treasurer

HARTFORD, CT–(Marketwire – Apr 21, 2011) – The Taiwan Greater China Fund ( NYSE : TFC ), a diversified closed-end registered investment company listed on the New York Stock Exchange (the “Trust”), announced today that Jon Kathe has been named as the Chief Compliance Officer (“CCO”), Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”), Treasurer and Secretary of the Trust.

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Taiwan Greater China Fund Names Jon Kathe as Chief Compliance Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Secretary

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Australian Treasurer sees need for carbon tax

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Australian Treasurer sees need for carbon tax

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DigitalGlobe Names Amy Shapero Vice President of Corporate Development

March 28, 2011

LONGMONT, CO–(Marketwire – March 28, 2011) –  DigitalGlobe ( NYSE : DGI ), a leading global content provider of high-resolution earth imagery solutions, has appointed Amy Shapero to the newly created position of Vice President, Corporate Development. In the role, Shapero is responsible for identifying and managing acquisition and partnership activities worldwide to accelerate DigitalGlobe’s growth in the imagery-based information services market. She reports to Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Yancey Spruill.

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Sanswire Appoints New Chief Financial Officer

February 8, 2011

Jeffrey Sawyers Appointed Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

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State Of Oregon Joins Class-Action Suit Against Apollo Group

October 19, 2010

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)–The state of Oregon has joined a securities fraud class-action lawsuit against Apollo Group Inc. (APOL) and several of its executives, alleging the for-profit college operator misled investors about its revenue between 2007 and 2010. The Oregon Public Employees Retirement Fund lost $10 million as Apollo’s stock price dropped in the wake of the company’s disclosure of a Securities and Exchange Commission inquiry and heightened scrutiny of the entire for-profit college sector, according to a statement released by Oregon Attorney General John Kroger and Treasurer Ted Wheeler.

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U.S. Concrete Hires Chief Financial Officer

October 1, 2010

HOUSTON, TX–(Marketwire – October 1, 2010) –  U.S. Concrete, Inc. ( PINKSHEETS : RMIXQ ) today announced that James C. Lewis has been named Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Mr. Lewis has over 20 years of senior financial management experience. Most recently, Mr. Lewis was Vice President and Treasurer with McDermott International, Inc., a global engineering and construction company with over $6 billion in annual revenue and operations in 20 countries. He holds a BBA in finance from the University of Houston and an MBA from the University of Texas and will begin his role immediately.

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Emerson Radio Corp. Announces Appointment of Chief Financial Officer

September 10, 2010

MOONACHIE, NJ–(Marketwire – September 10, 2010) –  Emerson Radio Corp. ( NYSE Amex : MSN ) today announced that its Board of Directors appointed Andrew Davis, age 42, to the positions of Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer effective September 3, 2010. Mr. Davis has served as Vice President, Finance and Corporate Controller of Emerson Radio since August 2007. In addition, Mr. Davis serves as the Secretary and Treasurer of Emerson Radio.

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Pioneer Power Solutions Appoints Andrew Minkow as Chief Financial Officer and Director

August 12, 2010

FORT LEE, NJ–(Marketwire – August 12, 2010) –  Pioneer Power Solutions, Inc. ( OTCBB : PPSI ) (“Pioneer”), a manufacturer of electrical equipment for utility, industrial, commercial and wind energy applications, announced the appointment of Andrew Minkow as its Chief Financial Officer, Secretary and Treasurer effective immediately. Mr. Minkow was also appointed to our Board of Directors.

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Zygo Announces the Pending Departure of Walter A. Shephard, CFO

July 30, 2010

MIDDLEFIELD, CT–(Marketwire – July 30, 2010) –  Zygo Corporation ( NASDAQ : ZIGO ) today announced that Walter A. Shephard, Vice President Finance, CFO and Treasurer, has made the personal decision to step down from his positions with the company after serving for over six years. Zygo has initiated a search for Mr. Shephard’s successor. Mr. Shephard has agreed to remain in his current roles with Zygo through August to assist in an orderly transition. A conference call has been scheduled for Thursday, August 19, 2010 for Zygo to announce its financial results for the fourth quarter and full year of fiscal 2010.

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Accellera Announces Election of Officers for 2010/11

July 29, 2010

Shishpal Rawat, Chair; Dennis Brophy, Vice-Chair; Stan Krolikoski, Secretary; Yatin Trivedi, Treasurer

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Ken Blackwell: GM’s Move Away from ‘Government Motors’

July 13, 2010

My friend Matt Lewis recently authored a thoughtful column about General Motors . As he pointed out, regardless of how one feels about the government bailout of GM — which he and I both vigorously opposed — there is reason for optimism about the company’s future. To be sure, there is an argument to be made for conservatives to actually root for GM’s continued failure. Presumably, this would lessen the odds that the government would attempt such a heavy-handed maneuver in the future. But as a former Cincinnati Mayor — and Treasurer of State of Ohio (another state struggling to adapt from a manufacturing economy to an information economy) — my strong philosophical opposition to bailouts is tempered by my realization that the decision was made, and now we must move forward. It’s also important for someone to make this point before it’s too late — if GM does succeed at turning things around, it should not be construed as “proof” the bailout “worked,” nor should President Obama attempt some sort of victory tour to score political points. For one thing, it’s impossible to say that bailing out GM — even if GM turns things around — was good. It very well may be that allowing GM to fail would have forced the industry to modernize, and would have allowed competitors like Ford to gain market share. We can have that debate, but that’s water under the bridge now. It’s too early to predict how things will play out (I’ll be more charitable toward GM once the taxpayers are fully compensated, and once the government no longer owns stock in the company), but evidence suggests the new GM regime is miraculously attempting to implement conservative free market principles. Should GM succeed in achieving long-term profitability, the credit will belong to the new leadership, not the federal government. Based on early reports, it seems the old days of GM producing cars that no one really wanted and then offering steep discounts just to move subpar products, are over. Also gone are the days when GM was in a variety of businesses that were unrelated to the automobile industry. Now the company concentrates solely on producing high quality cars, trucks and SUVs, nothing else. I’m told that within GM there is a deep desire to pay back the government loan and turn the company around to permanent profitability. Again, I will believe it when I see it, but, so far, indications are positive that GM will do just that. It’s also worth noting that General Motors’ June U.S. sales rose 11 percent from the same month last year. Sales of GM’s Camaro, Malibu, and its family SUV, the Equinox, are flourishing The Camaro outsold Ford’s Mustang for 11 straight months until Ford was forced to offer big incentives to lure buyers. Ten GM models ranked in the Top 3 of their segment, more than any other manufacturer and GM now boasts four award winning models; Tahoe; Avalanche; Sierra LD and the Escalade. Motor Trend recently reported, “Buick Is Back,” and featured a story applauding the brand’s quality and performance. In addition, the company has completely restructured its labor agreement to bring its labor costs in line with what Toyota is paying. The company has inked a new contract with labor that includes a “no-strike” provision that extends beyond five years. GM also now has more flexibility to bring on temporary skilled and non-skilled workers to keep plants open and production lines running. Within a few months, I am sure we will see a high profile victory tour by members of the Obama Administration who will want to claim a lion’s share of the credit for GM’s turnaround. But make no mistake about it, if GM turns the corner, it will be the result of new leadership by a determined CEO who is demanding a strong work ethic and utilizing sound free market principles to return General Motors to icon status within the automobile industry.

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Video: Louisiana’s Kennedy Warns U.S. to Plan for BP Bankruptcy: Video

June 18, 2010

June 18 (Bloomberg) — Louisiana State Treasurer John Kennedy talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about the need for state and federal governments to be prepared to “step in” if BP Plc files for bankruptcy. Kennedy, speaking yesterday, also discussed his concern about the environmental effects of the dispersants being used to break down the oil in the water. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Rio Chief Says Australian Mining Tax Forces `Silent Partner’ on Businesses

May 29, 2010

By Shani Raja May 30 (Bloomberg) — Tom Albanese , chief executive officer of Rio Tinto Group , said Australia’s plan to boost taxes on resources producers would make the government a “silent partner” in businesses like its own. The proposal for a 40 percent super profits tax on resource companies has also damaged Australia’s reputation overseas and added to sovereign risk, Albanese said in an interview broadcast today on ABC’s “Inside Business.” “This is half our balance sheet at risk because we have someone now coming in to say, ‘I want to be your silent partner. I want 40 percent of your pretax profits and largely written- off assets,’” Albanese told the program. The government set aside A$38.5 million ($32.6 million) in its May 11 budget to promote an overhaul of the nation’s tax system, including the resources levy. Mining companies have been the fiercest opponents to the tax, scheduled to take effect in 2012, taking full-page advertisements out in Australian newspapers to lobby for changes. Last week, the government said it will run its own advertising campaign to counter mining-industry “misinformation,” and Treasurer Wayne Swan said in an e- mailed statement today that any suggestion the super profits tax, or RSPT, would apply to past profits was “misleading.” ‘Misleading’ Claims “There has been much comment from mining companies in recent weeks about the supposed ‘retrospectivity’ of the RSPT,” Swan said. “These claims are clearly misleading, as the RSPT will apply to mining profits from 1 July 2012. It does not apply to past profits.” The mining-tax plan has prompted Rio Tinto to re-evaluate all its projects in Australia, Albanese said in the ABC interview. “I have said to each of my managers, including during discussions this week while I’ve been in Australia, that every single project in Australia needs to be tested and retested and recalibrated, basically remodeled, on a worst-case tax assumption,” he said. Albanese said it was important to reconsider the proposal “holistically,” and that he stands “ready to engage” with Prime Minister Kevin Rudd ’s government on a fundamentally different approach. “Albanese left no doubt he’s willing to engage on a long- term, workable solution, arguably a process companies like Rio should have been involved in before the tax was announced,” said Tim Schroeders , a fund manager at Pengana Capital Ltd. in Melbourne. “It’d be imprudent not to re-assess the viability of existing and prospective projects in the light of such a large potential change to the Australian tax system.” To contact the reporter on this story: Shani Raja in Sydney at sraja4@bloomberg.net .

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Richard Alarcón: Financial Reform: The Collective Power of Local Government vs. Big Banks

May 24, 2010

Across the United States, newspaper headlines lead with stories about financial reform. Members of Congress want to better regulate Wall Street and to take on the fat cats at the big banks, with their golden parachutes and big bonuses, who took our hard-earned tax dollars in the form of a federal bailout, despite the fact that they got us in to this mess in the first place. And Congress is right to take on the big banks – reform at the national level is long overdue and obviously needed. But in the hubbub that is the national overhaul, the seeds of this reform, the work done at the state and local level, cannot be overlooked nor can we let up on this work. True reform of our banking and financial systems will take pressure and action at every level and across the nation. Americans are fed up with billionaires who are bilking us for all we are worth, making the middle class the biggest losers. Our friends and neighbors have lost their homes, found out that the pensions or retirement savings they worked for are gone and are struggling to find work in the worst economy of our lifetimes. In the meantime, Wall Street is back to business as usual, posting new profits, while those on the other side of the deals have lost their homes, their jobs, and their retirement savings. With all of the anger and distrust of Wall Street, we have hit a place where we are ready for a basic cultural shift – one that turns away from looking at our investments and banking solely on the basis of short-term profits, and toward the production of true long-term growth: by investing our funds in economic growth opportunities that directly impact our communities. We cannot let this historic opportunity pass us by. We must channel our inner Howard Beale and scream from our windows, “I’m mad as Hell, and I’m not going to take it anymore” – our outrage must be heard, not just in words but in action. At the City level, leveraging this cultural shift means investing our money in banks that are helping grow Main Street by offering small business loans, working with homeowners to renegotiate mortgages when they’re faced with foreclosure, and opening up bank branches and the cycle of credit in under-served areas, by creating local versions of the Community Reinvestment Act standards. After all, what good does it do Los Angeles if the banks in which the bulk of our tax dollars sit in are reinvested in another City, far away? That’s why the Los Angeles City Council unanimously supported my proposal to create Responsible Banking Standards in Los Angeles , based on a Philadelphia model put in place in 2002. Los Angeles alone has a cash and pension portfolio of over twenty-five billion dollars, which allows us to leverage these investments in such a way to benefit the residents of our city – not just through the rate of return, but by looking at how the banks and financial institutions reinvest in our community. The ordinance will require that any bank looking to do business with Los Angeles would have to submit a report to the City Treasurer who, in turn, would grade the banks based on their investments in Los Angeles. And we’re not the only ones – cities including Boston, Carson, Charlotte, Dallas, Denver, Independence, Muskegon and Watsonville are all looking into creating similar standards for Responsible Banking. And this week, Boston City Councilor Felix Arroyo is hosting a Council hearing to examine how the Boston City Council can hold big banks accountable in their city. The States of California, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Mexico, Ohio and Washington are also all considering or have implemented sweeping financial reforms, including looking at the creation of State-run banks or investing only in State-chartered banks. The anger is palatable and the time for reform is now. We’ve lost our trust in the banks that took our bailout money, and let hundreds of thousands of homes fall into foreclosure. We’ve lost our trust in Wall Street, where companies gained enormous profits, betting on the demise of investments. We’ve lost trust in the rating agencies, when 93% of the subprime-mortgage-backed securities issued in 2006 for which they gave AAA ratings are now “junk” status. The only way that trust is going to be restored is with sweeping reform. That’s why Congress must pass substantive financial reform, so that Americans can begin to believe again. But at the same time, reform – just as powerful – must come from the cities and states. Collectively, our leverage is enormous. I introduced a resolution at the National League of Cities in support of local reform, because I know the power we could have if we banded together. Local and state officials know the pain of our constituents, and know the benefit that can be derived from holding banks and financial institutions more accountable. The notion that we can create real change is not just pie in the sky. The City of Philadelphia has had their policy in place since 2002, which has resulted in increased consumer and small business lending to historically under-served areas of that city. And on April 16, Massachusetts State Treasurer Timothy Cahill announced that the State of Massachusetts will begin divesting $243 million in taxpayer dollars from three of the nation’s largest banks – Bank of America, Citibank, and Wells Fargo. The decision came after the banks were asked, and refused, to voluntarily comply with an 18% interest rate cap on credit cards and other consumer borrowing for Massachusetts residents. The cap, which is required of all Massachusetts state-chartered banks, does not apply to federally-chartered banks. These actions are just the beginning of our cultural shift. More Cities and states are needed to create real pressure on the banks. I urge every City to create standards for how tax-payer dollars are invested and find ways to ensure that the dollars are going to banks and financial institutions that are behaving well. Shouting may not get what we want – but you can bet that billions and billions of dollars taken elsewhere will get banks’ attention. We are mad as Hell – and we don’t have to take it any more.

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Ellen Brown: The Mysterious CAFRs: How Stagnant Pools of Government Money Could Help Save the Economy

May 21, 2010

For over a decade, accountant Walter Burien has been trying to rouse the public over what he contends is a massive conspiracy and cover-up, involving trillions of dollars squirreled away in funds maintained at every level of government. His numbers may be disputed, but these funds definitely exist, as evidenced by the Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports (CAFRs) required of every government agency. If they don’t represent a concerted government conspiracy, what are they for? And how can they be harnessed more efficiently to help allay the financial crises of state and local governments? The Elusive CAFR Money Burien is a former commodity trading adviser who has spent many years peering into government books. He notes that the government is composed of 54,000 different state, county, and local government entities, including school districts, public authorities, and the like; and that these entities all keep their financial assets in liquid investment funds, bond financing accounts and corporate stock portfolios. The only income that must be reported in government budgets is that from taxes, fines and fees; but the investments of government entities can be found in official annual reports (CAFRs), which must be filed with the federal government by local, county and state governments. These annual reports show that virtually every U.S. city, county, and state has vast amounts of money stashed away in surplus funds. Burien maintains that these slush funds have been kept concealed from taxpayers, even as taxes are being raised and citizens are being told to expect fewer government services. Burien was originally alerted to this information by Lt. Col. Gerald Klatt, who evidently died in 2004 under mysterious circumstances , adding fuel to claims of conspiracy and cover-up. Klatt was a an Air Force auditor and federal accountant, and it’s not impossible that he may have gotten too close to some military stash being used for nefarious ends. But it is hard to envision how all the municipal governments hording their excess money in separate funds could be complicit in a massive government conspiracy. Still, if that is not what is going on, why such an inefficient use of public monies? A Simpler Explanation I got a chance to ask that question in April, when I was invited to speak at a conference of Government Finance Officers in Missouri. The friendly public servants at the conference explained that maintaining large “rainy day” funds is simply how local governments must operate. Unlike private businesses, which have bank credit lines they can draw on if they miscalculate their expenses, local governments are required by law to balance their budgets; and if they come up short, public services and government payrolls may be frozen until the voters get around to approving a new bond issue. This has actually happened, bringing local government to a standstill. In emergencies, government officials can try to borrow short-term through “certificates of participation” or tax participation loans, but the interest rates are prohibitively high; and in today’s tight credit market, finding willing lenders is difficult. To avoid those unpredictable contingencies, municipal governments will keep a cushion of from 20% to 75% more than their budgets actually require. This money is invested, but not necessarily lucratively. One finance officer, for example, said that her city had just bid out $2 million as a 30-day certificate of deposit (CD) to two large banks at a meager annual interest of 0.11%. It was a nice spread for the banks, which could leverage the money into loans at 6% or so; but it was a pretty sparse deal for the city. Meanwhile, Back in California That was in Missouri, but the figures I was particularly interested were for my own state of California, which was struggling with a budget deficit of $26.3 billion as of April 2010. Yet the State Treasurer’s website says that he manages a Pooled Money Investment Account (PMIA) tallying in at nearly $71 billion as of the same date, including a Local Agency Investment Fund (LAIF) of $24 billion. Why isn’t this money being used toward the state’s deficit? The Treasurer’s answer to this question, which he evidently gets frequently, is that legislation forbids it. His website states: Can the State borrow LAIF dollars to resolve the budget deficit? No. California Government Code 16429.3 states that monies placed with the Treasurer for deposit in the LAIF by cities, counties, special districts, nonprofit corporations, or qualified quasi-governmental agencies shall not be subject to either of the following: (a) Transfer or loan pursuant to Sections 16310, 16312, or 16313. (b) Impoundment or seizure by any state official or state agency. The non-LAIF money in the pool can’t be spent either. It can be borrowed, but it has to be paid back. When Governor Schwarzenegger tried to raid the Public Transportation Account for the state budget, the California Transit Association took him to court and won . The Third District Court of Appeals ruled in June 2009 that diversions from the Public Transportation Account to fill non-transit holes in the General Fund violated a series of statutory and constitutional amendments enacted by voters via four statewide initiatives dating back to 1990. In short, the use of these funds for the state budget has been blocked by the voters themselves. Bond issues are approved for particular purposes. When excess funds are collected, they are not handed over to the State toward next year’s budget. They just sit idly in an earmarked fund, drawing a modest interest. What’s Wrong with This Picture? California’s budget problems have caused its credit rating to be downgraded to just above that of Greece, driving the state’s interest tab skyward. In November 2009, the state sold 30-year taxable securities carrying an interest rate of 7.26% . Yet California has never defaulted on its bonds. Meanwhile, the too-big-to-fail banks, which would have defaulted on hundreds of billions of dollars of debt if they had not been bailed out by the states and their citizens, are able to borrow from each other at the extremely low federal funds rate, currently set at 0 to .25% (one quarter of one percent). The banks are also paying the states quite minimal rates for the use of their public monies, and turning around and relending this money, leveraged many times over, to the states and their citizens at much higher rates. That is assuming they lend at all, something they are increasingly reluctant to do, since speculating with the money is more lucrative, and investing it in federal securities is more secure. Private banks clearly have the upper hand in this game. Local governments have been forced to horde funds in very inefficient ways, building excessive reserves while slashing services, because they do not have the extensive credit lines available to the private banking system. States cannot easily incur new debt without voter approval, a process that is cumbersome, time-consuming and uncertain. Banks, on the other hand, need to keep only the slimmest of reserves, because they are backstopped by a central bank with the power to create all the reserves necessary for its member banks, as well as by Congress and the taxpayers themselves, who have been arm-twisted into repeated bailouts of the Wall Street behemoths. How the CAFR Money Could Be Used Without Spending It California, then, is in the anomalous position of being $26 billion in the red and plunging toward bankruptcy, while it has over $70 billion stashed away in an investment pool that it cannot touch. Those are just the funds managed by the Treasurer. According to California’s latest CAFR, the California Public Employees’ Retirement Fund (CalPERS) has total investments of $360 billion, including nearly $144 billion in “equity securities” and $37 billion in “private equity.” See the State of California Comprehensive Annual Financial Report for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 2009, pages 83-84. This money cannot be spent, but it can be invested — and it can be invested not just in conservative federal securities but in equity, or stocks. Rather than turning this hidden gold mine over to Wall Street banks to earn a very meager interest, California could leverage its excess funds itself, turning the money into much-needed low-interest credit for its own use. How? It could do this by owning its own bank. Only one state currently does this — North Dakota. North Dakota is also the only state projected to have a budget surplus by 2011. It has not fallen into the Wall Street debt trap afflicting other states, because it has been able to generate its own credit through its own state-owned Bank of North Dakota (BND). An investment in the State Bank of California would not be at risk unless the bank became insolvent, a highly unlikely result since the state has the power to tax. In North Dakota, the BND is a dba of the state itself: it is set up as “the State of North Dakota doing business as the Bank of North Dakota.” That means the bank cannot go bankrupt unless the state goes bankrupt. The capital requirement for bank loans is a complicated matter, but it generally works out to be about 7%. (According to Standard & Poor’s, the worldwide average risk-adjusted capital ratio stood at 6.7 per cent as of June 30, 2009; but for some major U.S. banks it was much lower: Citigroup’s was 2.1 per cent; Bank of America’s was 5.8 per cent.) At 7%, $7 of capital can back $100 in loans. Thus if $7 billion in CAFR funds were invested as capital in a California state development bank, the bank could generate $100 billion in loans. This $100 billion credit line would allow California to finance its $26 billion deficit at very minimal interest rates, with $74 billion left over for infrastructure and other sorely needed projects. Studies have shown that eliminating the interest burden can cut the cost of public projects in half. The loans could be repaid from the profits generated by the projects themselves. Public transportation, low-cost housing, alternative energy sources and the like all generate fees. Meanwhile, the jobs created by these projects would produce additional taxes and stimulate the economy. Commercial loans could also be made, generating interest income that would return to state coffers. Building a Deposit Base To start a bank requires not just capital but deposits. Banks can create all the loans they can find creditworthy borrowers for, up to the limit of their capital base; but when the loans leave the bank as checks, the bank needs to replace the deposits taken from its reserve pool in order for the checks to clear. Where would a state-owned bank get the deposits necessary for this purpose? In North Dakota, all the state’s revenues are deposited in the BND by law. Compare California, which has expected revenues for 2010-11 of $89 billion . The Treasurer’s website reports that as of June 30, 2009, the state held over $18 billion on deposit as demand accounts and demand NOW accounts (basically demand accounts carrying a very small interest). These deposits were held in seven commercial banks, most of them Wall Street banks: Bank of America, Union Bank, Bank of the West, U.S. Bank, Wells Fargo Bank, Westamerica Bank, and Citibank. Besides these deposits, the $64 billion or so left in the Treasurer’s investment pool could be invested in State Bank of California CDs. Again, most of the bank CDs in which these funds are now invested are Wall Street or foreign banks . Many private depositors would no doubt choose to bank at the State Bank of California as well, keeping California’s money in California. There is already a movement afoot to transfer funds out of Wall Street banks into local banks. While the new state-owned bank is waiting to accumulate sufficient deposits to clear its outgoing checks, it can do what other startup banks do – borrow deposits from the interbank lending market at the very modest federal funds rate (0 to .25%). To avoid hurting California’s local banks, any state monies held on deposit with local banks could remain there, since the State Bank of California should have plenty of potential deposits without these funds. In North Dakota, local banks are not only not threatened by the BND but are actually served by it, since the BND partners with them, engaging in “participation loans” that help local banks with their capital requirements. Taking Back the Money Power We have too long delegated the power to create our money and our credit to private profiteers, who have plundered and exploited the privilege in ways that are increasingly being exposed in the media. Wall Street may own Congress, but it does not yet own the states. We can take the money power back at the state level, by setting up our own publicly-owned banks. We can “spend” our money while conserving it, by leveraging it into the credit urgently needed to get the wheels of local production turning once again.

