avoiding mentioning other countries by name. “Our highest priority in Toronto must be to safeguard and strengthen the recovery,” he said in the letter, which the White House released on Friday. “We worked exceptionally hard to restore growth; we cannot let it falter or lose strength now.” Obama called on the other nations to “reaffirm our unity of purpose to provide the policy support necessary to keep economic growth strong.” The president noted that “significant weaknesses” linger among the major and developing economic powers. He told his summit partners “it is essential that we have a self-sustaining recovery that creates the good jobs that our people need.” The White House released a copy of the letter on Friday. In the letter, Obama said that the June 25-27 summit should also focus on efforts to stabilize public deficits in the “medium term,” a reference to the administration’s position that governments need to run huge deficits currently to provide the stimulus needed to ensure a sustained recovery but then move in future years to deficit reduction efforts. But several European nations including Germany, France and Britain are already moving to attack high deficits in an effort to calm global financial markets which have stumbled in recent weeks over concerns that Greece or other highly indebted nations could default on their loans. Obama is having a tough time making the argument for increased deficit spending at home as well. The Senate has blocked a scaled-down jobs bill with critics complaining that the $120 billion pricetag is still too high. In his letter to the G-20, Obama said: “I am committed to the restoration of fiscal sustainability in the United States and believe that all G-20 countries should put in place credible and growth-friendly plans to restore sustainable public finances.” “But it is critical that the timing and pace of consolidation in each economy suit the needs of the global economy, the momentum of private sector demand and national circumstances.” The recovery from recession in the United States has been erratic and uneven. In his letter, Obama also called on his G-20 partners to promote “balanced global demand” and said he remained concerned about the “continued heavy reliance on exports by some countries with already large external surpluses.” While not mentioning China by name, that comment was an obvious reference China’s trade surpluses and continued resistance to U.S. demands that it allow its currency, called the renminbi, to rise in value against the dollar. A stronger Chinese currency and a cheaper dollar would make U.S. goods more competitive in China and provide Chinese consumers with cheaper products. American manufacturers contend that China is manipulating the value of its currency to gain unfair trade advantages and some U.S. lawmakers are pushing legislation to impose stiff penalties on Chinese imports unless Beijing allows its currency to appreciate. White House spokeswoman Amy Brundage said Friday that the administration will review the status of a long-delayed report on China currency after the G-20 meeting. The report should have been released April 15, by law, but Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner delayed it to give more time for discussions with the Chinese. “We will take stock of where we are with the foreign exchange report after the G-20,” she said. The Obama administration is under heavy pressure from Congress to name China a currency manipulator, a designation that would trigger talks between the two countries and could ultimately lead to U.S. trade sanctions against China. There had been hopes that China would move on the issue before the Toronto summit but on Thursday Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told reporters that “we believe it would be inappropriate to discuss the renminbi exchange rate issue in the context of the G-20 meeting.” Qin reiterated the government’s position that it would gradually reform its exchange rate policies at a timing of its choosing and not in response to pressure. ___ Associated Press writers Darlene Superville in Washington and Charles Hutzler in Beijing contributed to this report.

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Obama’s Letter To G20 Urges World Leaders To Continue Stimulus

June 18, 2010

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is appealing to the world’s major economies not to waver in their efforts to support a sustained rebound from the near collapse of the global economic system in the fall of 2008. “We must act together to strengthen the recovery,” Obama said in his letter to other leaders of the Group of 20 major industrial countries, written in advance of next week’s summit meeting in Toronto. But Obama’s appeal for unity underscored a number of divisions that have developed between the major powers. Many European nations, rattled by the debt crisis that had engulfed Greece, have started to trim their own budget deficits while China has rejected calls by the United States to allow its currency to rise in value as a way to boost sales of American and other foreign products in China. Obama referred in an oblique way to those disagreements in the letter, avoiding mentioning other countries by name. “Our highest priority in Toronto must be to safeguard and strengthen the recovery,” he said in the letter, which the White House released on Friday. “We worked exceptionally hard to restore growth; we cannot let it falter or lose strength now.” Obama called on the other nations to “reaffirm our unity of purpose to provide the policy support necessary to keep economic growth strong.” The president noted that “significant weaknesses” linger among the major and developing economic powers. He told his summit partners “it is essential that we have a self-sustaining recovery that creates the good jobs that our people need.” The White House released a copy of the letter on Friday. In the letter, Obama said that the June 25-27 summit should also focus on efforts to stabilize public deficits in the “medium term,” a reference to the administration’s position that governments need to run huge deficits currently to provide the stimulus needed to ensure a sustained recovery but then move in future years to deficit reduction efforts. But several European nations including Germany, France and Britain are already moving to attack high deficits in an effort to calm global financial markets which have stumbled in recent weeks over concerns that Greece or other highly indebted nations could default on their loans. Obama is having a tough time making the argument for increased deficit spending at home as well. The Senate has blocked a scaled-down jobs bill with critics complaining that the $120 billion pricetag is still too high. In his letter to the G-20, Obama said: “I am committed to the restoration of fiscal sustainability in the United States and believe that all G-20 countries should put in place credible and growth-friendly plans to restore sustainable public finances.” “But it is critical that the timing and pace of consolidation in each economy suit the needs of the global economy, the momentum of private sector demand and national circumstances.” The recovery from recession in the United States has been erratic and uneven. In his letter, Obama also called on his G-20 partners to promote “balanced global demand” and said he remained concerned about the “continued heavy reliance on exports by some countries with already large external surpluses.” While not mentioning China by name, that comment was an obvious reference China’s trade surpluses and continued resistance to U.S. demands that it allow its currency, called the renminbi, to rise in value against the dollar. A stronger Chinese currency and a cheaper dollar would make U.S. goods more competitive in China and provide Chinese consumers with cheaper products. American manufacturers contend that China is manipulating the value of its currency to gain unfair trade advantages and some U.S. lawmakers are pushing legislation to impose stiff penalties on Chinese imports unless Beijing allows its currency to appreciate. White House spokeswoman Amy Brundage said Friday that the administration will review the status of a long-delayed report on China currency after the G-20 meeting. The report should have been released April 15, by law, but Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner delayed it to give more time for discussions with the Chinese. “We will take stock of where we are with the foreign exchange report after the G-20,” she said. The Obama administration is under heavy pressure from Congress to name China a currency manipulator, a designation that would trigger talks between the two countries and could ultimately lead to U.S. trade sanctions against China. There had been hopes that China would move on the issue before the Toronto summit but on Thursday Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told reporters that “we believe it would be inappropriate to discuss the renminbi exchange rate issue in the context of the G-20 meeting.” Qin reiterated the government’s position that it would gradually reform its exchange rate policies at a timing of its choosing and not in response to pressure. ___ Associated Press writers Darlene Superville in Washington and Charles Hutzler in Beijing contributed to this report.

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