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Mining Profit-Tax `Contagion’ Is Poised to Spread Worldwide From Australia

May 19, 2010

By Madelene Pearson and Jesse Riseborough May 20 (Bloomberg) — Australia’s planned 40 percent tax on mining profits has set a benchmark for other countries weighing higher levies, reducing earnings forecasts for BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group and the attraction of mining stocks. “It could create what the miners are now describing at a global level as a type of tax contagion,” said Tom Price, commodities analyst with UBS AG in Sydney, in an interview. “They might levy a new tax at the miners in Brazil. Canada is another mineral province and South Africa.” BHP, the world’s largest mining company, Xstrata Plc and Rio said they are reviewing projects in Australia, the No. 1 exporter of coal and iron ore, after the government unveiled the tax this month, saying a country’s resources belong to the people. Citigroup Inc. Sydney-based analyst Craig Sainsbury said Canada, Peru and Chile may be next. “Resource nationalism” is a major risk facing miners in the next few years, Evy Hambro , manager of BlackRock Investment Management Ltd.’s flagship $14.3 billion World Mining Fund said last month. Chile, the biggest copper exporter, is proposing a temporary rise in mining taxes to help pay for earthquake reconstruction that may cost BHP, Xstrata and Anglo American Plc $1.2 billion in the next two years. Brazil, the second-biggest iron ore exporter, may tax shipments of the commodity or raise royalties, Energy and Mining Minister Edison Lobao has said. ‘Markets Suicide’ The Australian tax plan is “global financial markets suicide,” according to Charlie Aitken , the executive director of Southern Cross Equities Ltd., the equal top ranked predictor of BHP’s share price performance of 17 analysts, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Mining companies’ earnings may be cut by almost a third when the tax starts in 2012, Moody’s Investor Services said this week. The tax would be broadly credit negative for the sector and raise uncertainty for some companies over the short-to- medium term, Moody’s said this month. The tax may also prompt European and Scandinavian nations to seek a greater share of revenue from production, Magnus Ericsson , a senior partner at Raw Materials Group, a mining data and analysis company, said this month. The proposal will make Australian mines the highest taxed in the world, according to Minerals Council of Australia. “Economies, particularly European economies, are going to have to deal with deficits,” said Jamie Nicol , chief investment officer at Dalton Nicol Reid in Brisbane, which manages about A$550 million ($472 million) including BHP and Rio shares. “They are going to look at some sort of innovative tax solutions to try and claw back some of that.” Levy Wars Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. , Australia’s third-largest iron ore exporter, has dropped 16 percent and BHP’s Melbourne-traded stock has fallen 9.3 percent, while the Australian currency has slid 7.6 percent since the government announced the tax on May 2. Fortescue this week placed $15 billion of projects on hold, citing the tax. Nations that resist may attract investment. South Africa taxes mining companies at 33 percent, Canada 23 percent and China 30 percent compared with a forecast 58 percent in Australia after the tax, according to Citigroup data. Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan has said he “strongly disagrees” with claims the tax will damage miners. China’s demand for Australian metals will outweigh higher taxes, according to AMP Capital Investors Ltd., a unit of the country’s largest pension plan provider, which hasn’t changed its industry assessment. Rio , the world’s third-largest mining company, this month said it will spend $401 million to boost iron ore output in Canada, citing the “attractiveness of investing” in the North American nation. BHP has said the tax would stymie investment. “It doesn’t matter if it’s the Congo or Sudan, or it’s Australia or Canada, these projects require commitments by governments that are 30 years and when they move the goal posts they will have a serious rippling effect,” said Frank Holmes , chief investment officer of U.S. Global Investors Inc., which manages about $3 billion. “They could stifle the world.” To contact the reporter on this story: Madelene Pearson in Melbourne on mpearson1@bloomberg.net

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Massey CEO Blankenship, Board Face Shareholder Challenge After Fatal Blast

May 17, 2010

By Mario Parker May 17 (Bloomberg) — Massey Energy Co. ’s Chief Executive Officer Don Blankenship and board face the first challenge to their leadership in four years as shareholders, including state pension funds, attempt to block re-election of a slate of directors in protest over the company’s safety record. Investors from New York to California have said they will oppose the three directors and have urged others to do the same at the Richmond, Virginia-based company’s annual meeting tomorrow, six weeks after the April 5 accident at the Upper Big Branch Mine in which 29 people were killed. It was the worst U.S. coal mining disaster in 40 years. The CtW Investment Group and the heads of pension funds in eight states, which hold about $64 million worth of shares, have said they will cast votes against re-electing Baxter Phillips , Richard Gabrys and Dan Moore , who each served on Massey’s safety committee, saying they’ve failed in their duties and that the company’s safety record has eroded shareholder value. “It’s potentially a big deal,” said James Rollyson , an analyst at Raymond James Financial Inc. in Houston. “If it goes through, they’re going to have to nominate new people and go through that whole process.” Telephone messages left for Jeff Gillenwater , a Massey spokesman, weren’t returned. Massey fell $2.90, or 7.8 percent, to $34.10 at 11:04 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares have dropped 37 percent since the fatal explosion, lowering the company’s market value to $3.52 billion. Staggered Terms The move against the directors is the first significant challenge to the board since 2006, when Massey engaged in a four-month proxy fight with hedge-fund manager Daniel Loeb of Third Point LLC over two board vacancies. Loeb gained seats for himself and colleague, Todd Swanson. They quit the board about 11 months later, citing the company’s decision not to seek a combination with a rival. In a response to investors’ concerns, Massey said May 14 that it will move to eliminate staggered terms for its directors. Shareholders, including the New York State Office of the State Comptroller, had urged Massey to make the move and it was in the company’s proxy for tomorrow’s meeting. Proxy advisers Glass Lewis & Co. LLC and Riskmetrics Group Inc.’s ISS/RiskMetrics also recommended that investors not vote for the three directors, citing the company’s history of safety citations and saying that the board has been unresponsive to shareholders. “The UBB explosion put a spotlight on Massey and its leadership, but the issues highlighted in the ‘Vote No campaign’ and ISS’s analysis transcend concerns about this specific tragedy,” ISS/RiskMetrics said in a report. Company Response In a letter last week, the company defended Blankenship, Phillips, Gabrys and Moore and asked that shareholders vote to re-elect the three board members. Massey’s board consists of eight members, including Blankenship. “This is a critical period in Massey Energy’s history and it is vital that no radical departures in its governance be made when so much remains unsettled,” Roger Hendriksen , the company’s director of investor relations, wrote May 12. Any nominee who doesn’t collect a majority of votes has to immediately submit a resignation to the board, then Massey’s governance and nominating committee will recommend whether the board should accept the resignation, the company said. Moore has been on the board since 2002 and Gabrys and Phillips have been members since 2007. Blankenship has said Phillips, Massey’s president, is his likely successor as chief executive officer. Election Expectations North Carolina State Treasurer Janet Cowell , who holds 384,515 Massey shares worth $14.2 million as of May 14, said she doesn’t expect the members to be re-elected. “The majority of votes have been against the directors,” she said in a May 13 telephone interview. “So far the early indications are certainly showing that the coalition’s perspective is one that is widely shared.” Blankenship, 60, plans to appear before the Labor and Health and Human Services subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations Committee, on May 20 in Washington, his first appearance before Congress since the explosion. Massey said last month that it expects a second-quarter charge of as much as $212 million for the accident, more than twice its 2009 earnings. The costs will include $80 million to $150 million for benefits for families of the miners, rescue and recovery efforts, insurance deductibles, legal and other contingencies, Massey said. The value of the damaged equipment, development and mineral rights is an additional $62 million. Market Value Cowell said the accident, the drop in market value and the projected second-quarter loss prompted her to join her counterparts in opposing the re-election of the board members. She said the company’s safety performance is affecting returns. “They go hand-in-hand,” Cowell said. “We don’t do social investing through the fund.” Upper Big Branch racked up 639 U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration violations from January 2009 to the accident. Three of the company’s mines are among the top 20 in the U.S. ranked by the number of “significant and substantial” violations accrued since January 2009, according to MSHA data. Significant and substantial, or “S&S,” violations are those that are “reasonably likely to result in a reasonably serious injury or illness under the unique circumstance contributed to by the violations,” according to MSHA. Regardless of the outcome, the opposition may cause the company to consult investors more and give Massey “less carte blanche,” said Pearce Hammond , an analyst at Simmons & Co. Ltd. in Houston. “We knew the folks at CtW were looking at Massey for a bad track record of corporate governance,” said William Atwood , who helps oversee about $10 billion as executive director of the Illinois State Board of Investment in Chicago. “Clearly, the fulcrum event was the disaster there.” To contact the reporter on this story: Mario Parker in Chicago at mparker22@bloomberg.net .

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EU Finance Chiefs Race to Ready Euro Stability Fund

May 9, 2010

By James G. Neuger and Gregory Viscusi May 9 (Bloomberg) — European Union finance ministers meet today to hammer out the details of an emergency fund to prevent a sovereign debt crisis from shattering confidence in the 11- year-old euro. Jolted into action by last week’s slide in the currency to the lowest in 14 months and soaring bond yields in Portugal and Spain, leaders of the 16 euro nations agreed to the financial backstop at a May 7 summit. They assigned finance chiefs to get it ready before Asian markets open later today European time. “We will defend the euro, whatever it takes,” European Commission President Jose Barroso told reporters in the early hours yesterday after the leaders met in Brussels. Europe’s failure to contain Greece’s fiscal crisis triggered a 4.3 percent drop in the euro last week, the biggest weekly decline since October 2008. It prompted the U.S. and Asia to urge broader steps to prevent a global sovereign-debt crisis from pitching the world back into a recession. “Europe is getting its act together,” said Chris Rupkey , chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York. “Time will tell if this statement is enough to satisfy the European bond market vigilantes.” European officials declined to disclose the size of the stabilization fund, to be made up of money borrowed by the EU’s central authorities with guarantees by national governments. Finance ministers will meet at about 3 p.m. in Brussels. A press briefing is scheduled for 6 p.m. ‘That’s Significant’ “When the markets re-open Monday, we will have in place a mechanism to defend the euro,” French President Nicolas Sarkozy said. “If you don’t think that’s significant, you haven’t been to many EU summits.” Sarkozy cancelled a planned trip to Moscow today to deal with the crisis. Britain, the EU’s third-largest economy, won’t contribute to the fund aimed at euro countries that essentially duplicates the work of the International Monetary Fund, a U.K. official said yesterday. Barroso said he wouldn’t push the independent European Central Bank to, for example, buy government bonds. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet accelerated the market selloff on May 6 by rejecting that measure. With the euro facing its stiffest test since its debut in 1999, the summit — called to discuss efforts to coordinate economic policies — turned into a crisis-management session that dragged past midnight. Euro’s Drop The euro slid to $1.2715 from $1.3293 during the week, and is down 15 percent since late November. European stocks sank the most in 18 months, with the Stoxx Europe 600 Index tumbling 8.8 percent to 237.18. The extra yield that investors demand to hold Greek, Portuguese and Spanish debt instead of benchmark German bonds rose to euro-era highs. The premium on 10-year government bonds jumped as high as 973 basis points for Greece, 354 basis points for Portugal and 173 basis points for Spain. Europe came under pressure on a hastily arranged conference call of Group of Seven finance chiefs before the summit. All agreed on “the need for a clear, timely and strong response,” Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty , who chaired the call, told reporters in Ottawa. “We hope to see a strong, early policy response in Europe.” The spreading contagion also drew the attention of President Barack Obama , who said in Washington that U.S. regulators will examine the “unusual market activity” that on May 6 briefly drove the Dow Jones Industrial Average down by almost 1,000 points, erasing more than $1 trillion in wealth before the market bounced back. ‘Speedy Resolution’ “There are impacts on financial markets, including share markets, from the events in Europe and in Greece more specifically,” Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan told reporters in Canberra. “We are urging as speedy a resolution as is possible in the circumstances.” In Brussels, German Chancellor Angela Merkel stepped up German calls for a closer monitoring of government finances and more rigorous enforcement of the deficit-limitation rules, originally drafted by Germany in the 1990s. Europe will send “a very clear signal against those who want to speculate against the euro,” Merkel said. With the euro region’s overall deficit forecast at 6.6 percent of gross domestic product in 2010 and 6.1 percent in 2011, the vow to bring budget shortfalls back below the euro’s 3 percent limit echoes promises that have been regularly broken ever since governments in 1999 set a three-year deadline for achieving balanced budgets. Rating Firms Plans for a European credit-rating authority are already under consideration at the EU Commission, the bloc’s Brussels- based executive agency. It also is investigating whether ratings companies such as Standard & Poor’s wield too much power over investors’ perceptions of governments. Asked whether steps to stem speculation against government bonds would include restrictions on short sales or credit default swaps, Barroso said “some of the points you have mentioned will be contemplated.” The political leadership of the $12 trillion economy also signed off on a 110 billion-euro ($140 billion) aid package for Greece negotiated by finance ministers last week. So far nine governments have cleared the way for funds to be sent to Athens. Germany, the biggest contributor with as much as 22.4 billion euros over three years, fell in line with endorsements in the lower and upper houses of parliament on May 7. A group of German academics filed a lawsuit to try to halt the payout. Germany’s highest court yesterday rejected the challenge. A day after whisking a three-year, 30 billion-euro program of deficit cuts through parliament, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou ruled out further belt-tightening steps, saying the point of the summit was to “reaffirm our confidence in our economies and our common currency and this I believe is a very important message for the global economic recovery.” To contact the reporters on this story: James G. Neuger in Brussels at jneuger@bloomberg.net ; Gregory Viscusi in Brussels at gviscusi@bloomberg.net

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EU Finance Chiefs Race to Ready Emergency Fund Before Asian Markets Open

May 8, 2010

By James G. Neuger and Gregory Viscusi May 9 (Bloomberg) — European Union finance ministers meet today to hammer out the details of an emergency fund to prevent a sovereign debt crisis from shattering confidence in the 11- year-old euro. Jolted into action by last week’s slide in the currency to the lowest in 14 months and soaring bond yields in Portugal and Spain, leaders of the 16 euro nations agreed to the financial backstop at a May 7 summit. They assigned finance chiefs to get it ready before Asian markets open later today European time. “We will defend the euro, whatever it takes,” European Commission President Jose Barroso told reporters in the early hours yesterday after the leaders met in Brussels. Europe’s failure to contain Greece’s fiscal crisis triggered a 4.3 percent drop in the euro last week, the biggest weekly decline since October 2008. It prompted the U.S. and Asia to urge broader steps to prevent a global sovereign-debt crisis from pitching the world back into a recession. “Europe is getting its act together,” said Chris Rupkey , chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York. “Time will tell if this statement is enough to satisfy the European bond market vigilantes.” European officials declined to disclose the size of the stabilization fund, to be made up of money borrowed by the EU’s central authorities with guarantees by national governments. Finance ministers will meet at about 3 p.m. in Brussels. A press briefing is scheduled for 6 p.m. ‘That’s Significant’ “When the markets re-open Monday, we will have in place a mechanism to defend the euro,” French President Nicolas Sarkozy said. “If you don’t think that’s significant, you haven’t been to many EU summits.” Sarkozy cancelled a planned trip to Moscow today to deal with the crisis. Barroso said he wouldn’t push the independent European Central Bank to, for example, buy government bonds. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet accelerated the market selloff on May 6 by rejecting that measure. With the euro facing its stiffest test since its debut in 1999, the summit — called to discuss efforts to coordinate economic policies — turned into a crisis-management session that dragged past midnight. The euro slid to $1.2715 from $1.3293 during the week, and is down 15 percent since late November. European stocks sank the most in 18 months, with the Stoxx Europe 600 Index tumbling 8.8 percent to 237.18. Surging Spreads The extra yield that investors demand to hold Greek, Portuguese and Spanish debt instead of benchmark German bonds rose to euro-era highs. The premium on 10-year government bonds jumped as high as 973 basis points for Greece, 354 basis points for Portugal and 173 basis points for Spain. Europe came under pressure on a hastily arranged conference call of Group of Seven finance chiefs before the summit. All agreed on “the need for a clear, timely and strong response,” Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty , who chaired the call, told reporters in Ottawa. “We hope to see a strong, early policy response in Europe.” The spreading contagion also drew the attention of President Barack Obama , who said in Washington that U.S. regulators will examine the “unusual market activity” that on May 6 briefly drove the Dow Jones Industrial Average down by almost 1,000 points, erasing more than $1 trillion in wealth before the market bounced back. “There are impacts on financial markets, including share markets, from the events in Europe and in Greece more specifically,” Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan told reporters in Canberra. “We are urging as speedy a resolution as is possible in the circumstances.” Merkel’s Call In Brussels, German Chancellor Angela Merkel stepped up German calls for a closer monitoring of government finances and more rigorous enforcement of the deficit-limitation rules, originally drafted by Germany in the 1990s. Europe will send “a very clear signal against those who want to speculate against the euro,” Merkel said. With the euro region’s overall deficit forecast at 6.6 percent of gross domestic product in 2010 and 6.1 percent in 2011, the vow to bring budget shortfalls back below the euro’s 3 percent limit echoes promises that have been regularly broken ever since governments in 1999 set a three-year deadline for achieving balanced budgets. Plans for a European credit-rating authority are already under consideration at the EU Commission, the bloc’s Brussels- based executive agency. It also is investigating whether ratings companies such as Standard & Poor’s wield too much power over investors’ perceptions of governments. Restrictions Considered Asked whether steps to stem speculation against government bonds would include restrictions on short sales or credit default swaps, Barroso said “some of the points you have mentioned will be contemplated.” The political leadership of the $12 trillion economy also signed off on a 110 billion-euro ($140 billion) aid package for Greece negotiated by finance ministers last week. So far nine governments have cleared the way for funds to be sent to Athens. Germany, the biggest contributor with as much as 22.4 billion euros over three years, fell in line with endorsements in the lower and upper houses of parliament on May 7. A group of German academics filed a lawsuit to try to halt the payout. Germany’s highest court yesterday rejected the challenge. A day after whisking a three-year, 30 billion-euro program of deficit cuts through parliament, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou ruled out further belt-tightening steps for the time being, saying the point of the summit was to “reaffirm our confidence in our economies and our common currency and this I believe is a very important message for the global economic recovery.” To contact the reporters on this story: James G. Neuger in Brussels at jneuger@bloomberg.net ; Gregory Viscusi in Brussels at gviscusi@bloomberg.net

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Europe’s Leaders Agree on Emergency Fund to Defend Euro as Crisis Spreads

May 8, 2010

By James G. Neuger and Gregory Viscusi May 8 (Bloomberg) — European leaders agreed to set up an emergency fund to halt the spread of Greece’s fiscal woes, seeking to prevent a sovereign debt crisis from shattering confidence in the 11-year-old euro. Jolted into action by the sliding currency and soaring bond yields in Portugal and Spain, leaders of the 16 euro countries said the workings of the financial backstop will be hammered out before the markets open on May 10. “We will defend the euro, whatever it takes,” European Commission President Jose Barroso told reporters early today after the leaders met in Brussels. Europe’s failure to contain Greece’s fiscal crisis triggered a 4.3 percent drop in the euro this week and led the U.S. and Asia to rally around in a bid to prevent a global sovereign-debt crisis from pitching the world back into a recession. European officials declined to disclose the size of the stabilization fund, to be made up of money borrowed by the European Union’s central authorities with guarantees by national governments. Finance ministers will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Brussels to flesh out the details. “When the markets re-open Monday, we will have in place a mechanism to defend the euro,” French President Nicolas Sarkozy said. “If you don’t think that’s significant, you haven’t been to many EU summits.” Independent ECB Barroso said he wouldn’t push the independent European Central Bank to, for example, buy government bonds. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet accelerated the market selloff on May 6 by rejecting that measure. With the euro facing its stiffest test since its debut in 1999, the summit — called to discuss longer-term efforts to coordinate economic policies — turned into a crisis-management session that dragged past midnight. The euro slid to $1.2715 from $1.3293 during the week, and is down 15 percent since late November. European stocks sank the most in 18 months, with the Stoxx Europe 600 Index tumbling 8.8 percent to 237.18. The extra yield that investors demand to hold Greek, Portuguese and Spanish debt instead of safer German bonds rose to euro-era highs yesterday. The premium on 10-year government bonds jumped as high as 973 basis points for Greece, 354 basis points for Portugal and 173 basis points for Spain. Spreading Contagion Europe came under pressure on a hastily arranged conference call of Group of Seven finance chiefs yesterday. All agreed on “the need for a clear, timely and strong response,” Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty , who chaired the call, told reporters in Ottawa. “We hope to see a strong, early policy response in Europe.” The spreading contagion also drew the attention of President Barack Obama , who said in Washington that U.S. regulators will examine the “unusual market activity” that on May 6 briefly drove the Dow Jones Industrial Average down by almost 1,000 points, erasing more than $1 trillion in wealth before the market bounced back. “There are impacts on financial markets, including share markets, from the events in Europe and in Greece more specifically,” said Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan, speaking to reporters in Canberra today. “We are urging as speedy a resolution as is possible in the circumstances.” In Brussels, German Chancellor Angela Merkel stepped up German calls for a closer monitoring of government finances and more rigorous enforcement of the deficit-limitation rules, originally drafted by Germany in the 1990s. Europe will send “a very clear signal against those who want to speculate against the euro,” Merkel said. Credit-Rating Authority With the euro region’s overall deficit forecast at 6.6 percent of gross domestic product in 2010 and 6.1 percent in 2011, the vow to bring budget shortfalls back below the euro’s 3 percent limit echoes promises that have been regularly broken ever since governments in 1999 set a three-year deadline for achieving balanced budgets. Plans for a European credit-rating authority are already under consideration at the EU Commission, the bloc’s Brussels- based executive agency. It also is investigating whether ratings companies such as Standard & Poor’s wield too much power over investors’ perceptions of governments. Asked whether steps to stem speculation against government bonds would include restrictions on short sales or credit default swaps, Barroso said “some of the points you have mentioned will be contemplated.” The political leadership of the $12 trillion economy also signed off on a 110 billion-euro ($140 billion) aid package for Greece negotiated by finance ministers last week. So far nine governments have cleared the way for funds to be sent to Athens. Biggest Contributor Germany, the biggest contributor with as much as 22.4 billion euros over three years, fell in line yesterday with endorsements in the lower and upper houses of parliament. A group of German academics filed a lawsuit to try to halt the payout. A day after whisking a three-year, 30 billion-euro program of deficit cuts through parliament, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou ruled out further belt-tightening steps for the time being, saying the point of the summit was to “reaffirm our confidence in our economies and our common currency and this I believe is a very important message for the global economic recovery.” Europe’s unprecedented lending pledge has “proven insufficient to stop market contagion to the rest of the euro- zone periphery,” Michael Saunders and other economists at Citigroup Inc. said in an e-mailed note before the summit. “Different kinds of solutions are necessary to fix the underlying problems of the rest of the euro periphery other than Greek-style packages, and these are unlikely to come in the very short term.” To contact the reporters on this story: James G. Neuger in Brussels at jneuger@bloomberg.net ; Gregory Viscusi in Brussels at gviscusi@bloomberg.net .

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Europe’s Leaders Agree on Emergency Fund to Defend Euro as Crisis Spreads

May 8, 2010

By James G. Neuger and Gregory Viscusi May 8 (Bloomberg) — European leaders agreed to set up an emergency fund to halt the spread of Greece’s fiscal woes, seeking to prevent a sovereign debt crisis from shattering confidence in the 11-year-old euro. Jolted into action by the sliding currency and soaring bond yields in Portugal and Spain, leaders of the 16 euro countries said the workings of the financial backstop will be hammered out before the markets open on May 10. “We will defend the euro, whatever it takes,” European Commission President Jose Barroso told reporters early today after the leaders met in Brussels. Europe’s failure to contain Greece’s fiscal crisis triggered a 4.3 percent drop in the euro this week and led the U.S. and Asia to rally around in a bid to prevent a global sovereign-debt crisis from pitching the world back into a recession. European officials declined to disclose the size of the stabilization fund, to be made up of money borrowed by the European Union’s central authorities with guarantees by national governments. Finance ministers will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Brussels to flesh out the details. “When the markets re-open Monday, we will have in place a mechanism to defend the euro,” French President Nicolas Sarkozy said. “If you don’t think that’s significant, you haven’t been to many EU summits.” Independent ECB Barroso said he wouldn’t push the independent European Central Bank to, for example, buy government bonds. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet accelerated the market selloff on May 6 by rejecting that measure. With the euro facing its stiffest test since its debut in 1999, the summit — called to discuss longer-term efforts to coordinate economic policies — turned into a crisis-management session that dragged past midnight. The euro slid to $1.2715 from $1.3293 during the week, and is down 15 percent since late November. European stocks sank the most in 18 months, with the Stoxx Europe 600 Index tumbling 8.8 percent to 237.18. The extra yield that investors demand to hold Greek, Portuguese and Spanish debt instead of safer German bonds rose to euro-era highs yesterday. The premium on 10-year government bonds jumped as high as 973 basis points for Greece, 354 basis points for Portugal and 173 basis points for Spain. Spreading Contagion Europe came under pressure on a hastily arranged conference call of Group of Seven finance chiefs yesterday. All agreed on “the need for a clear, timely and strong response,” Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty , who chaired the call, told reporters in Ottawa. “We hope to see a strong, early policy response in Europe.” The spreading contagion also drew the attention of President Barack Obama , who said in Washington that U.S. regulators will examine the “unusual market activity” that on May 6 briefly drove the Dow Jones Industrial Average down by almost 1,000 points, erasing more than $1 trillion in wealth before the market bounced back. “There are impacts on financial markets, including share markets, from the events in Europe and in Greece more specifically,” said Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan, speaking to reporters in Canberra today. “We are urging as speedy a resolution as is possible in the circumstances.” In Brussels, German Chancellor Angela Merkel stepped up German calls for a closer monitoring of government finances and more rigorous enforcement of the deficit-limitation rules, originally drafted by Germany in the 1990s. Europe will send “a very clear signal against those who want to speculate against the euro,” Merkel said. Credit-Rating Authority With the euro region’s overall deficit forecast at 6.6 percent of gross domestic product in 2010 and 6.1 percent in 2011, the vow to bring budget shortfalls back below the euro’s 3 percent limit echoes promises that have been regularly broken ever since governments in 1999 set a three-year deadline for achieving balanced budgets. Plans for a European credit-rating authority are already under consideration at the EU Commission, the bloc’s Brussels- based executive agency. It also is investigating whether ratings companies such as Standard & Poor’s wield too much power over investors’ perceptions of governments. Asked whether steps to stem speculation against government bonds would include restrictions on short sales or credit default swaps, Barroso said “some of the points you have mentioned will be contemplated.” The political leadership of the $12 trillion economy also signed off on a 110 billion-euro ($140 billion) aid package for Greece negotiated by finance ministers last week. So far nine governments have cleared the way for funds to be sent to Athens. Biggest Contributor Germany, the biggest contributor with as much as 22.4 billion euros over three years, fell in line yesterday with endorsements in the lower and upper houses of parliament. A group of German academics filed a lawsuit to try to halt the payout. A day after whisking a three-year, 30 billion-euro program of deficit cuts through parliament, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou ruled out further belt-tightening steps for the time being, saying the point of the summit was to “reaffirm our confidence in our economies and our common currency and this I believe is a very important message for the global economic recovery.” Europe’s unprecedented lending pledge has “proven insufficient to stop market contagion to the rest of the euro- zone periphery,” Michael Saunders and other economists at Citigroup Inc. said in an e-mailed note before the summit. “Different kinds of solutions are necessary to fix the underlying problems of the rest of the euro periphery other than Greek-style packages, and these are unlikely to come in the very short term.” To contact the reporters on this story: James G. Neuger in Brussels at jneuger@bloomberg.net ; Gregory Viscusi in Brussels at gviscusi@bloomberg.net .

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Sleep-Deprived Traders Work at Midnight for U.K. Ballot; FTSE Futures Fall

May 7, 2010

By Nandini Sukumar May 7 (Bloomberg) — Traders across London started showing up for work around midnight as dealing desks opened in the early morning to react to the U.K. election. London’s Liffe derivatives exchange opened contracts on gilts, FTSE 100 Index and short-sterling futures at 1 a.m. today for the first time ever. Brokers brought in staff to cope with demand as the voting result tempts dealers with the promise of market volatility. FTSE 100 futures lost 2.3 percent to 2,580 as of 5:28 a.m. London time as a national exit poll projected David Cameron ’s Conservative party winning more seats in Parliament than Prime Minister Gordon Brown . “There’ll be some frenetic activity,” said David Buik , a market analyst at BGC Partners Inc. who has spent more than 35 years as a broker. He said his firm was expected to have about 50 to 60 employees in from 1 a.m. Whichever party forms a government must deliver a plan to reduce the U.K.’s budget deficit, which at more than 11 percent of gross domestic product is the largest in the Group of Seven nations. Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s say Britain’s AAA grade is under threat without convincing proposals to tame the nation’s finances. Concern that spiraling government debt will derail the economy roiled markets this week and wiped $250 billion off the value of European equities. Buik, who hosted an election night party, had planned to eschew champagne for water so he could come straight to BGC’s trading floor on the 19th story of the Barclays Plc building in London’s Canary Wharf. Midnight Arrival Six miles across town in the Mayfair district, Sebastian Jones, associate director of Berkeley Futures Ltd., had aimed to arrive at the firm’s Savile Row offices after midnight. “It will be a busy night,” said Jones, 32. Many clients “have already reduced their exposure to ensure they’re well placed to take fresh positions once a clear result becomes apparent.” Cameron’s Conservatives were forecast to have won 305 seats in the 650-seat House of Commons to Labour’s 255 and 61 for Nick Clegg ’s Liberal Democrats, the national exit poll showed. It would be the first election since 1974 when no party gained a majority. Without a majority, Brown or Cameron may need the backing of the Liberal Democrats to govern. “This election is probably the most important in the lives of current traders because the problems faced by the new government will be the hardest since Margaret Thatcher took over,” said Jones. “We expect volatility to be high.” Margaret Thatcher The pound had fallen 7 percent against the dollar this year on concern the election won’t deliver a clear result. Cameron’s Conservatives have said they plan to tackle the deficit immediately, while Labour and the Liberal Democrats favor delaying spending cuts until 2011 to protect the recovery. The U.K. economy grew 0.2 percent in the first quarter, half as much as forecast, the Office for National Statistics said April 23. “Volumes should be good because it’s potentially a major change in British politics,” said Dirk Hoffmann-Becking , banking analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in London. “It will be fun, it doesn’t happen that often.” Liffe , the futures market owned by NYSE Euronext, offered three-month sterling interest-rate futures, gilt contracts and FTSE 100 Index futures three hours after polls close. It’s the first time the exchange changed its trading hours for an election. The bourse will have six employees monitoring the process, said spokesman James Dunseath . On the fourth floor of ICAP Plc’s offices in London’s Square Mile, more than 25 brokers will work through the night as results are transmitted on the plasma-screen televisions that line the room. They’ll be joined by a fresh shift at 6 a.m. Michael Spencer , chief executive officer and founder of ICAP, the world’s biggest broker of transactions between banks, recently announced his resignation as Treasurer of the Conservatives. “This is the first time I’ve pulled an all-nighter for an election,” said Don Smith , fixed-income strategist at ICAP, who has booked a hotel room near the office and doesn’t expect to return home until this evening. “It’s going to be a very, very interesting night.” To contact the reporter on this story: Nandini Sukumar in London at nsukumar@bloomberg.net

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Blankfein Bonds Riskier Than Pandit’s; Junk Bonds Tumble: Credit Markets

May 5, 2010

By John Detrixhe and Bryan Keogh May 5 (Bloomberg) — Goldman Sachs Group Inc. bond yields show the firm’s credit is more hazardous than Citigroup Inc.’s for the first time since February 2009 as speculation grows that legal and regulatory risks will depress its revenue. Debt from the most profitable Wall Street firm yielded 2.73 percentage points more than Treasuries on average as of May 4, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. That compares with a spread of 2.29 percentage points for Citigroup, which had to get a $45 billion bailout in 2008 and repaid $20 billion of the funds in December. At the end of March, Citigroup spreads were 0.45 percentage point wider than Goldman Sachs’s. Fitch Ratings revised Goldman Sachs’s A+ ranking outlook to “negative” from “stable” today on concern its reputation may be tarnished. Wider spreads mean the New York-based investment bank, with $180.4 billion of unsecured long-term borrowing, may pay an extra $7.6 million in annual interest on every billion of debt it issues. “With Goldman and the investigation going on, you have to build a bit more risk premium into that,” said Michael Donelan , director of trading and head portfolio manager who oversees $3.5 billion of bonds at Ryan Labs Inc., a money management and research firm in New York that sold two-thirds of its position in Goldman Sachs debt on April 30. “Citigroup actually could be further down the line as far as regulatory risk concern.” Federal Investigation U.S. prosecutors are investigating Goldman Sachs, where Lloyd Blankfein has served as chief executive officer since 2006. The Securities and Exchange Commission filed a civil lawsuit on April 16 alleging fraud tied to collateralized debt obligations. The firm called the SEC’s claims “unfounded.” “No one’s attacking Citigroup over anything anymore, and everyone’s attacking Goldman Sachs over everything,” said Richard Bove , a banking analyst at Rochdale Securities in Lutz, Florida. “It logically tells you that Citigroup should have a lower spread to Treasury than Goldman Sachs does.” Elsewhere in credit markets, turmoil in Europe’s financial system led banks to borrow the most in two months from the European Central Bank, junk bonds tumbled and relative yields on emerging-market bonds jumped to the most since February. California bucked the trend, boosting the size of a bond sale twice. Banks in the euro region borrowed 2.63 billion euros ($3.4 billion) from the ECB’s marginal loan facility on May 3, the most since March 10, ECB data show, while the amount of overnight deposits held at the central bank rose to 268.7 billion euros on May 4, the highest since July. Junk Bonds Financial institutions may be growing more reluctant to lend to each other in the so-called interbank market on concern that Greece’s debt crisis will hurt the quality of loan collateral. “There are echoes here of the July-August 2007 period, when people became very suspicious of what everyone else has on their books,” said Marc Ostwald , a fixed-income strategist at Monument Securities Ltd. in London. “This reinforces the idea that there’s less going in the interbank market. This will depress the ECB, but they’ll fully understand it in the current situation.” Yields over benchmark rates on high-yield bonds rose 23 basis points today, the most since June 2009, to 591 basis points, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data. High-yield, high-risk, or junk bonds are rated below Baa3 by Moody’s Investors Service and lower than BBB- by Standard & Poor’s. Credit-Default Swaps A benchmark indicator of U.S. corporate credit risk soared to the most in three months. The Markit CDX North America Investment Grade Index Series 14 increased 7.3 basis points to 105.1, the highest since Feb. 8, according to Markit Group Ltd. The index typically rises as investor confidence deteriorates and falls as it improves. Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value if a borrower fails to meet its obligations, less the value of the defaulted debt. A basis point equals $1,000 annually on a contract protecting $10 million of debt. The extra yield investors demand to own emerging-market bonds over U.S. Treasuries rose 10 basis points to 290, the highest since Feb. 26, according to JPMorgan’s EMBI+ Index. Brazilian traders are betting for the first time that the central bank will raise the benchmark lending rate by 1 percentage point next month after last week’s increase failed to tame rising inflation expectations. Yields on overnight interest rate futures contracts due in July held at an 11-month high of 9.7 percent. The futures rose 14 basis points since central bank President Henrique Meirelles raised the overnight Selic rate by a bigger-than-forecast 75 basis points from a record low 8.75 percent on April 28. California Offering California ’s treasurer boosted the size of a bond sale for the state’s Department of Water Resources by 46 percent to $2.97 billion, after orders from individual investors exceeded $1.2 billion. The issue, now the largest offering of tax-exempt debt this year, was increased twice in response to investor demand, Treasurer Bill Lockyer said in a statement. The bonds, being sold to refinance debt from the state’s power crisis of 2001-2002, were offered at preliminary yields of 0.92 percent on two-year notes, to 3.8 percent on bonds maturing in 2022, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Goldman Sachs’s 6.15 percent notes due in April 2018 yield 5.92 percent, compared with 5.71 percent for Citigroup’s 6.125 percent debt due a month later, according to data from Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. The average bond yield for Goldman Sachs increased to 5.39 percent as of May 4, from 4.63 percent at the end of last year, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show. Michael DuVally, a Goldman Sachs spokesman, and Danielle Romero-Apsilos of Citigroup, declined to comment. ‘Loyalty and Relationships’ Credit-default swaps traders are charging 53 basis points more to protect Goldman Sachs bonds for one year than they are for bonds from New York-based Citigroup, run by Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit , according to CMA DataVision. Before the SEC filed its fraud suit, Goldman Sachs one-year swaps cost 15 basis points less than Citigroup’s. That means it would cost an extra $55,000 to protect $10 million of Goldman bonds rather than Citigroup’s. Goldman Sachs’s “reputation, their loyalty and relationships is what everyone talks about,” said James Barnes , money manager at Wyomissing, Pennsylvania-based National Penn Investors Trust Co., where he helps oversee $1 billion in fixed- income assets. “If that becomes challenging to maintain, that’s where you can see a continuation in spreads widening.” To contact the reporters on this story: John Detrixhe in New York at jdetrixhe1@bloomberg.net ; Bryan Keogh in London at bkeogh4@bloomberg.net

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BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto Shares Decline on New `Super’ Australian Mine Tax

May 2, 2010

By Gemma Daley and Rebecca Keenan May 3 (Bloomberg) — BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group, led declines in mining stocks in Sydney trading on concern Australia’s plans to impose the world’s heaviest tax regime on resource companies will cut billions of dollars from profits. BHP and Rio fell the most in 10 months after Australia announced the so-called super tax yesterday. The 40 percent tax on resource profits will start from 2012 and raise A$12 billion ($11 billion) in its first two years. BHP, with 51 percent of its assets in Australia, said taxes on its operations there will increase to 57 percent in 2013 from 43 percent now. “These proposals seriously threaten Australia’s competitiveness, jeopardize future investments and will adversely impact the future wealth and standard of living of all Australians,” BHP’s Chief Executive Officer Marius Kloppers said in an e-mailed statement. Australia, the world’s biggest iron ore and coal exporter, is now the most highly taxed mining nation, reducing its competitiveness, Citigroup Inc. said. The move may reduce BHP’s earnings by 17 percent and Rio’s by 21 percent in 2013, UBS AG said today in a report. BHP, the world’s biggest mining company, traded 2.9 percent lower at A$39.58 at 1:38 p.m. in Sydney, it earlier dropped as much as 4.5 percent, the biggest decline since June 23. Rio, the third-biggest, declined 3.3 percent to A$69.72. Earlier it fell as much as 6 percent for its biggest drop since June 18. Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. slipped 3.5 percent and Newcrest Mining Ltd., the largest Australian gold mining company, fell 2.9 percent. Morgan Stanley said the tax may cut its valuation of Fortescue by 36 percent. Worst Case “It’s a worst-case scenario,” Citigroup mining analyst Craig Sainsbury said. Mining companies will be taxed about 58 cents for every dollar of earnings, compared with 35 cents before the new regime, he said. The resource profits tax is on top of corporate tax and companies payments of state royalties will be rebated under the new regime. Resource mergers and acquisitions may “dry up” because of the uncertainty created by the proposed changes, Sainsbury said. This is “bad news for mid-cap Aussie miners,” he said. Peabody Energy Corp., which has provisionally offered A$4.1 billion for Macarthur Coal Ltd., is assessing the likely effect of the tax changes on the bid, spokeswoman Jennifer Morgans said by phone. Macarthur declined as much as 10 percent to A$13.86, 13 percent less than Peabody’s offer of A$16 a share. Peabody may reduce its bid because the proposal may affect its valuation of Macarthur, Macquarie Group Ltd. said today. The government runs the risk of “taking away from Australia the strongest industry we have and the one that saved us from the global financial crisis,” Keith De Lacy , chairman of Brisbane-based Macarthur, the world’s largest producer of pulverized coal, said yesterday. “Always 50 percent of our net profits went into development and exploration and so much of that is going now so obviously we’ll grow slower.” Election Year Taxing resources companies to help fund government spending is designed to give Australia’s 20 million population a greater share in a China-fueled boom for iron ore and coal. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd , preparing for an election within a year, said the changes will help the government pay for additional hospitals, retirement benefits and company tax reductions. “The royalties regime was outdated,” Treasurer Wayne Swan said in an interview with Bloomberg Television today. “It certainly did not extract for the Australian people a fair share of those very big profits that are coming through on the back of the mining boom.” Resources companies make up 9 percent of the economy and last week warned that a 40 percent levy and double taxation with payments to states would threaten $108 billion of planned investment. The government yesterday said it will compensate companies for the state royalties they have paid. “It is not the right solution and will ensure Australian commodity exports become less competitive globally and investment in Australia is reduced,” Charlie Aitken , director of Southern Cross Equities Ltd., said today in a report. Threat to Competitiveness The changes to taxation will “erode Australia’s competitiveness, severely curtail investment and limit jobs growth”, Rio Tinto, which has 35 percent of its assets in Australia and New Zealand, said in a statement. Xstrata Plc, with coal, copper, zinc and nickel mines in the country, said today the tax may curb investment. Xstrata, which has 33 percent of its assets in Australia and New Zealand according to data compiled by Bloomberg, declined 4.1 percent in London on April 30. Separately, Glencore International AG, the world’s largest commodity trader, is studying a merger with Xstrata Plc as a way to restructure its ownership and improve access to capital, according to two people familiar with the matter. “Australia will have the highest taxed mining industry in the world,” Minerals Council of Australia Chief Executive Officer Mitch Hooke said in an e-mailed statement. “Australia’s hard-earned reputation as a stable investment environment will be dramatically undermined.” Slower Growth “Some will undoubtedly be paying some more tax,” Swan said today. “But what Australia needs as we go forward is an efficient tax we need one which gives to the Australian people the fair value they deserve for their resources and also recognizes the very substantial investments that are made in mining ventures.” Chinese and Indian demand for resources from Australia helped the A$1.2 trillion economy skirt recession during the global financial crisis. Rudd’s Labor government, which has led the opposition Liberal-National coalition in opinion polls, commissioned the tax review two years ago. “It is like standing on quicksand, relying on a resources rent tax,” Opposition Treasurer Joe Hockey said in Canberra yesterday. “This is a cowardly response to a very substantial report.” Growing Population The government will use the resource tax revenue to create a A$5.6 billion infrastructure fund, cut company taxes to 28 percent from the current 30 percent and boost retirement funds, now worth A$1.3 trillion. It will also give a tax concession for resource exploration, including geothermal power, affecting 4,300 companies, Swan said yesterday. The corporate tax rate, reduced to 30 percent from 36 percent by the previous Liberal-National government, will be cut by mid-2014, with 720,000 small businesses getting a one-year head-start. The government may decrease the rate further. The government will also increase the amount companies have to pay into people’s retirement funds to 12 percent from 9 percent of their gross salary in mid-2019. Australia will make it more attractive for some 8.4 million workers to increase their own contributions to the pool, and the changes will add A$85 billion to the A$1.34 trillion funds, Swan said. In total, the government said its tax policy changes will add 0.7 percent a year to the economy. To contact the reporters on this story: Gemma Daley in Canberra at gdaley@bloomberg.net ; Rebecca Keenan in Melbourne at rkeenan5@bloomberg.net

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BHP, Rio Face Heaviest Burden as Australia Outlines Resources Company Tax

May 2, 2010

By Gemma Daley and Marion Rae May 3 (Bloomberg) — Australia plans to impose the world’s heaviest tax regime on mining companies, cutting billions of dollars in profits for BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group as part of the broadest tax overhaul since World War II. The 40 percent tax on resource profits will start from 2012 and raise A$12 billion ($11.1 billion) in its first two years. BHP, the world’s biggest resources company with 51 percent of its assets in Australia, said the tax rate on its Australian earnings will increase to 57 percent in 2013 from 43 percent now. “These proposals seriously threaten Australia’s competitiveness, jeopardize future investments and will adversely impact the future wealth and standard of living of all Australians,” BHP’s Chief Executive Officer Marius Marius Kloppers said in an e-mailed statement yesterday. Taxing resources companies to help fund government spending is designed to give Australia’s 20 million population a greater share in a China-fueled boom for iron ore and coal. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd , preparing for an election within a year, said the changes will help the government pay for additional hospitals, retirement benefits and company tax reductions. Resources companies make up 9 percent of the economy and last week warned that a 40 percent levy and double taxation with payments to states would threaten $108 billion of planned investment. The government yesterday said it will compensate companies for the state royalties they have paid. Highest Taxed “Australia will have the highest taxed mining industry in the world,” Minerals Council of Australia Chief Executive Officer Mitch Hooke said in an e-mailed statement. “Australia’s hard-earned reputation as a stable investment environment will be dramatically undermined.” The government runs the risk of “taking away from Australia the strongest industry we have and the one that saved us from the global financial crisis,” said Keith De Lacy , chairman of Brisbane-based Macarthur Coal Ltd., the world’s largest producer of pulverized coal. “Always 50 percent of our net profits went into development and exploration and so much of that is going now so obviously we’ll grow slower.” The introduction of the resource tax would cut Australia’s competitiveness, Citigroup Inc. said on April 28 before the release of the review. Mining Stocks Resources stocks may decline in trading today after the tax plan was announced. “The knee-jerk reaction is they’ll get hit,” Citigroup Mining Analyst Craig Sainsbury said yesterday from Sydney. Mining companies will be taxed about 58 cents for every dollar of earnings, compared with 35 cents before the new regime, he said. Chinese and Indian demand for resources from Australia, the world’s biggest exporter of coal, iron ore and alumina, helped the A$1.2 trillion economy skirt recession during the global financial crisis. Rudd’s Labor government, which has led the opposition Liberal-National coalition in opinion polls, commissioned a tax review two years ago to create a simpler and fairer system to meet the needs of a growing and ageing population. One quarter of a projected population of 36 million will be aged 65 and over by 2050, increasing pressure to build roads, rail, ports, and hospitals. Revenue ‘Quicksand’ “It is like standing on quicksand, relying on a resources rent tax,” Opposition Treasurer Joe Hockey said in Canberra yesterday. “This is a cowardly response to a very substantial report.” The government will use the resource tax revenue to create a A$5.6 billion infrastructure fund, cut company taxes to 28 percent from the current 30 percent and boost retirement funds, now worth A$1.3 trillion. It will also give a tax concession for resource exploration, including geothermal power, affecting 4,300 companies, Treasurer Wayne Swan said. The corporate tax rate, reduced to 30 percent from 36 percent by the previous Liberal-National government, will be cut by mid-2014, with 720,000 small businesses getting a one-year head-start. The government may decrease the rate further. The government will also increase the amount companies have to pay into people’s retirement funds to 12 percent from 9 percent of their gross salary in mid-2019. Australia will make it more attractive for some 8.4 million workers to increase their own contributions to the pool, and the changes will add A$85 billion to the A$1.34 trillion funds, Swan said. In total, the government said its tax policy changes will add 0.7 percent a year to the economy. To contact the reporters on this story: Gemma Daley in Canberra at gdaley@bloomberg.net ; Marion Rae in Canberra at mrae3@bloomberg.net

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Swan, Ahead of Australia Tax Review, Urges `Fair Share’ of Mining Profits

May 1, 2010

By Nichola Saminather and Rebecca Keenan May 2 (Bloomberg) — Australia’s Treasurer Wayne Swan , speaking ahead of the release of a major review of the nation’s tax system today, said profits from the mining industry should be “fairly” shared. “It’s very important that all Australians receive a fair share of mining industry profits,” Swan said in an interview on Channel Ten’s “Meet the Press” program today. “Before the boom something like one in three dollars in mining industry profits came from the royalty regimes run by the states. That’s fallen to something like one in seven.” Swan is due to release the government’s response to Treasury Secretary Ken Henry ’s 10-year plan for a more efficient tax system at 2:30 p.m. in Canberra. Media speculation has focused on a resource rent tax that would be levied on the profits of mining companies such as BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group, according to Stephen Walters , chief economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Sydney. A national tax on miners would replace a web of earnings- based royalties set by state governments. Today’s review may show that Australia faces a A$35 billion ($32.3 billion) shortfall in taxes from commodity companies, the Australian Financial Review reported yesterday, without disclosing where it obtained the information. A 40 percent resource rent tax could cut the earnings of Rio Tinto by as much as 30 percent and BHP Billiton’s by 19 percent, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. ‘Extremely Profitable’ “Mining companies have been extremely profitable in recent times,” Swan said yesterday to reporters in Canberra. “But, as I said before, when it comes to state mining taxes they have dropped dramatically as a share of those mining profits. So that’s just one issue which is considered in the report.” The government commissioned the review almost two years ago and it was handed to Swan at the end of last year. It aims to eliminate many of the 125 local, state and federal taxes currently in place. Of that total, 10 taxes, including state mining and petroleum rent tax, reap 90 percent of revenue. “Tax reform is a decade-long process,” Swan said today. “We can’t necessarily legislate all of these things in the budget because when you are engaged in tax reform you have to go through a consultative process.” Mining companies say a resource rent tax would jeopardize investment and jobs in an industry that makes up about a tenth of Australia’s A$1.21 trillion ($1.12 trillion) economy and employs about 333,000 people. Transitional Rules Any new tax regime “must be carefully designed from an international competitiveness perspective,” BHP’s outgoing Chairman Don Argus said in October. “Whatever is decided, the transitional rules applying to existing projects will be critical to the success of any policy reform in this area,” said Argus, who stepped down at the end of March. Swan said the government’s response to the so-called Henry Review would be about making sections of the economy pay their “fair share.” “We share the objective of a prosperous mining industry in this country, one in which all Australians can share fairly and one which is quite attractive for investment,” he said today. Economic growth in Australia, one of few nations to skirt last year’s global recession, will accelerate to 3.5 percent in 2011 from 3 percent this year, the International Monetary Fund said last week. The Australian currency posted its third- straight monthly gain last month and has risen 26.9 percent in the past year. Other Changes “In view of the mining sector, it’s not a question who collects the tax, it’s the amount of tax collected that determines the investment horizons of Australia,” Minister for Resources and Energy Martin Ferguson said last week. “That’s clearly an issue that the government will have to consider.” JPMorgan’s Walters said other possible changes in the review could be tax breaks on mineral-exploration expenditure and incentives for savings. “Media speculation suggests there may be a reduction in the company tax rate — from 30 percent to 25 percent — to enhance international tax competition,” he said. “This change would partly assuage the pain inflicted by the implementation of the resource rent tax.” Still, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd ’s government may be reluctant to implement tax reforms that are unpopular with the electorate. The government faces an election within a year and Swan is due to release this year’s budget on May 11. “The government has been sitting on the review for four months, which suggests some of the panel’s recommendations may be politically unpalatable, particularly in an election year,” Walters said. The government is “very unlikely to scare the horses in the lead-up to the election.” To contact the reporters on this story: Nichola Saminather in Sydney at nsaminather1@bloomberg.net Rebecca Keenan in Melbourne at rkeenan5@bloomberg.net

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Goldman Sachs Clashes With Senate’s Levin Ahead of Blankfein’s Testimony

April 24, 2010

By Christine Harper and Ryan J. Donmoyer April 25 (Bloomberg) — Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and U.S. Senator Carl Levin fired opening shots ahead of a congressional hearing this week, releasing conflicting evidence of the investment bank’s tactics during the mortgage market’s collapse. Levin , a Michigan Democrat who leads the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations , posted internal Goldman Sachs e- mail s on his website yesterday that he said show the firm “made a lot of money by betting against the mortgage market.” Goldman Sachs responded with documents indicating the firm lost money on mortgages in 2008 and that executives didn’t know the market would fall. Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein , 55, and six current and former Goldman Sachs employees will have to face questions from Levin ’s panel against the backdrop of fraud claims from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The regulator sued the firm on April 16, saying it defrauded investors when selling a debt instrument tied to mortgages. Goldman Sachs, which contests the SEC’s claims, said Levin’s committee has “cherry-picked” evidence and jumped to conclusions “even before holding a hearing.” “Investment banks such as Goldman Sachs were not simply market-makers, they were self-interested promoters of risky and complicated financial schemes that helped trigger the crisis,” Levin, 75, said in a statement released with the e-mails. One of the e-mails provided by Levin yesterday shows Blankfein telling colleagues on Nov. 18, 2007, that the firm was making more money from its so-called short bets on mortgages than it lost on its investments related to home loans. ‘Mortgage Mess’ “Of course we didn’t dodge the mortgage mess,” Blankfein wrote in an e-mail dated Nov. 18, 2007, that was among eight pages of documents made public by the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. “We lost money, then made more than we lost because of shorts. Also, it’s not over, so who knows how it will turn out ultimately.” Another document contains an exchange between Chief Financial Officer David Viniar and Gary Cohn , the firm’s president and chief operating officer, about the fixed-income division’s profit and loss statement in July 2007. Cohn’s e-mail describes how the firm’s mortgage unit is up “in the index book,” while recording writedowns on residential mortgages and collateralized debt obligations. One method the firm used to make bets against the mortgage market was to take short positions on the so-called ABX index. “Tells you what might be happening to people who don’t have the big short,” Viniar replies, according to the documents. Losses Overwhelmed Gains Documents released yesterday by Goldman Sachs show that the firm’s gains from shorting subprime mortgages in 2007 were overwhelmed by losses in 2008 when higher-quality mortgages suffered more than the firm anticipated. “Goldman Sachs did not have access to any special information that caused us to know that the U.S. housing market would collapse,” the firm stated in an “executive summary” of its arguments released yesterday. “As a result of the spread of the crisis from subprime to all residential mortgages, Goldman Sachs had overall net losses of approximately $1.7 billion with respect to residential mortgage-related products for fiscal 2008.” A lawyer for Goldman Sachs wrote a letter to Levin April 23 asking the subcommittee to warn the firm of any information the panel plans to release so it has a chance to respond. The letter followed Levin’s statement at a hearing the same day that “investment banks such as Goldman Sachs were not market makers helping clients; they were self-interested promoters of risky and complicated financial schemes that were a major part of the 2008 crisis.” ‘Already Drawn Conclusions’ “The statement suggests that you and the subcommittee have already drawn conclusions about the conduct of Goldman Sachs,” K. Lee Blalack II from the law firm O’Melveny & Myers LLP wrote to Levin. “We strongly disagree with your statement at today’s hearing and believe that, if we were provided an opportunity to respond to your specific findings, Goldman Sachs could produce to you information that establishes that your findings are incorrect.” Blalack, a partner in the Washington office of O’Melveny & Myers, is a former chief counsel and staff director of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, according to his biography on the firm’s website. As other banks struggled throughout the financial crisis, Goldman Sachs posted record earnings in 2007 and then set a new record in 2009. In late 2008, following the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. , the firm was allowed to convert to a bank under the oversight of the Federal Reserve and received $10 billion of taxpayer money, which it repaid with interest about eight months later. Blankfein, whose $67.9 million bonus in 2007 was a record for a Wall Street CEO, received no bonus in 2008 and a $9 million all-stock bonus for last year. Making Markets Goldman Sachs disputes the criticism that the firm’s short position on mortgage securities during 2007 constituted a bet against its own clients. In a letter to shareholders earlier this month, Blankfein and President Gary Cohn said the positions “served to offset our long positions. Our goal was, and is, to be in a position to make markets for our clients while managing our risk within prescribed limits.” The interrogation of Goldman Sachs, the most profitable securities firm in Wall Street history, may echo Ferdinand Pecora’s Depression-era investigation of powerful financiers like J.P. Morgan Jr. , said some historians. Levin, who has served in the Senate for more than 30 years, and his panel have a reputation for thorough research. “This is Pecora II,” said Charles Geisst , a finance professor at Manhattan College in Riverdale, New York, who has written about Wall Street’s history. “They have to squirm and they have to answer the questions.” Pecora Commission The Senate investigation into the causes of the Wall Street crash of 1929 became known as the Pecora Commission, after the former New York City assistant district attorney who was appointed its chief counsel. Congress went on to pass the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, portions of which Goldman Sachs and an employee, Fabrice Tourre , are accused of violating in the Securities and Exchange Commission’s suit filed on April 16. The SEC said Goldman Sachs and Tourre, 31, failed to inform investors in a 2007 collateralized debt obligation that hedge fund Paulson & Co., led by billionaire John Paulson, played a role in choosing the mortgage securities that underpinned the CDO and planned to bet on its failure. Goldman Sachs said it would never mislead investors and that ACA Management LLC and IKB Deutsche Industriebank AG, investors in the deal, had all the material information they needed. Tourre will tell Levin’s panel he did nothing wrong, according to a person briefed on his planned testimony. SEC Enforcement Chief Robert Khuzami , the SEC’s enforcement chief, oversaw a group that helped create CDOs when he worked at Deutsche Bank AG, the Wall Street Journal reported April 23, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter. It isn’t clear whether Khuzami reviewed any documents at Deutsche Bank related to CDOs, the newspaper said. Khuzami declined to comment because the terms of his SEC recusal prevent him from discussing Deutsche Bank, John Nester , an agency spokesman, told Bloomberg News. Like Pecora’s, Levin’s hearings may have implications for financial regulation. They take place as the Senate starts considering a package of financial rules that would require better disclosure of derivatives trading and could force banks to split off divisions that trade for their own accounts. Tougher Questioning Blankfein may get tougher questioning than he received in front of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission led by former California state Treasurer Phil Angelides in January, Geisst said. Levin’s committee first subpoenaed information from Goldman Sachs on June 30 and sent a second subpoena on March 12, before conducting interviews with Goldman employees this month. “Levin is smarter,” said Martin Mayer , a guest scholar of the Brookings Institution who has written books including “The Fed” and “The Bankers” about the financial system. “It’s a stronger committee.” Levin has been chairman or the top Democrat on the Permanent Subcommittee for more than a decade. He delves deeply into the issues, said Jack Blum , who spent 14 years as an investigator for other Senate panels and has testified before Levin’s committee as a private citizen. “What you’re going to expect is a guy who first of all really will have done his homework,” Blum said. “He’s a very influential senator.” Blum said the permanent subcommittee also is one of the rare panels in which senators and their staffs cooperate across party lines. Parade of Critics Criticizing Goldman “is going to be everybody’s great moment,” Blum said. “It’s the parade you want to be in.” Testimony is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. Washington time on April 27. The first panel will question Tourre, Michael Swenson , a managing director in Goldman Sachs’s structured products group, and two former employees: Daniel Sparks , who was head of the mortgage department, and Joshua Birnbaum , who was a managing director in the structured products group. A second panel will feature Chief Financial Officer David Viniar and Chief Risk Officer Craig Broderick , followed by a final panel at which Blankfein is slated to appear alone. Levin’s chief investigator, Robert Roach , has been at the permanent subcommittee since September 1997 and has almost 20 years of experience working for congressional oversight committees. Staff director Elise Bean has focused on the pay gap between executives and average workers for almost as long. Roach balances his investigative work with speeches at conferences that interact with his areas of expertise, such as a meeting on offshore bank jurisdictions held annually in Miami Beach. After an interview over drinks last year, Roach insisted on paying for his own $3 beer, saying he never let anyone, reporters included, pay for his meals. Budget Watchdog Keith Ashdown , chief investigator for the Republican staff led by Oklahoma Senator Tom Coburn , is a former executive at Taxpayers for Common Sense, the Washington-based budget watchdog group that first dubbed a proposal to build a bridge in Alaska the “Bridge to Nowhere.” Created in 1948, the panel was led in the 1950s by then- Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin, who alleged that communists had infiltrated the federal government. McCarthy later was censured for hearings that Levin wrote in 2003 “destroyed careers of people who were not involved in the infiltration of our government.” In the last two years, the committee focused on the role played by UBS AG and Liechtenstein’s LGT Group in facilitating offshore tax evasion worldwide. At a July 2008 hearing, UBS made worldwide headlines by announcing it would stop offering offshore banking services for U.S. customers. Enron, Saddam Hussein Under Levin’s leadership, the panel has exposed how banks such as Citigroup Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. helped Enron Corp. structure fraudulent financial transactions, and investigated the dangers of buying prescription drugs over the Internet and how former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein abused the United Nations Oil-for-Food program. The committee has focused on tax issues other than the UBS case in recent years. In 2003, it revealed how firms such as KPMG LLP, Ernst & Young LLP and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP spent much of the 1990s devising and marketing tax shelters judged illegal by the Internal Revenue Service. In 2007, Levin introduced legislation to limit tax benefits for companies that pay executives millions of dollars in stock options after his panel concluded the tax subsidies helped widen the divide between compensation of top officials and ordinary workers. The panel’s shortcoming, Blum said, is that it rarely enjoys legislative jurisdiction in the areas it investigates, meaning any bill the probes produce must go through other committees. In the Goldman case, any ensuing legislation would probably go through the Senate Banking Committee or the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. Still, Blum said, when Levin holds hearings, “the companies involved have a hell of an image problem.” To contact the reporters on this story: Christine Harper in New York at charper@bloomberg.net ; Ryan J. Donmoyer in Washington at rdonmoyer@bloomberg.net

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Boston Rally Featuring Palin With Tea Party Fails to Draw Senator Brown

April 14, 2010

By Tom Moroney April 14 (Bloomberg) — When Sarah Palin rolls into downtown Boston for a rally today, she’ll be greeted by Tea Party activists and a brass band playing Sousa marches. Absent will be U.S. Senator Scott Brown and at least one other top state Republican. They say they’re too busy to attend the 10 a.m. rally on Boston Common. Local organizer Christen Varley, who heads the Greater Boston Tea Party , says the absentees are being pragmatic. “How can Scott Brown stand up on the stage with Sarah Palin and not get skewered for it by the ridiculous mainstream media?” asked Varley, 39. For a grassroots movement dedicated to eliminating what it describes as big-spending liberals in Washington, holding the rally in the heavily Democratic Boston — site of the first Tea Party in 1773 — represents an opportunity to tweak the opposition, said Tea Party Express Chairman Mark Williams. “Boston is the cradle of democracy,” said Williams, 54, talking earlier this week on his cell phone from a Tea Party bus headed to Buffalo. “It’s also the cradle of the Looney Tunes left-wing.” Such talk coupled with Palin’s appearance may not play well for Republicans in Massachusetts, where 62 percent voted in 2008 to elect Democrat Barack Obama president, said David Paleologos , director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center in Boston. Low in Poll Poll numbers among Massachusetts voters for Palin, the former Alaska governor who was the Republican 2008 vice presidential nominee, are low, Paleologos said. Her unfavorable rating was 60 percent, her favorable rating 25 percent in a Suffolk poll Jan. 14, five days before Brown’s victory in a special election. Brown’s favorability among registered Republicans was 91 percent, compared with 51 percent for Palin. Among registered independents, Brown outpaced Palin 66 percent to 28 percent. The voters with no party affiliation are key, Paleologos said. They represent the largest bloc in Massachusetts, at 51 percent, while Democrats are at 37 percent and Republicans just under 12 percent. “The Republicans are well aware of these numbers” and of Palin’s low showing with independents, Paleologos said. “The decision to go or not go to the rally is calculated,” he said. Busy in Washington Gail Gitcho, Brown’s communications director, said the senator is skipping the rally because he recently returned from Afghanistan and needs to stay abreast of legislative matters in Washington. “While he is unable to attend Wednesday’s event, the senator appreciates the strong grassroots support he received from a wide range of individuals, including those who are part of the Tea Party movement,” according to a statement released by Gitcho. Varley said Tea Party volunteers “worked their little hearts out to get Brown elected” to complete the term of the late Senator Edward Kennedy , a Democrat who held the seat for almost 47 years. Still, there are no hard feelings, Williams said. “He’s got a half-century of Kennedy damage to undo,” he said. “There’s no time for flying around, attending celebrity events.” In addition to Brown, 50, Republican gubernatorial candidate and former health-care executive Charles Baker will forgo today’s rally, according to spokesman Rick Gorka. Baker will be making stops in western Massachusetts that were scheduled weeks ago. Showing Up Among those attending will be state Treasurer Timothy Cahill , a Democrat turned independent candidate for governor, who welcomes the opportunity to meet potential supporters, said campaign spokeswoman Amy Birmingham. Also going is Christy Mihos , who sought the governorship in 2006 as an independent and is running now for the office as a Republican. The gubernatorial election is Nov. 2; Brown will be up for election in 2012. “I’m thrilled to be with Tea Party and any people we can attract into the Republican Party to get some votes,” Mihos said in a telephone interview. “It’s a huge tent.” The state’s Democratic governor, Deval Patrick , who is seeking re-election, didn’t immediately respond to an e-mail asking if he would attend. TV Campaign Earlier this month, the Tea Party started a television and radio campaign in Michigan against nine-term Democratic Representative Bart Stupak ; he announced his retirement April 9. Stupak drew the anger of the group by voting for President Barack Obama’s health-care initiative. The Tea Party kicked off its current cross-country tour March 27 in Searchlight, Nevada, hometown of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid , a Democrat up for re-election this year. The activists gathered in Searchlight two days after Congress cleared the last aspect of the health-care overhaul measure for Obama’s signature. Palin, 46, the most recognized face on the tour, took aim at Obama at the Nevada event, urging the 35,000 in the audience to ask his supporters: “So how is that hopey, changey thing working out for you?” To contact the reporter on this story: Tom Moroney in Boston at tmorrone@bloomberg.net .

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Broadridge Appoints New Vice President of Investor Relations

March 12, 2010

LAKE SUCCESS, NY–(Marketwire – March 12, 2010) – Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. ( NYSE : BR ) today announced the appointment of Rick Rodick as its new vice president of investor relations. During his six years with the Company, Mr. Rodick has held numerous senior financial leadership roles, including that of Treasurer, a position he will continue to hold. This appointment becomes effective on March 15 th . Rick Rodick will succeed Marvin Sims who was recently appointed a vice president of regulatory affairs supporting Broadridge’s Investor Communications business.

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Detroit Sells $250 Million of Its Debt Without Recent Disclosure Filings

March 11, 2010

By Darrell Preston March 11 (Bloomberg) — Detroit, the largest U.S. city whose debt is rated below investment grade, will ask investors today to buy $250 million of its debt without having filed annual financial reports on time for five years. The city, which warned investors in its preliminary official statement of the possibility of filing for Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection, is providing a June 30, 2008, financial statement, its most recent, to investors. A fiscal 2009 report is expected to be complete by May 31, said city spokesman Dan Lijana, in an e-mail. “This issue is not for the faint of heart,” said Richard Ciccarone, chief research officer of Oak Brook, Illinois-based McDonnell Investment Management, which oversees $6.8 billion of municipal debt. “It certainly raises eyebrows.” Detroit will provide backing by payments of state aid from sales taxes to the general obligation issue, which enabled the issue to maintain investment grade. Michigan’s state treasurer can pay the aid directly to the trustee for the bonds, bypassing the city to ensure the debt is serviced, according to offering documents. The treasurer also agreed not to withhold payments when the city is late filing financial statements, as it has in the past. The municipality is selling the same week that state and local governments are scheduled to bring more than $11 billion of long-term securities to market. The largest deals include $2 billion from California and $696 million from the District of Columbia. Goldman Sachs Detroit is selling $250 million of bonds through investment banks led by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to help cover budget deficits expected to total $280 million this year. The deal will probably appeal to investors seeking high-yield municipal debt, predicted Ciccarone, precluding the city from a market with tax- exempt yields near three-month lows . The city lost its investment-grade ratings as automobile makers in Michigan began cutting jobs and the tax revenue declined, which led to an expanding budget gap covered by short- term borrowing. The new bonds will spread repayment of the deficit debt across a longer period. Detroit general obligations maturing in 2024 traded yesterday at a yield of 7.56 percent, according to Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board data. That compares with yields of 3.36 percent to 3.5 percent for top-rated 14-year municipal debt yesterday, according to Municipal Market Advisors Inc. State Revenue Detroit will benefit in pricing from the state revenue added to its general obligation backing, said Ciccarone. Moody’s Investors Service, which rates the city’s general obligation debt Ba3, its third-highest rating below investment grade, assigned an A1 rating to today’s issue because of the legal structure that protects state payments to bondholders. Standard & Poor’s, which carries a BB rating on the city’s general obligation debt, assigned an AA- rating to the new issue. Michigan has previously withheld payments because the city has been late filing financial statements, according to the offering documents. Detroit disclosed that it expects state aid to be withheld for February and April this year because its 2009 financial statement is late. Money for bondholders isn’t expected to be withheld, according to the bond documents. Detroit also disclosed there’s no precedent for how its state aid payments would be handled in the event of a Chapter 9 bankruptcy filing because there’s never been a local instance. “The lack of precedent in Michigan makes the risks associated with such a filing difficult to assess,” the preliminary offering statement said. Financial Crisis While the city is still in a financial crisis, “insolvency isn’t on the horizon or on the agenda,” said Mayor Dave Bing , in a prepared statement provided by Lijana. A request to make finance officials available for comment was declined by Lijana. The delay in financial statements occurred under previous mayors and Bing plans to submit on time the 2010 audit, the first full budget cycle under his administration, Lijana said. Following are descriptions of pending sales of municipal debt in the U.S.: FLORIDA’S CITIZENS PROPERTY INSURANCE CORP. , the state’s largest real estate insurer, plans to sell $2 billion in tax- exempt senior bonds next week. Proceeds from the debt, secured by pledged revenue deposited to the insurer’s high-risk account, will provide financing to pay claims during the 2010 hurricane season. Underwriters led by JPMorgan Chase & Co. will market the securities. They are rated A+ by S&P and A2 by Moody’s. (Added March 9) ORLANDO-ORANGE COUNTY EXPRESSWAY AUTHORITY , which operates 100 miles (161 kilometers) of toll roads in the region, plans to sell $350 million of tax-exempt revenue bonds next week. Proceeds from the sale will help finance the authority’s capital program. JPMorgan Chase & Co. will underwrite the securities, rated A1 by Moody’s and A by S&P. (Added March 9) CALIFORNIA , the lowest-rated U.S. state, intends to raise as much as $5 billion from investors this month with its first debt sales since November, according to Treasurer Bill Lockyer . JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley were selected to manage a tax-exempt deal of as much as $2 billion today, and Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Merrill Lynch will handle a taxable offering later in the month, according to the state treasurer’s Web site. California is rated A- by S&P, Baa1 by Moody’s and BBB by Fitch. (Updated March 11) MASSACHUSETTS , the second most-indebted state per capita after Connecticut, plans to sell $538.9 million of floating-rate general obligations as early as this week. The date of the sale will be determined by market conditions, according to the state treasurer’s Web site. Proceeds will help refinance outstanding variable-rate demand bonds supported by an agreement from Citibank that expires later this month, according to Moody’s. Underwriters led by Morgan Stanley will market the issue. The state’s general obligations are rated Aa2 by Moody’s, while Fitch and S&P rate them AA, the third-highest of 10 investment grades. (Updated March 9) UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS , with nine academic locations and six health institutions, plans to sell $373.3 million of fixed-rate revenue bonds next week. Proceeds from the sale of the tax exempts will be used to refinance outstanding debt. It sold $331.4 million of tax-exempt securities last week with yields ranging from 0.66 percent on securities maturing in 2012 to 3.5 percent on securities due in 2024. The sale will be marketed by RBC Capital Markets, a unit of Royal Bank of Canada. The securities are rated AAA by S&P and Fitch and Aaa by Moody’s. (Added March 11) ILLINOIS, the second-lowest rated U.S. state after California, will take bids today from banks seeking to underwrite $300 million of Build America Bonds and $56 million of non-subsidized taxable notes. The deal will finance school construction, according to John Sinsheimer , the state’s director of capital markets. Illinois, which last sold Build America securities in a $1 billion deal on Jan. 28, is rated A2 by Moody’s, A+ by S&P and A by Fitch. A statutory requirement calls for 25 percent of all state debt to be bid competitively, Sinsheimer said. Banks led by William Blair & Co. will negotiate the sale of an additional $700 million in Build America securities in mid-March, he said. (Updated March 11) To contact the reporter on this story: Darrell Preston in Dallas at dpreston@bloomberg.net .

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Yields on Tax-Exempt Bond Sales Reach Their Lowest Level in Three Months

March 5, 2010

By Catarina Saraiva March 5 (Bloomberg) — Yields on local and state government tax-exempt bonds fell to a three-month low as supply shrank to the smallest amount in four weeks. Yields on top-rated general obligations due in 10 years fell to 3 percent, the lowest since Dec. 10, a daily survey by Municipal Market Advisors shows. Tax-exempt sales totaled $3.6 billion this week, dropping to less than $4 billion for the first time since the five-day period ended Feb. 5. Issuers led by Georgia’s Municipal Electric Authority sold $2 billion in taxable Build America Bonds, which provide a 35 percent subsidy on interest costs from the federal government. The Georgia utility plans to sell an additional $920 million of such debt today. “There is a lot of interest out there in pure tax-exempt bonds,” said Anthony Shields , a principal in the public finance department at Williams Capital Group in New York. “Build America Bonds are sucking out some of the issuance, so that there’s less and less pure tax-exempts coming to market.” The New York Dormitory Authority , the second-biggest municipal issuer after California last year, sold $590.8 million secured by personal income tax revenue, including $365.7 million of tax-exempt debt. After getting more than $200 million in orders from individual buyers, the agency finished the pricing ahead of schedule, Shields said. Benchmark borrowing costs for state and local government selling 30-year revenue bonds fell to a seven-week low of 4.93 percent, according to the weekly Bond Buyer 25 index. Securities in the gauge have an average Moody’s Investors Service rating of A1, the fifth highest. “The demand component is going up just as the supply component is going down,” said Mike Pietronico , chief executive officer of Miller Tabak Asset Management in New York. “That has all the makings of a bull market. It’s like the perfect storm.” Following are descriptions of pending sales of municipal debt in the U.S. ASCENSION HEALTH, the largest nonprofit health-care system in the U.S., plans to sell about $1.35 billion in tax-exempt revenue bonds beginning next week. About $745 million will be used to refinance current debt and $600 million will help fund new construction and expansion at five health-care centers, said Stephen Gilmore, director of capital finance for St. Louis-based Ascension. Morgan Stanley will market a $670.5 million fixed- rate sale on March 10 and a $675.4 variable-rate issue later in the month. Ascension is rated Aa1 by Moody’s, AA by Standard & Poor’s and AA+ by Fitch Ratings. (Added March 5) MASSACHUSETTS , the second most-indebted state per capita after Connecticut, plans to sell $538.9 million of floating-rate general obligations as early as next week. The date of the sale will be determined by market conditions, according to the state treasurer’s Web site. Revenue from the sale will help refinance outstanding variable-rate demand bonds supported by an agreement from Citibank that expires later this month, according to Moody’s. Underwriters led by Morgan Stanley will market the issue. The state’s general obligations are rated Aa2 by Moody’s, while Fitch and S&P rate them AA, the third-highest of 10 investment grades. (Updated March 5) GUILFORD COUNTY , North Carolina, plans to sell $298.4 million of general obligations next week. The sale includes $82.5 million of tax-exempt debt and the same amount of taxable Build America Bonds to fund public improvements. The remainder, also tax exempt, will be used to refinance existing debt. The county, which includes Greensboro, has a top rating from S&P. Moody’s and Fitch grade it one level lower. (Updated March 5) CALIFORNIA , the lowest-rated U.S. state, intends to raise as much as $5 billion from investors this month with its first debt sales since November, according to Treasurer Bill Lockyer . JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley were selected to manage a tax-exempt deal of as much as $2 billion on March 11, and Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Merrill Lynch will handle a taxable offering later in the month, according to the state treasurer’s Web site. California is rated A- by S&P, Baa1 by Moody’s and BBB by Fitch. (Updated March 2) DETROIT, the largest U.S. city whose general obligation debt is rated below investment grade, plans to borrow $250 million as early as next week by issuing municipal securities to help fill a budget deficit, Moody’s said in a report. State aid derived from a Michigan-wide sales tax as well as the city’s full faith and credit secure the bonds, rated A1 by Moody’s and AA- by S&P. Without aid from Michigan, the ratings would be B1 from Moody’s and BB by S&P. (Updated March 2) NEW YORK CITY MUNICIPAL WATER FINANCE AUTHORITY, which helps raise capital funding for a system that serves 9 million people, plans to sell $400 million in fixed-rate taxable Build America Bonds on March 9, the second such deal in less than two months. Proceeds from the sale will be used for capital improvements of the city’s water and sewer system, city finance officials said in a statement last week. The securities are rated AA+ by S&P, Aa3 by Moody’s and AA by Fitch. A group of underwriters led by Jefferies Group Inc. will market the securities to investors. (Added March 2) ILLINOIS, the second-lowest-rated U.S. state after California, will take bids on March 11 from banks seeking to underwrite $300 million of Build America Bonds and $56 million of non-subsidized taxable notes. The deal will finance school construction, according to John Sinsheimer , director of capital markets for Illinois. The state, which last sold BABs in a $1 billion deal on Jan. 28, is rated A2 by Moody’s, A+ by S&P and A by Fitch. A statutory requirement calls for 25 percent of all state debt to be bid competitively, Sinsheimer said. Banks led by William Blair & Co. will negotiate the sale of an additional $700 million in Build America securities in mid-March, he said. (Added March 2) DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, the U.S. capital, plans to sell $715 million of tax-exempts backed by income tax revenue as soon as next week. The deal will replace a mixture of fixed- and variable-rate general obligation bonds, which have lower ratings, and reduce the district’s amount of adjustable-rate debt, Fitch said in a release March 3. Underwriters led by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. will handle the deal. The debt is rated AAA by S&P, AA by Fitch and Aa2 by Moody’s. (Updated March 4) To contact the reporter on this story: Catarina Saraiva in New York at asaraiva@bloomberg.net .

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New South Wales May Get $2.7 Billion for Power Companies, Citigroup Says

February 20, 2010

By James Paton Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) — The Australian state of New South Wales, which this week delayed its planned sale of power assets, may raise A$3 billion ($2.7 billion) by selling three electricity retail businesses, Citigroup Inc. said. Any sale isn’t likely to be completed until the end of this year or early next year, Marie Miyashiro , a Citigroup analyst in Sydney, said in a Feb. 19 report. The government last September set a target to complete the sale in this half. EnergyAustralia, one of the three businesses, has 1.4 million customers, while Country Energy has more than 800,000, according to their Web sites. Origin Energy Ltd. and AGL Energy Ltd. , Australia’s biggest electricity and gas retailers, could boost earnings through a retailer acquisition, Citigroup said. “In the retail business, it’s all about economies of scale,” Steve Durose , an analyst at Fitch Ratings in Sydney, said today by phone. “Both of them will be interested in the retail side. That’s a no-brainer.” The state expects to complete the sale of the power assets later this year after allowing groups to begin the study of finances toward the middle of 2010, Treasurer Eric Roozendaal said Feb. 18. Origin Energy was disappointed by the delay, the Sydney-based company said Feb. 18. TRUenergy Pty, the Australian retailer owned by Hong Kong-based CLP Holdings Ltd., also has said it may bid. ‘Proving Complex’ NSW aims to sell the three retailers as well as new generator development sites. It also plans to contract the right to sell power produced by state-owned generators to private trading companies, a process that is “proving complex,” Citigroup’s Miyashiro said in the report. “We are of the view that at the very least, the retail assets should be privatized on their own,” she said. “We would view the government’s failure to privatize at least the retail portion of their energy assets as a negative for the utilities sector as a whole.” The total assets, including the retailers, may be worth about A$6 billion, Gavin Madson , Brisbane-based director of the energy and utilities team of Fitch Ratings, estimated last year. The state said it aims to introduce at least one new entrant to the New South Wales market and would consider an initial public offering for some of the assets should attractive bids fail to emerge. After a series of delays, “it’s going to happen this year,” Fitch’s Durose said. The sale would allow New South Wales to focus on providing health, education and transportation services at a time of declining revenue, the government said March 5 last year. New South Wales scaled back the plan after a proposal to sell the state-owned power stations was blocked. To contact the reporter on this story: James Paton in Sydney at jpaton4@bloomberg.net

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Robert Creamer: What the Iconic Labor Battle at Hugo Boss Means for Our Economic Future

February 8, 2010

It’s the red carpet season in Hollywood. That means high-end apparel companies like Hugo Boss are promoting iconic celebrities to wear their clothing line at the Oscars and other award ceremonies. But for the workers who make these suits in Cleveland, Ohio, it’s a season of a different shade — that of the pink slip. And the result is an iconic labor battle that is emblematic of many of the most important issues facing our economy. Just after Christmas, Germany-based Hugo Boss messengered pink slips to the 400 employees at its Cleveland, Ohio manufacturing facility. The employees were told that they were being laid off and the plant was being closed. Hugo Boss was not closing the facility because it was losing money — or, for that matter, because the company was in bad financial condition. Quite the contrary. Its annual report says that: “Despite the global economic crisis… HUGO BOSS held its ground over the course of the year. In particular, toward the end of the year some initial positive trends were visible. In the fourth quarter sales revenues were slightly above the previous year’s …” Not only is the whole company profitable, there is every indication that the Cleveland plant is profitable as well. So why is Hugo Boss shuttering its Cleveland operation and sending 400 American workers onto unemployment lines? Simple. The workers at the plant refused a company demand that their wages be cut by almost a third — from $12 per hour to $8 and change. The company refused to discuss counter-offers, and rejected out of hand a package of incentives proposed by state and local officials to save the plant. Now let’s remember that these workers weren’t making exorbitant incomes to begin with. Twelve dollars an hour is only about $25,000 a year. The average CEO of a large American corporation (making $10.5 million per year) earns that much in the first five hours of the first work day of the year. No matter, the executives at Hugo Boss think they can make more money if they move the jobs of the Cleveland workers to Turkey and China, where they can get workers to manufacture their suits for even less. If something isn’t done to alter their decision, the Hugo Boss plant in Cleveland will stop making suits in April of this year. There are four key lessons for the American economy from the Hugo Boss story: Lesson # 1. Every time we allow the executives of international corporations to maximize their own wealth by paying their workers less and less, we allow them to place all of us in economic jeopardy. The root of the current Great Recession was the reckless speculation of a bloated financial sector that was swimming in the money it has squeezed from ordinary Americans who actually produce things for a living. That shift of income from everyday people to corporate CEO’s, insurance companies and Wall Street banks left wages stagnant for the last decade. All of the economic growth of the Bush years went to the top two percent of the population. That left consumers without expanding incomes to buy new products, forcing the economy to rely on growing consumer debt and a housing bubble to finance its relatively anemic expansion. The fruits of increased productivity must be widely shared in order to sustain long-term economic growth. A high wage economy is the foundation of a bright economic future – not a Bush era economy where income is concentrated in the hands of a few. The evidence is crystal clear. Economist Paul Krugman has noted, at the beginning of the Great Depression, income inequality, and inequality in the control of wealth, was very high. Then came the “the great compression” between 1929 and 1947. Real wages for workers in manufacturing rose 67% while real income for the richest 1% of Americans fell 17%. This period marked the birth of the American middle class. Two major forces drove these trends — unionization of major manufacturing sectors, and the public policies of the New Deal that were sparked by the Great Depression. The growing spending power of everyday Americans spurred the postwar boom from 1947 to 1973. Real wages rose 81% and the income of the richest 1% rose 38%. Growth was widely shared, but income inequality continued to drop. Compare that to the Republican policies of the Bush years — trade policies that allowed corporations to send manufacturing jobs abroad, and to lower wages at home; policies making it harder to organize unions; and tax cuts for the wealthy. Of course, throughout the heyday of Reagan’s “supply side revolution” and Bush’s tax cuts, the Republicans and the right wing intellectual establishment have held fast to their foundational belief that these policies — and especially tax cuts for upper income Americans — would create private sector jobs. Well, the great experiment in “trickle down economics” is over and the results are in. The New York Times reports that, “For the first time since the Depression, the American economy has added virtually no jobs in the private sector over a 10-year period. The total number of jobs has grown a bit, but that is only because of government hiring.” These Republican economic policies didn’t just produce fewer jobs than advertised. They didn’t produce any private sector jobs at all. The whole experiment in handing over money to the wealthiest people in America so they could use it to benefit the rest of us was a colossal — empirically verifiable — failure. But our economy is not doomed to have more and more low-paying jobs, greater income inequality and economic stagnation. There’s a great deal that can be done to prevent corporations from lowering the incomes of American workers in the future — and to stop Hugo Boss from laying off 400 workers in Cleveland right now. Lesson #2. America’s trade policies have to change . The international rules of the economic road must and can be changed. Fundamentally, the rules of international trade must require that wages for employees are not solely subject to market forces. Human beings are not commodities like beans and corn. Most people agree that we need child labor laws, health and safety laws, laws protecting the right to organize, and the minimum wage. That’s because without them, “the market” — left to its own devices — would force companies to drive down wages, and incentivize unsafe working conditions. The same is true of the international market place. The international rules of the economic game that are reflected in trade agreements need to be changed to recognize that human beings are the point of the economic system — not just an “economic input.” Labor agreements must have labor and environmental protections — not just protections for the rights of capital and “intellectual property.” Lesson #3. Our tax and regulatory policies need to be changed to reward true economic production and discourage the reckless speculation of the financial sector. It is the exploding financial sector that insists that a profitable company like Hugo Boss produce even more short-term profits — even though it damages the American manufacturing base. We’ve seen this movie over and over again. A few months ago Simmons — a 133-year-old profitable bedding maker — was forced to file for bankruptcy protection because it has been milked dry by a succession of buyers and Wall Street investment banks. The investment banks made millions through leveraged buyouts that made good financial sense for Wall Street, but left the manufacturing firm deeper and deeper in debt. The New York Times reports that “the financiers borrowed more and more money to pay ever-higher prices for the company, enabling each previous owner to cash out profitably.” This time, Hugo Boss is being milked by a private equity firm called Permira. The changes in financial regulation proposed by the Obama administration would be a start in the right direction. But everything from tax policies to compensation practices need to change if we are going to re-establish the priority of productive work — including manufacturing — over the needs of the “Masters of the Universe” on Wall Street. Lesson #4. We have to remember: it ain’t over ’til it’s over. It’s up to all of us to use our collective political and economic power not only to make changes in our economic policies, but to stop the destruction of 400 productive jobs at Cleveland’s Hugo Boss. Workers at Republic Windows and Doors in Chicago sat down on the job in order to preserve their jobs — and with the help of public officials like Congressman Luis Gutierrez and my wife, Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky — they won. Last year workers at another apparel company, Chicago-based Hartmarx, which makes President Obama’s suits, faced their own fight. Thousands of jobs were put in jeopardy when the company’s bankers sought to liquidate the company entirely. The workers fought the banks again — and with the help of Illinois State Treasurer and current Senate candidate Alexi Giannoulias they won, too. The workers in Cleveland realize they must engage in that same type of fight against the corporate greed of Hugo Boss, and they need all of our help. We should demand that each of the glitterati that attends the Oscars publicly refuse to wear Hugo Boss clothes, so long as the company continues to put its own greed over the interests of American workers. Each of us should foreswear Hugo Boss clothes until the workers at the Cleveland plant get back their jobs. Retailers should be asked to stop carrying Hugo Boss products. Investors in the private pension fund Permira should sell their holdings. All of us should stand shoulder to shoulder with the members of Workers United, an affiliate of Service Employees International Union, and help them demonstrate to America, once again, why a strong labor movement is our country’s principal defense against a low-wage economy and economic stagnation. Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and author of the recent book: Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win, available on Amazon.com .

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Democrats Have More Campaign Cash Than Republicans for Off-Year Election

January 31, 2010

By Jonathan D. Salant and John McCormick Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — Democratic Party committees entered an off-year election with more money in the bank than their Republican counterparts for the first time in at least 18 years, giving the party a financial boost as it tries to stave off a surge by the opposition. The Democratic National Committee and the fundraising arms of House and Senate Democrats reported $37.9 million in the bank as of Dec. 31, almost double the $19.4 million the Republicans had, Federal Election Commission filings show. The Democrats have never had more money than Republicans to spend at the beginning of an off-year election, according to FEC records that date to 1991, the first year the parties had to report unregulated corporate, union and individual donations. Such “soft money” donations were banned after the 2002 elections. “It means we’ve put together the resources to protect members and stay on offense,” Representative Chris Van Hollen , chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said in an interview. While this is the first time since the 1993-94 election cycle that the Democrats control both the White House and Congress, Republicans have been invigorated by Scott Brown’s Jan. 19 win in Massachusetts to claim the U.S. Senate seat formerly held by the late Democrat Edward Kennedy. Financial Parity The Democratic National Committee entered the off-year election with more money than the Republican National Committee, $8.7 million to $8.4 million. The Republicans were debt-free, while the Democrats owed $4.7 million. Four years ago, the Republican committee had $34 million to the Democrats’ $6 million. “Without the White House, without the U.S. Senate, and without the Congress, we start 2010 with parity,” Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele told reporters in Honolulu. “And I think that’s a good spot for the party to be in.” The Republican National Committee spent $98 million last year as it helped fund winning candidates in the New Jersey and Virginia governors’ races. Brown’s capture of the Massachusetts senate seat ended the Democrats’ 60-vote majority, needed in that chamber to override efforts to block legislation. “Those two races set the stage for Massachusetts,” RNC Treasurer Randy Pullen, a national committee member from Arizona, said in an interview. “It was a great investment.” Resistance to Steele Even so, Steele has run into some opposition from party members. Republican fundraiser Wayne Berman said there is “resistance” to the chairman among some large donors. Steele has been criticized for writing a book about how to defeat Democrats without telling his party’s leadership, for saying Republicans wouldn’t win back the House of Representatives and for criticizing the rhetoric of conservative talk radio host Rush Limbaugh. Steele, the first black to hold the post, said he would seek another term as chairman, while saying “my style is not something you get used to very easily, I know that.” The Republican National Committee outraised its Democratic counterpart, $91 million to $84 million, last year. Four years ago, when the Republicans controlled the White House and both houses of Congress, the party took in $105 million to the Democrats’ $56 million. The House Democrats’ fundraising committee took in $55.6 million, while House Republicans raised $36.2 million. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee raised $43.6 million, to $41.2 million for the National Republican Senatorial Committee. “It’s not terribly surprising they have leads in the money sprint,” Republican consultant Alex Vogel said. “My guess is you will have enough parity that you’re not going to have money making the difference at the end of the day.” Democratic Difficulties Van Hollen, speaking on “Fox News Sunday” today, acknowledged that 2010 was “going to be a difficult election year, the first midterm for a new president.” The House Democrats’ fundraising was helped by $641,950 raised by former Texas Lieutenant Governor Ben Barnes, now a lobbyist, who hosted an event in Austin last fall. He brought in more than any other lobbyist fundraiser for House Democrats, FEC records show. Barnes’s lobbying issues included physician-owned hospitals. In August 2008, Medicare began requiring doctors who own a financial stake in hospitals to tell patients being referred there about any financial links. “This wasn’t about lobbying; this was about Democrats,” Barnes said in an interview. “I was a Democratic giver and fundraiser long before I registered to represent anybody.” To contact the reporters on this story: Jonathan D. Salant in Washington at jsalant@bloomberg.net ; John McCormick in Honolulu at jmccormick16@bloomberg.net .

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Lawrence G. McDonald: The Geithner Deception

January 14, 2010

In 2005, when Timothy Geithner was head of the New York Fed, he ignored one of the greatest dangers our financial markets have ever faced. And that danger was buried deep inside our banks, in the unregulated market of Credit Default Swaps (CDS). If you buy a stock from another party, the trade is forced to settle by the exchange within three days. This prevents any gray areas of ownership, which is critical for tracking the amount of risk in the financial system. Even if you bought a stock and immediately sold it to someone who then flogged it to another buyer, all these trades must be settled in the exchanges. This is the proper, regulated environment of the stock market. But with CDS, this is not the case. It is like the Wild West, where trades are settled by hand in an over-the-counter market. Can you imagine the paperwork? And when the market exploded in 2005, during a time when traders made astronomical piles of money, the CDS paperwork piled higher and higher, until a pile the size of Mount Everest sat in the back offices of Wall Street. With months and months of unsettled CDS trades, and with the unstoppable 300 m.p.h. gravy-train steaming forward, Timothy Geithner, our current Secretary of the United States Treasury, just stood there like a bird watcher on the side of tracks, doing absolutely nothing about it. The “Over-the-Counter Derivatives Markets Act of 2009″, which passed the House Financial Services Committee on a party line vote, was cleverly designed with a “trigger” to facilitate a White House takeover of the $54 trillion credit derivatives markets. The draft legislation warns that if the “SEC and the Commodities Futures Trading Commission cannot jointly prescribe uniform rules and regulations under any provision of this act in a timely manner [60 days], the Secretary of the Treasury…shall prescribe rules and regulations under such provision.” Considering the relationship between the SEC and CFTC has been defined by decades of territorial feuding, Secretary Geithner will quickly usurp oversight of this critical market. But Mr. Geithner’s dubious regulatory record as President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from 2003 to 2008, makes him a curious candidate to become “Master of the Derivative’s Universe.” When spectacular problems in the Credit Default Swaps (CDS) markets came to his attention following the bankruptcies of Delta and Northwest Airlines in 2005, he allowed the industry to continue to self-regulate its trading activities. Every day billions of dollars of CDS contracts had been trading between banks, brokers and hedge funds, but contract execution to settle these transactions was often delayed by months. Literally hundreds of billions of dollars of outstanding derivative contract risk was floating off the balance sheets of the major financial institutions. This strategy allowed the derivative traders to engage in the equivalent of “check kiting” on a grand scale. The turmoil in the markets and the size of 2005 losses made clear to the New York Fed that many banks were engaged in activities that skirted prudent banking standards. As head of trading for the world’s largest bank, Mr. Geithner could have used his authority to force the derivative industry to comply with settling all trades in three days. Instead of acting decisively to eliminate a known and growing systemic threat, he watched financial cancer quietly metastasize. In an October 4, 2005 letter to Mr. Geithner, the ‘Major Dealers’ committed to reducing the number of confirmations outstanding longer than 30 days, by 30% over the next five months. The letter, signed by Bank of America, Barclays Capital, Bear Stearns, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, JP Morgan Chase, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, UBS and Wachovia states unequivocally that anything less than “significant progress on our backlogs…will be unacceptable.” Over the next two and a half years, the Major Dealers spoke regularly with the New York Fed regarding the “tactical” steps they were taking to reduce the enormous number of outstanding trades. In a March 27, 2006 letter to Geithner, the Major Dealers agreed to provide only “informal updates” on their efforts to implement industry wide processing guidelines by the end of the year. This was a critical moment in the history of the financial markets. It marked the day when the New York Fed and the US Treasury went to bed with Wall St. The grass had become too high to cut, and now they were married to this deadly mountain of unsettled CDS risk. But if Geithner had taken prudent action in 2005, forced Wall Street to settle the trades within seven days, the financial crisis might have been averted. At a time when dangerous activities in the Credit Derivatives market demanded legal scrutiny and public disclosure, Geithner permitted the industry to avoid unpleasant intrusions into their most profitable business practices. Given confirmations should have been sent in one day, and signed contracts and collateral transferred in a maximum of three days. It is now clear the New York Fed was willing to allow the industry to self police their way back into compliance. It took one of the Major Dealers going bankrupt to spur the necessary change. Two weeks after the collapse of Bear Stearns, in a letter dated March 27, 2008 the “Major Dealers” finally agreed to begin clearing trades electronically. By then, billions of taxpayer dollars had been put at risk, and the market was in a death spiral. When Lehman Brothers failed on September 15, 2008, credit froze at banks around the word for the main reason that banks couldn’t determine who was exposed to Lehman. The settlement of Credit Default Swaps, an-over-the-counter market, did not keep up with the volume of trading. Our Fed and Treasury were flying blind when they let Lehman fail. And we’ll be paying the price for many years. The mantra of the Administration has been “you never want a serious crisis to go to waste.” However, before handing the keys of the regulatory kingdom back to the deceptive Mr. Geithner, the public deserves to know about his three years of total incompetence, and they need to hear about the billowing risk in the credit derivatives markets, and how he failed to protect our nation. By Chriss W. Street, Orange Country Treasurer and Lawrence G. McDonald, author of “A Colossal Failure of Common Sense,” and international financial lecturer.

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California Rating Cut Shows Schwarzenegger $20 Billion Gap Lifts Bond Cost

January 14, 2010

By Michael B. Marois and William Selway Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — California bondholders got an early glimpse of what the state’s budget-negotiation season may bring as a looming $20 billion deficit led Standard & Poor’s to cut its credit rating for the second time in less than year. S&P yesterday lowered its assessment on $64 billion of the most-populous U.S. state’s general obligation bonds one level to A-, four steps above speculative grade, saying a plan by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to erase the spending gap relies too much on proposals that may not succeed. It was S&P’s first downgrade of California since February, when it preceded Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings in lowering the state’s rating as lawmakers were locked in a stalemate over how to fill what was then a $46 billion gap. “This is déjà vu,” said Kenneth Naehu , who invests $2.5 billion in municipal bonds for Bel Air Investment Advisors in Los Angeles. A taxable California bond maturing in 2039 traded yesterday for as little as 97.90 cents on the dollar, to yield 7.73 percent. That’s down from 98.67 cents a day earlier, when the yield was 7.66 percent. The extra yield on California 10-year bonds was 1.30 percentage points yesterday compared with top-rated municipal securities. Last year at this time, the so-called yield spread on California 10-year debt soared above one percentage point, or 100 basis points, for the first time in more than a decade. Spending Cut Schwarzenegger’s budget plan seeks to cut spending by $8.5 billion on top of the $30 billion slashed last year. He said he’ll lower it another $7 billion if the federal government won’t reimburse California for money he said the state is owed for health care mandates, education standards and illegal immigrants in its jails. “There is no rational way to absolve Washington of any responsibility for state budget deficits until Congress acts to remove the barriers that prevent states from reducing spending as needed to live within our means,” Schwarzenegger said in a letter yesterday to the state’s congressional delegation. The 62-year-old Republican governor isn’t likely to get much of the federal aid he’s seeking, California state Legislative Analyst Mac Taylor said Jan. 12. At the same time, criticism of his proposal from top Democratic state lawmakers, who control both chambers of the Legislature, has stoked investors’ concern that prolonged political fighting over the $82.9 billion budget will drain the state of its cash, as it did last year. ‘Spook’ to Investors George Strickland , who invests $4.5 billion of municipal debt for Thornburg Investment Management in Santa Fe, New Mexico, said he’s avoiding adding California bonds, anticipating that the fiscal negotiations will depress prices should the budget fight extend into mid-year again. “It’s going to make last year’s cycle look not so bad,” he said. “It will spook a number of investors.” Controller John Chiang in July resorted to using IOUs to pay bills to make sure the state had enough money for payments given the highest priority under the law, including debt service. Budget officials have already said they may delay paying some of the state’s bills in March because the cash balance will dip below the $2.5 billion cushion they like to maintain. S&P’s cut brings its rating on California closer to that of Moody’s and Fitch, which have the state at Baa1 and BBB, respectively. California is the largest borrower in the municipal bond market. Rating Cuts Moody’s lowered its assessment of California’s debt in March and again in July, leaving it three steps above non- investment grade, according to the California Treasurer’s office. Fitch reduced its grading three times last year and now rates it two steps above so-called junk, according to the Treasurer. California Treasurer Bill Lockyer has rejected any assertion that the state will default on its obligations to bondholders. Lockyer said last week that the state may be forced to shutter or delay thousands of public works projects should it lose access to the bond market and in December he told lawmakers he may need to look to international investors to sell debt after issuing $36 billion of securities last year. Peter Hayes , who oversees $115 billion of municipal bond investments for New York-based BlackRock Inc., said this week before the S&P cut that California politicians would move to preserve the state’s investment-grade rating, as losing it would shut off access to some investors and increase interest costs. “I don’t think the state of California wants to go through that process,” he said. To contact the reporters on this story: Michael B. Marois in Sacramento at mmarois@bloomberg.net ; William Selway in San Francisco at wselway@bloomberg.net

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Australian Home-Loan Approvals Fall More Than Estimates After Rates Rise

January 11, 2010

By Jacob Greber Jan. 12 (Bloomberg) — Australian home-loan approvals fell in November by the most in 18 months as central bank Governor Glenn Stevens led the world in raising borrowing costs. The number of loans granted to build or buy houses and apartments for owner-occupiers slumped 5.6 percent to 59,516 from October, when they fell a revised 1.9 percent, the statistics bureau said in Sydney today. The median estimate of 19 economists surveyed by Bloomberg was for a 0.5 percent drop. The currency dropped on speculation approvals may slide further after Stevens boosted the benchmark interest rate in December for an unprecedented third straight month and the government slashed grants to first-time buyers of new homes to A$7,000 ($6,500) from A$21,000. Traders predict Stevens will boost the rate by another quarter point to 4 percent by March. “We’re going to see continued weakness in these numbers throughout the first half of the year,” said Helen Kevans , an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Sydney. The decline “will be welcomed by the Reserve Bank — they are wary of a housing bubble.” The Australian dollar fell to 92.71 U.S. cents at 12:07 p.m. in Sydney from 92.86 cents just before the report was released. The two-year government bond yield shed 1 basis point to 4.48 percent. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. First-home buyers accounted for 22.1 percent of dwellings that were financed in November, down from 26 percent in October, the statistics bureau said today. Interest Rates Stevens and his board increased Australia’s overnight cash rate target in three moves from October to December to 3.75 percent from 3 percent as a rebound in exports to China from companies including BHP Billiton Ltd. helped fuel the biggest three-month surge in hiring in three years. Employers added 99,500 new jobs in the three months through November, cutting the jobless rate to 5.7 percent from 5.8 percent in October. Employers added another 10,000 jobs last month, according to the median estimate of 19 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News ahead of a Jan. 14 government report. Jobs advertised in newspapers and on the Internet jumped 6 percent in December, the biggest increase in 2 1/2 years, according to an Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. report published yesterday. Mortgage Repayments Investors are betting there is a 58 percent chance of an interest-rate increase at the central bank’s next meeting on Feb. 2, according to Bloomberg calculations based on interbank futures on the Sydney Futures Exchange at 11:27 a.m. Chances of a quarter-point move in March are at 100 percent. Prior to today’s report, the bet on a quarter-point move next month stood at 64 percent. Last year’s interest-rate increases added about A$150 to monthly repayments on an average A$300,000 home loan, and may prompt consumers to trim spending that surged in the first half of the year after Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s government distributed more than A$20 billion in cash handouts to households. An index of consumer confidence dropped 3.8 percent last month, led by waning sentiment among households with mortgages, according to a report by Westpac Banking Corp. Demand for mortgages surged in the first half of last year amid record purchases from first-time buyers after Treasurer Wayne Swan tripled to A$21,000 a grant to buyers of new homes, and doubled to A$14,000 payments for those purchasing existing dwellings. In May last year, Swan extended the increases through to the end of September, when they were partially reduced. The payments were cut to their original level of A$7,000 on Jan. 1 The value of lending to owner-occupiers declined 2.9 percent in November. The value of loans to investors who plan to rent or resell homes advanced 2.1 percent. The total value of loans fell 1.6 percent to A$22.8 billion, today’s report showed. To contact the reporter for this story: Jacob Greber in Sydney at jgreber@bloomberg.net

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Tax rule investment fear

January 10, 2010

THE nation’s ability to fund billions of dollars in much-needed infrastructure is under threat because of tax rulings designed to crack down on private equity raiders, the Treasurer Wayne Swan has been warned. The Australia

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Trim Holding Group Announces Appointment of Nitin Amersey as CFO

January 5, 2010

BAY CITY, MI–(Marketwire – January 5, 2010) – Trim Holding Group (“the Company”) ( OTCBB : TRHG ) announced that the Company named Nitin Amersey its Chief Financial Officer as of December 15, 2009. Nitin Amersey also serves as a Director and as Secretary and Treasurer of the Company. Safe Harbor: This news release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (The “Act”). In particular, when used in the preceding discussion, the words “pleased,” “plan,” “confident that,” “believe,” “expect,” or “intend to,” and similar conditional expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Act and are subject to the safe harbor created by the Act. Such statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties and actual results could differ materially from those expressed in any of the forward-looking statements. Such ri

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Zale Jewelry Chain Said to Work With Rothschild on Restructuring Options

December 24, 2009

By Lauren Coleman-Lochner Dec. 24 (Bloomberg) — Zale Corp. , the Texas-based jewelry chain that posted seven straight quarters of losses, is working with Rothschild to evaluate restructuring options, according to three people with knowledge of the situation. The investment bank was named to help the unprofitable retailer weigh its choices in 2010, said the people, who declined to be identified because the information isn’t public. Zale didn’t return telephone calls and an e-mailed request for comment. Rothschild declined to comment through an outside spokesman. Jewelry sales slumped as U.S. unemployment climbed, contributing to the demise of chains that include Finlay Enterprises Inc. and Fortunoff Holdings LLC this year. Zale lost $189.5 million last year. It twice delayed releasing fourth- quarter results and last month reported a loss of $57.6 million in the first quarter ended Oct. 31. Zale rose 8 cents, or 3.3 percent, to $2.50 at 10:06 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares had slipped 27 percent this year before today. Zale, based in Irving, Texas, said in October that it closed more than 200 locations in the 2009 fiscal year through July. It operates more than 1,900 stores in North America, including the Gordon’s Jewelers, Piercing Pagoda and Zales Jewelers chains. On Aug. 6, Zale said it would record a $50 million pretax charge to close 118 locations in the quarter ended July 31. The charge included $23 million to cover lease guarantees on Bailey, Banks & Biddle stores, replacing a previous estimate of $62 million, Treasurer David Sternblitz said. The company said it expected the $23 million to include rent obligations earlier valued at $33 million. Zale sold that chain in 2007 to Finlay Enterprises Inc., which filed for bankruptcy protection on Aug. 5. To contact the reporter on this story: Lauren Coleman-Lochner in New York at llochner@bloomberg.net .

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California’s Bonds Fail on Wall Street Advice Bill Lockyer Couldn’t Refuse

December 17, 2009

By Michael B. Marois Dec. 17 (Bloomberg) — For California Treasurer Bill Lockyer , the offer from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. , JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc. was too good to refuse. If California were willing to forgo competitive bidding for a $4.5 billion bond offering, the banks promised more orders from individuals and a lower bill to the taxpayers. The firms insisted that by negotiating with them, the state would benefit from its special relationship with the Wall Street troika and wind up with what two underwriters called a salutary “buzz” to boost demand for the debt. When the October offering failed to sell as planned, California was forced to accept 8 percent less money than it needed and to pay as much as $123 million more in interest than the banks said was sufficient for the market. And the threesome made $12.4 million on the deal, contributing to record bonuses in the securities industry a year after getting a total of $80 billion in a federal bailout. “Just because someone earns a big wad of money doesn’t mean that they can do what they say they can do,” said Marilyn Cohen , who watched the sale unfold from Los Angeles as president of Envision Capital Management, which oversees $250 million in bonds for individuals. “And shame on the state if they were drinking that Kool-Aid.” The California sale helped send the municipal-bond market to its worst month in a year. It ended a rally that had pushed borrowing costs for cities and states to a 42-year low, as measured by the Bond Buyer’s index of 20-year general obligation bonds. Familiarity Over Price California, with a bigger economy than Russia’s , seeks bids for everything from building roads and schools to buying portable toilets and fire extinguishers. When the state with the worst credit rating sells municipal bonds, it usually chooses bankers through a negotiation process that lets experience and familiarity trump price. For the October deal, state Treasurer Lockyer picked the world’s most profitable investment bank and the nation’s two biggest bond underwriters, which together have sold $31 billion of debt for California since he took office in 2007. The U.S. municipal bond market’s largest borrower has sold tax-backed debt nine times this year, for a total of about $37 billion, more than four times second-place New York’s total, data compiled by Bloomberg show. ‘Conflicts’ The state’s former public finance director, Juan Fernandez , worked on the sale as JPMorgan’s executive director in San Francisco. Goldman’s bankers included Kathleen Brown , a former state treasurer. She’s the daughter of one past governor, Pat Brown , and the sister of another, current Attorney General Jerry Brown . “The whole business is full of conflicts, and that’s a gigantic problem,” Cohen said. Goldman, JPMorgan and Citigroup declined to comment, as did Fernandez. Kathleen Brown didn’t respond to phone and e-mail messages. The $2.8 trillion market for state and local government bonds used to be more competitive. In 1970, 73 percent of municipal offerings were sold at auctions, the General Accounting Office said in a 1983 report. In such deals, the bank that offers the lowest interest cost via the highest bid, or price, buys the securities and tries to sell them for more. This year, 16 percent of $368 billion in new fixed-rate issues were sold that way, Bloomberg data show. The rest were negotiated offerings, in which underwriters are selected before the sale based on assurances they’ll deliver cheaper rates by lining up investors. ‘Bad Week’ When the New York banks’ promises to California proved unreliable, Lockyer, 68, not his underwriters, tried to explain the miscalculation to taxpayers. “It turned into a bad week for bonds,” the treasurer said in an Oct. 9 interview. “This seemed to be a very hard week with some headwinds for issuers.” The underwriters left Lockyer “standing on the platform alone,” said Christopher Taylor , former executive director of the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board in Alexandria, Virginia, a self-regulatory organization. Taxpayers “probably didn’t get their money’s worth because California only got someone taking orders,” he said. “They didn’t get somebody out there that had any really strong incentive to sell.” Banks don’t want “any unsold bonds hanging around,” so they prefer to help states set rates and see if the bonds sell, as happens in negotiated deals, Taylor said. If demand falls short, the dealers say, “Listen, we can’t sell this” without higher yields, he said. “It’s a wonderful world that the dealer community has created — just fees, no risk.” Saving a ‘Boatload’ Lockyer has no regrets about using a no-bid process because an auction would have led to even higher interest costs, said Tom Dresslar , his spokesman. While auctions may be effective for smaller issues, multibillion-dollar sales of both taxable and tax-exempt bonds like this one require advance marketing that banks will deliver only if they are hired beforehand, he said. “We have saved taxpayers a boatload of money through negotiated bond sales,” Dresslar said, citing an analysis in the winter 2008 issue of the Municipal Finance Journal that was funded by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. The authors concluded that competitive sales have “no general advantage” and criticized past studies that found interest costs on negotiated sales were as much as 70 basis points, or 0.7 percentage point, higher. True Interest Cost California’s estimate of the so-called true interest cost on the tax-exempt portion of the October sale indicates it spent more the last time it sold competitively. Including fees, the $1.3 billion negotiated sale cost 33 basis points less than the national average for 20-year general- obligation bonds at the time, excluding a risk premium of almost 1 percentage point the state paid after approaching insolvency, Bloomberg data show. When the state sold $1.1 billion in tax- free securities at auction on Feb. 14, 2007, the cost was 13 basis points over the average. “Even though they couldn’t sell as much as they wanted, and even though they sold at yields at higher levels than what they wanted,” the deal “went well from California’s point of view,” said Gary Pollack , who oversees $12 billion as head of fixed-income trading at Deutsche Bank AG’s Private Wealth Management unit in New York. “They were able to borrow $4.1 billion at relatively historically low yields.” After the sale, several states scaled back borrowing plans as municipal bond yields climbed the most in two weeks since December. ‘Litmus Test’ Maryland sold $200 million of debt on Oct. 21, about 25 percent of what it had wanted to offer, Bloomberg data show. Minnesota issued $576 million of bonds, or 64 percent of its planned total. Hawaii and Washington took similar steps after rising yields erased projected savings from refinancing. “California’s large offering proved to be a litmus test for investors’ tolerance for new supply at relatively low yields,” said Chris Holmes , a fixed-income strategist at JPMorgan in New York, in a note to clients after the sale. It “set a tepid tone for subsequent large offerings by other issuers,” he said. Municipal yields rose almost half a percentage point from their 3.94 percent low following the sale and were a quarter- point above that mark as of Dec. 10, the weekly Bond Buyer index shows. Unemployment California is strapped for cash amid the worst global recession since World War II. The most-populous state’s personal income tax revenue fell 33.4 percent in the second quarter, compared with a 27.5 percent national average, according to the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government in Albany, New York. Unemployment in California was 12.5 percent in October, the worst since at least 1976. Nationwide joblessness was 10.2 percent in October, a 26-year high, and 10 percent in November. The October sale was California’s first long-term debt offering since Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Democratic Legislature settled a three-month impasse over how to erase a $24 billion deficit in July. The stalemate, which put the state on the brink of insolvency for the second time this year, ended with the approval of an $85 billion budget. California has cut spending by $32 billion, raised taxes by $12.5 billion and papered over $6 billion in shortages with borrowing and what Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Bill Gross has called “accounting tricks that couldn’t fool a grade-schooler .” Imminent Downgrade The July compromise prompted credit-rating companies to remove California from lists of borrowers facing imminent downgrades. The state’s general obligation bonds are graded BBB by Fitch Ratings, Baa1 by Moody’s Investors Service and A by Standard & Poor’s. Public Resources Advisory Group, a financial consultant for the state since 1991, recommended a negotiated sale instead of a competitive one, a memo obtained through California’s Public Records Act shows. In past auctions, winning underwriters couldn’t line up enough buyers ahead of time, so “they bear more risk and the price they are willing to pay the state for the bonds will likely be lower,” increasing taxpayers’ interest costs, the New York firm wrote. If the consultant “had not recommended a negotiated sale, had they recommended a competitive sale to get the best deal for taxpayers, that’s what we would have done,” said Dresslar, the treasurer’s spokesman. Taylor, the former MSRB official, said financial advisers rarely recommend auctions. ‘Blackballed’ “The FA has no incentive to irritate the underwriter community by pushing the risk on them,” he said. “Any FA that pushes a competitive sale is going to get ‘blackballed.’” Lockyer’s staff advised him on Aug. 24 to hire Goldman and JPMorgan to manage a $3.2 billion mix of taxable debt, including federally subsidized Build America Bonds, and Citigroup to lead the simultaneous sale $1.3 billion of tax-exempt securities. Goldman, which accepted $10 billion in bailout money last year and repaid it eight months later, produced a $3.44 billion profit in the second quarter, a record for a U.S. investment bank. Its shares have almost doubled this year. JPMorgan, which has repaid its $25 billion bailout, is this year’s top U.S. bond underwriter, according to Bloomberg data that excludes municipal issues. Its shares are up 31 percent. JPMorgan’s investment bank and Goldman will set aside an unprecedented $32.1 billion for compensation this year, according to an estimate by David Trone , a Macquarie Securities Group analyst. That will produce record bonuses totaling $19.3 billion, based on New York pay consultant Options Group’s estimate that year-end awards usually account for 60 percent of compensation costs. ‘Lowest Borrowing Costs’ Second-ranked underwriter Citigroup is repaying $20 billion of its $45 billion bailout to escape U.S. Treasury Department- imposed pay restrictions as the government prepares to sell its remaining stake in the company to recover the rest. The shares are down 49 percent this year. The three banks were told by California in Sept. 21 engagement letters that they were expected to “perform at the highest level to assist this office in achieving a successful sale at the lowest borrowing costs.” The sales syndicate also included Bank of America Corp.’s Merrill Lynch & Co., Siebert Brandford Shank & Co., Wells Fargo & Co. and about 30 other banks and brokers that made $13.4 million on the deal, for a total of $25.8 million in fees. Before selling the long-term bonds, Lockyer shored up the state’s finances by borrowing $8.8 billion through one-year cash-flow notes, a routine move used to pay expenses while awaiting anticipated tax revenue. Record Demand That Sept. 23 offering, run by JPMorgan, attracted twice as much demand from individual investors as from mutual funds and other institutions. So-called retail orders totaling $6.64 billion, about 75 percent of the sale, was the most ever for a municipal issue, Lockyer’s office said, citing underwriters’ data. California paid as much as 1.5 percent on the debt, more than twice New Jersey’s cost for similar securities in August. The yield was in the low range of what had been advertised beforehand, and individual demand allowed the state to turn away $430 million in orders from institutions. “Investors clearly know a good deal when they see one, and California taxpayers will benefit as a result,” Lockyer said after the sale. That same day, Citigroup told Lockyer that the state would get a “vigorous pre-sale marketing effort” to “the broadest possible audience of potential investors” and “greater retail participation” for October’s long-term debt sale if he agreed to a negotiated deal, according to a letter from Chris Mukai, a director for the bank in Los Angeles. ‘Very Little Incentive’ When banks have to bid for bonds, they “have very little incentive” to find investors beforehand because they don’t know if they’ll “have the bonds to sell,” Mukai said. Underwriters in negotiated offerings “market the state’s transaction for at least a week in advance,” his letter said. “As a result of these efforts, Citi and the other underwriters will acquire accurate information as to the depth of buying interest, which is invaluable in the pricing of the issue and in securing the lowest possible borrowing costs.” Mukai reminded Lockyer that Citigroup had helped JPMorgan sell September’s short-term debt to individuals, “saving the state millions of dollars,” and had implemented California’s “Enhanced Retail Marketing Plan” in June 2007. “We believe all the retail marketing efforts in these past few negotiated sales have achieved tremendous success for the state,” leading to more than $8.1 billion in general-obligation bond sales to individuals, or 46 percent of new issues, Mukai wrote. ‘Buzz’ Memo Goldman and JPMorgan offered Lockyer similar assurances in a joint Oct. 6 memo outlining how they would help draft an offering document, design a sales presentation and perform “pre-marketing and price-discovery activities” to help structure the issue at the cheapest yield. “This process will generate a ‘buzz’ around the transaction, ultimately generating maximum investor participation in the sale, which we believe will translate into lower borrowing costs,” wrote Tim Romer , a Goldman managing director in Los Angeles, and JPMorgan’s Fernandez, who had been the state’s finance director from 2002 to 2006. The two firms “strongly believe that proceeding with a negotiated sale” of the bonds “will result in a more cost- effective sale than a competitively bid transaction,” they wrote. Lowest Since ‘67 Investors, including Envision Capital’s Cohen, predicted the October sale would go well, given the popularity of Build America Bonds, securities created by President Barack Obama’s economic stimulus package, which covers 35 percent of their interest costs. As of Oct. 1, state and local governments had sold at least $36.9 billion of the debt, about 14 percent of year-to-date borrowing. The bonds attracted buyers to the municipal market and reduced tax-exempt supply, helping drive down average yields to 3.94 percent, the lowest since 1967, from 4.92 percent on April 2, the Bond Buyer’s index shows. “There seems to be a voracious appetite for the BABs bonds no matter who the issuer is,” Cohen said in an interview the day before the sale. As for the $1.3 billion tax-exempt portion, “they should have a relatively easy time selling it because it’s not so huge,” she said. Increasing Supply In the weeks before the bond sale, Lockyer’s staff watched yields slide as state and local authorities kept issuing more debt to lock in low rates. Borrowers were benefiting from the recovery following the financial meltdown that had spurred a rush to the perceived safety of Treasuries after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. a year earlier. About $270 billion in new municipal bonds had been issued from Jan. 1 to early October, 16 percent more than at that point in 2008. California’s 2009 tax-backed bond and note sales totaled $23.4 billion by Sept. 30, up from $4.6 billion and $10.6 billion in the first three quarters of 2008 and 2007, respectively. Demand might wane “because we are at lows in terms of absolute yield levels,” said Peter Hayes , who oversees $106 billion in municipal bonds for BlackRock Inc., on Oct. 6. California officials said they knew the bonds would be a harder sell than the September notes. To keep debt payments low, Lockyer loaded the tax-exempt portion with maturities longer than what individual investors typically buy. ‘We Got Spoiled’ “We are so used to getting 50 percent, 60-plus percent, 80 percent retail,” said Dresslar, the Lockyer spokesman, referring to how much individuals bought of an offering. “We got spoiled,” he said. “We were fully cognizant that this was not going to be a walk in the park.” Deputy Treasurer Katie Carroll and Public Finance Director Blake Fowler flew to New York to monitor the sale, accompanied by Dresslar. Fowler, 43, has spent most of his career in municipal bonds. A year ago, Carroll, 53, gave a talk on “ways to maximize demand ” from individuals to the National Association of State Treasurers. Then in Fowler’s job, Carroll emphasized the value of advertising on radio and giving retail buyers a two-day “priority period” for placing orders. Day One The bankers went into the sale telling investors California would pay tax-exempt yields from 2.87 percent for the 2015 maturity to 4.63 percent for bonds due in 2029. The 20-year was 23 basis points lower than indicated at the time by a Bloomberg index designed to gauge the fair value of similar bonds. The estimate for yields on taxable securities available to individuals ranged from 3.5 percent to 3.75 percent. On Oct. 6, the first day of retail sales, the three California officials sat in a conference room in Barclays Capital’s New York headquarters on Seventh Avenue. As they talked to credit-rating companies about another bond issue, they monitored orders for the current one, which the London-based bank helped sell. They phoned in updates to Lockyer. With Municipal Market Advisors data showing yields already starting to rise, individuals bought 28 percent of the tax-exempt bonds and 25 percent of the taxable debt, less than half the demand seen on the first day of the September sale. The underwriters “told us before the deal not to expect the level of retail that we had been getting,” Dresslar said. By the time of the sale, they painted an even gloomier picture of concessions that investors wanted “to get the deal done at least close to the size” California wanted, he said. “Some of the numbers that were coming out were startling.” Day Two The following morning, the three officials and their financial advisers were ushered into a conference room in Goldman’s 85 Broad St. headquarters. Fueled by coffee, pastries and sandwiches over a 10-hour day, they decided to raise yields by as much as 4 basis points on tax-exempt bonds to attract more orders. The market’s response “may reflect some anxieties with the retail investors in buying anything that’s longer” than one- year notes, Lockyer said on Bloomberg Television that day. “It may be pricing. It’s hard to tell.” By the end of the second day, retail buyers had placed orders for $427.7 million, or 33 percent, of the $1.31 billion tax-exempt portion and $77.5 million of the $250 million of taxable bonds available to individuals. All together, retail sales amounted to 11 percent of the $4.5 billion the state wanted to borrow. Day Three The next morning, the California officials moved to Citigroup’s offices to finish the offering with sales to pension plans, hedge funds, nonprofit groups and other professional buyers. “We’re depending on the institutional investors to make this work,” Lockyer had said on TV. In a room off the trading floor, the officials decided to cut the sale to $4.14 billion — $1.31 billion in tax-exempts, $1.75 billion in Build America Bonds and $1.07 billion in other taxable bonds. They also increased some yields again as institutions grew more wary of the state’s finances. Tax-exempt rates ended up 8 to 37 basis points higher than estimated, including the 20-year, which was boosted to 5 percent from 4.66 percent. Debt due in 2025 went to 4.69 percent from 4.42 percent. Four taxable issues, including the Build America Bonds, cost the state 12.5 to 25 basis points more than the low end of estimated ranges. Two priced at the high end, and two were above it. Extra Interest The yields, averaging almost a quarter-point more than estimated, will result in California paying $8.1 million a year more in interest than it would have at the lower rates. If the bonds all are outstanding at maturity, the extra interest would total $123.5 million, data compiled by Bloomberg show. “It’s justified for Cal to be paying a little higher price in order to sell its debt, given its credit issues,” Deutsche Bank’s Pollack said in an interview that day. “Their budget was not as tight and strong as I think a lot of people would have liked it to be.” The sale’s biggest maturity, $1.75 billion of 30-year Build America Bonds, was priced to yield 7.23 percent, 95 basis points more than comparable corporate bonds and 325 basis points more than Treasuries with similar maturities. With the subsidy, California’s net cost is about 4.7 percent. Ten-year Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. bonds with the same Moody’s ratings as California traded at 122 basis points more than Treasuries that same week. ‘Best Shot’ “They just got a little aggressive in where they wanted to price it,” said David Blair , a Pimco analyst in Newport Beach, California, the day after the sale. “Most people still recognize that there’s budget deficits the state is trying to deal with,” said Blair, whose company oversees $20 billion in municipal bonds. Lockyer’s spokesman portrayed the sale as a success. “To say that the market conditions were not as favorable as they had been doesn’t mean that you go in conceding hundreds of millions of dollars; you go in and give it your best shot because there’s a lot at stake,” Dresslar said. “Given the cold market and the inhospitable attitude of investors, to pull off a $4.1 billion deal, we believe, is an impressive achievement,” Dresslar said. “We would have been derelict in our duty to taxpayers if we sold a bond of this size through a competitive sale. We would have gotten hosed.” Highest Rate By Oct. 15, 20-year yields had risen 0.38 percentage point to 4.32 percent from its previous low, the biggest two-week increase in 10 months, the Bond Buyer index shows. California has since sold $7.3 billion in debt. On Oct. 22, it paid 8.361 percent on $250 million of lower-rated Build America Bonds — then the highest coupon rate for a $100 million-plus issue since the program began. A week later, the state was able to cut estimated yields as much as 0.15 percentage point on $3.5 billion in better-rated tax-exempt bonds when individuals placed orders for almost 72 percent, including debt due in 2022 that cost the state 4.85 percent, up from 4.47 percent in the early October sale. California sold $908 million in Build America Bonds on Nov. 3, pricing the 30-year securities to yield 7.26 percent, or 3 percentage points more than Treasuries, down from October’s 3.25-point spread. Lockyer has said the state may issue more debt before the fiscal year ends on June 30 without specifying how much. “Everybody thinks there’s still an appetite for California bonds,” the treasurer said in the Oct. 9 interview. “If the market is inhospitable, we won’t go,” he said. “We’ll just have to wait and see how the feelings are when we get ready to think about it again.” Tom Dalpiaz , who helps Advisors Asset Management oversee $3.3 billion in Melville, New York, said California and its bankers had flooded a glutted municipal bond market with too much supply. The sale gave investors “sticker-shock syndrome,” said Dalpiaz. “It was a very large bond issue to digest.” To contact the reporter on this story: Michael B. Marois in Sacramento at mmarois@bloomberg.net .

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California’s Bonds Fail on Wall Street Advice Bill Lockyer Couldn’t Refuse

December 17, 2009

By Michael B. Marois Dec. 17 (Bloomberg) — For California Treasurer Bill Lockyer , the offer from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. , JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc. was too good to refuse. If California were willing to forgo competitive bidding for a $4.5 billion bond offering, the banks promised more orders from individuals and a lower bill to the taxpayers. The firms insisted that by negotiating with them, the state would benefit from its special relationship with the Wall Street troika and wind up with what two underwriters called a salutary “buzz” to boost demand for the debt. When the October offering failed to sell as planned, California was forced to accept 8 percent less money than it needed and to pay as much as $123 million more in interest than the banks said was sufficient for the market. And the threesome made $12.4 million on the deal, contributing to record bonuses in the securities industry a year after getting a total of $80 billion in a federal bailout. “Just because someone earns a big wad of money doesn’t mean that they can do what they say they can do,” said Marilyn Cohen , who watched the sale unfold from Los Angeles as president of Envision Capital Management, which oversees $250 million in bonds for individuals. “And shame on the state if they were drinking that Kool-Aid.” The California sale helped send the municipal-bond market to its worst month in a year. It ended a rally that had pushed borrowing costs for cities and states to a 42-year low, as measured by the Bond Buyer’s index of 20-year general obligation bonds. Familiarity Over Price California, with a bigger economy than Russia’s , seeks bids for everything from building roads and schools to buying portable toilets and fire extinguishers. When the state with the worst credit rating sells municipal bonds, it usually chooses bankers through a negotiation process that lets experience and familiarity trump price. For the October deal, state Treasurer Lockyer picked the world’s most profitable investment bank and the nation’s two biggest bond underwriters, which together have sold $31 billion of debt for California since he took office in 2007. The U.S. municipal bond market’s largest borrower has sold tax-backed debt nine times this year, for a total of about $37 billion, more than four times second-place New York’s total, data compiled by Bloomberg show. ‘Conflicts’ The state’s former public finance director, Juan Fernandez , worked on the sale as JPMorgan’s executive director in San Francisco. Goldman’s bankers included Kathleen Brown , a former state treasurer. She’s the daughter of one past governor, Pat Brown , and the sister of another, current Attorney General Jerry Brown . “The whole business is full of conflicts, and that’s a gigantic problem,” Cohen said. Goldman, JPMorgan and Citigroup declined to comment, as did Fernandez. Kathleen Brown didn’t respond to phone and e-mail messages. The $2.8 trillion market for state and local government bonds used to be more competitive. In 1970, 73 percent of municipal offerings were sold at auctions, the General Accounting Office said in a 1983 report. In such deals, the bank that offers the lowest interest cost via the highest bid, or price, buys the securities and tries to sell them for more. This year, 16 percent of $368 billion in new fixed-rate issues were sold that way, Bloomberg data show. The rest were negotiated offerings, in which underwriters are selected before the sale based on assurances they’ll deliver cheaper rates by lining up investors. ‘Bad Week’ When the New York banks’ promises to California proved unreliable, Lockyer, 68, not his underwriters, tried to explain the miscalculation to taxpayers. “It turned into a bad week for bonds,” the treasurer said in an Oct. 9 interview. “This seemed to be a very hard week with some headwinds for issuers.” The underwriters left Lockyer “standing on the platform alone,” said Christopher Taylor , former executive director of the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board in Alexandria, Virginia, a self-regulatory organization. Taxpayers “probably didn’t get their money’s worth because California only got someone taking orders,” he said. “They didn’t get somebody out there that had any really strong incentive to sell.” Banks don’t want “any unsold bonds hanging around,” so they prefer to help states set rates and see if the bonds sell, as happens in negotiated deals, Taylor said. If demand falls short, the dealers say, “Listen, we can’t sell this” without higher yields, he said. “It’s a wonderful world that the dealer community has created — just fees, no risk.” Saving a ‘Boatload’ Lockyer has no regrets about using a no-bid process because an auction would have led to even higher interest costs, said Tom Dresslar , his spokesman. While auctions may be effective for smaller issues, multibillion-dollar sales of both taxable and tax-exempt bonds like this one require advance marketing that banks will deliver only if they are hired beforehand, he said. “We have saved taxpayers a boatload of money through negotiated bond sales,” Dresslar said, citing an analysis in the winter 2008 issue of the Municipal Finance Journal that was funded by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. The authors concluded that competitive sales have “no general advantage” and criticized past studies that found interest costs on negotiated sales were as much as 70 basis points, or 0.7 percentage point, higher. True Interest Cost California’s estimate of the so-called true interest cost on the tax-exempt portion of the October sale indicates it spent more the last time it sold competitively. Including fees, the $1.3 billion negotiated sale cost 33 basis points less than the national average for 20-year general- obligation bonds at the time, excluding a risk premium of almost 1 percentage point the state paid after approaching insolvency, Bloomberg data show. When the state sold $1.1 billion in tax- free securities at auction on Feb. 14, 2007, the cost was 13 basis points over the average. “Even though they couldn’t sell as much as they wanted, and even though they sold at yields at higher levels than what they wanted,” the deal “went well from California’s point of view,” said Gary Pollack , who oversees $12 billion as head of fixed-income trading at Deutsche Bank AG’s Private Wealth Management unit in New York. “They were able to borrow $4.1 billion at relatively historically low yields.” After the sale, several states scaled back borrowing plans as municipal bond yields climbed the most in two weeks since December. ‘Litmus Test’ Maryland sold $200 million of debt on Oct. 21, about 25 percent of what it had wanted to offer, Bloomberg data show. Minnesota issued $576 million of bonds, or 64 percent of its planned total. Hawaii and Washington took similar steps after rising yields erased projected savings from refinancing. “California’s large offering proved to be a litmus test for investors’ tolerance for new supply at relatively low yields,” said Chris Holmes , a fixed-income strategist at JPMorgan in New York, in a note to clients after the sale. It “set a tepid tone for subsequent large offerings by other issuers,” he said. Municipal yields rose almost half a percentage point from their 3.94 percent low following the sale and were a quarter- point above that mark as of Dec. 10, the weekly Bond Buyer index shows. Unemployment California is strapped for cash amid the worst global recession since World War II. The most-populous state’s personal income tax revenue fell 33.4 percent in the second quarter, compared with a 27.5 percent national average, according to the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government in Albany, New York. Unemployment in California was 12.5 percent in October, the worst since at least 1976. Nationwide joblessness was 10.2 percent in October, a 26-year high, and 10 percent in November. The October sale was California’s first long-term debt offering since Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Democratic Legislature settled a three-month impasse over how to erase a $24 billion deficit in July. The stalemate, which put the state on the brink of insolvency for the second time this year, ended with the approval of an $85 billion budget. California has cut spending by $32 billion, raised taxes by $12.5 billion and papered over $6 billion in shortages with borrowing and what Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Bill Gross has called “accounting tricks that couldn’t fool a grade-schooler .” Imminent Downgrade The July compromise prompted credit-rating companies to remove California from lists of borrowers facing imminent downgrades. The state’s general obligation bonds are graded BBB by Fitch Ratings, Baa1 by Moody’s Investors Service and A by Standard & Poor’s. Public Resources Advisory Group, a financial consultant for the state since 1991, recommended a negotiated sale instead of a competitive one, a memo obtained through California’s Public Records Act shows. In past auctions, winning underwriters couldn’t line up enough buyers ahead of time, so “they bear more risk and the price they are willing to pay the state for the bonds will likely be lower,” increasing taxpayers’ interest costs, the New York firm wrote. If the consultant “had not recommended a negotiated sale, had they recommended a competitive sale to get the best deal for taxpayers, that’s what we would have done,” said Dresslar, the treasurer’s spokesman. Taylor, the former MSRB official, said financial advisers rarely recommend auctions. ‘Blackballed’ “The FA has no incentive to irritate the underwriter community by pushing the risk on them,” he said. “Any FA that pushes a competitive sale is going to get ‘blackballed.’” Lockyer’s staff advised him on Aug. 24 to hire Goldman and JPMorgan to manage a $3.2 billion mix of taxable debt, including federally subsidized Build America Bonds, and Citigroup to lead the simultaneous sale $1.3 billion of tax-exempt securities. Goldman, which accepted $10 billion in bailout money last year and repaid it eight months later, produced a $3.44 billion profit in the second quarter, a record for a U.S. investment bank. Its shares have almost doubled this year. JPMorgan, which has repaid its $25 billion bailout, is this year’s top U.S. bond underwriter, according to Bloomberg data that excludes municipal issues. Its shares are up 31 percent. JPMorgan’s investment bank and Goldman will set aside an unprecedented $32.1 billion for compensation this year, according to an estimate by David Trone , a Macquarie Securities Group analyst. That will produce record bonuses totaling $19.3 billion, based on New York pay consultant Options Group’s estimate that year-end awards usually account for 60 percent of compensation costs. ‘Lowest Borrowing Costs’ Second-ranked underwriter Citigroup is repaying $20 billion of its $45 billion bailout to escape U.S. Treasury Department- imposed pay restrictions as the government prepares to sell its remaining stake in the company to recover the rest. The shares are down 49 percent this year. The three banks were told by California in Sept. 21 engagement letters that they were expected to “perform at the highest level to assist this office in achieving a successful sale at the lowest borrowing costs.” The sales syndicate also included Bank of America Corp.’s Merrill Lynch & Co., Siebert Brandford Shank & Co., Wells Fargo & Co. and about 30 other banks and brokers that made $13.4 million on the deal, for a total of $25.8 million in fees. Before selling the long-term bonds, Lockyer shored up the state’s finances by borrowing $8.8 billion through one-year cash-flow notes, a routine move used to pay expenses while awaiting anticipated tax revenue. Record Demand That Sept. 23 offering, run by JPMorgan, attracted twice as much demand from individual investors as from mutual funds and other institutions. So-called retail orders totaling $6.64 billion, about 75 percent of the sale, was the most ever for a municipal issue, Lockyer’s office said, citing underwriters’ data. California paid as much as 1.5 percent on the debt, more than twice New Jersey’s cost for similar securities in August. The yield was in the low range of what had been advertised beforehand, and individual demand allowed the state to turn away $430 million in orders from institutions. “Investors clearly know a good deal when they see one, and California taxpayers will benefit as a result,” Lockyer said after the sale. That same day, Citigroup told Lockyer that the state would get a “vigorous pre-sale marketing effort” to “the broadest possible audience of potential investors” and “greater retail participation” for October’s long-term debt sale if he agreed to a negotiated deal, according to a letter from Chris Mukai, a director for the bank in Los Angeles. ‘Very Little Incentive’ When banks have to bid for bonds, they “have very little incentive” to find investors beforehand because they don’t know if they’ll “have the bonds to sell,” Mukai said. Underwriters in negotiated offerings “market the state’s transaction for at least a week in advance,” his letter said. “As a result of these efforts, Citi and the other underwriters will acquire accurate information as to the depth of buying interest, which is invaluable in the pricing of the issue and in securing the lowest possible borrowing costs.” Mukai reminded Lockyer that Citigroup had helped JPMorgan sell September’s short-term debt to individuals, “saving the state millions of dollars,” and had implemented California’s “Enhanced Retail Marketing Plan” in June 2007. “We believe all the retail marketing efforts in these past few negotiated sales have achieved tremendous success for the state,” leading to more than $8.1 billion in general-obligation bond sales to individuals, or 46 percent of new issues, Mukai wrote. ‘Buzz’ Memo Goldman and JPMorgan offered Lockyer similar assurances in a joint Oct. 6 memo outlining how they would help draft an offering document, design a sales presentation and perform “pre-marketing and price-discovery activities” to help structure the issue at the cheapest yield. “This process will generate a ‘buzz’ around the transaction, ultimately generating maximum investor participation in the sale, which we believe will translate into lower borrowing costs,” wrote Tim Romer , a Goldman managing director in Los Angeles, and JPMorgan’s Fernandez, who had been the state’s finance director from 2002 to 2006. The two firms “strongly believe that proceeding with a negotiated sale” of the bonds “will result in a more cost- effective sale than a competitively bid transaction,” they wrote. Lowest Since ‘67 Investors, including Envision Capital’s Cohen, predicted the October sale would go well, given the popularity of Build America Bonds, securities created by President Barack Obama’s economic stimulus package, which covers 35 percent of their interest costs. As of Oct. 1, state and local governments had sold at least $36.9 billion of the debt, about 14 percent of year-to-date borrowing. The bonds attracted buyers to the municipal market and reduced tax-exempt supply, helping drive down average yields to 3.94 percent, the lowest since 1967, from 4.92 percent on April 2, the Bond Buyer’s index shows. “There seems to be a voracious appetite for the BABs bonds no matter who the issuer is,” Cohen said in an interview the day before the sale. As for the $1.3 billion tax-exempt portion, “they should have a relatively easy time selling it because it’s not so huge,” she said. Increasing Supply In the weeks before the bond sale, Lockyer’s staff watched yields slide as state and local authorities kept issuing more debt to lock in low rates. Borrowers were benefiting from the recovery following the financial meltdown that had spurred a rush to the perceived safety of Treasuries after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. a year earlier. About $270 billion in new municipal bonds had been issued from Jan. 1 to early October, 16 percent more than at that point in 2008. California’s 2009 tax-backed bond and note sales totaled $23.4 billion by Sept. 30, up from $4.6 billion and $10.6 billion in the first three quarters of 2008 and 2007, respectively. Demand might wane “because we are at lows in terms of absolute yield levels,” said Peter Hayes , who oversees $106 billion in municipal bonds for BlackRock Inc., on Oct. 6. California officials said they knew the bonds would be a harder sell than the September notes. To keep debt payments low, Lockyer loaded the tax-exempt portion with maturities longer than what individual investors typically buy. ‘We Got Spoiled’ “We are so used to getting 50 percent, 60-plus percent, 80 percent retail,” said Dresslar, the Lockyer spokesman, referring to how much individuals bought of an offering. “We got spoiled,” he said. “We were fully cognizant that this was not going to be a walk in the park.” Deputy Treasurer Katie Carroll and Public Finance Director Blake Fowler flew to New York to monitor the sale, accompanied by Dresslar. Fowler, 43, has spent most of his career in municipal bonds. A year ago, Carroll, 53, gave a talk on “ways to maximize demand ” from individuals to the National Association of State Treasurers. Then in Fowler’s job, Carroll emphasized the value of advertising on radio and giving retail buyers a two-day “priority period” for placing orders. Day One The bankers went into the sale telling investors California would pay tax-exempt yields from 2.87 percent for the 2015 maturity to 4.63 percent for bonds due in 2029. The 20-year was 23 basis points lower than indicated at the time by a Bloomberg index designed to gauge the fair value of similar bonds. The estimate for yields on taxable securities available to individuals ranged from 3.5 percent to 3.75 percent. On Oct. 6, the first day of retail sales, the three California officials sat in a conference room in Barclays Capital’s New York headquarters on Seventh Avenue. As they talked to credit-rating companies about another bond issue, they monitored orders for the current one, which the London-based bank helped sell. They phoned in updates to Lockyer. With Municipal Market Advisors data showing yields already starting to rise, individuals bought 28 percent of the tax-exempt bonds and 25 percent of the taxable debt, less than half the demand seen on the first day of the September sale. The underwriters “told us before the deal not to expect the level of retail that we had been getting,” Dresslar said. By the time of the sale, they painted an even gloomier picture of concessions that investors wanted “to get the deal done at least close to the size” California wanted, he said. “Some of the numbers that were coming out were startling.” Day Two The following morning, the three officials and their financial advisers were ushered into a conference room in Goldman’s 85 Broad St. headquarters. Fueled by coffee, pastries and sandwiches over a 10-hour day, they decided to raise yields by as much as 4 basis points on tax-exempt bonds to attract more orders. The market’s response “may reflect some anxieties with the retail investors in buying anything that’s longer” than one- year notes, Lockyer said on Bloomberg Television that day. “It may be pricing. It’s hard to tell.” By the end of the second day, retail buyers had placed orders for $427.7 million, or 33 percent, of the $1.31 billion tax-exempt portion and $77.5 million of the $250 million of taxable bonds available to individuals. All together, retail sales amounted to 11 percent of the $4.5 billion the state wanted to borrow. Day Three The next morning, the California officials moved to Citigroup’s offices to finish the offering with sales to pension plans, hedge funds, nonprofit groups and other professional buyers. “We’re depending on the institutional investors to make this work,” Lockyer had said on TV. In a room off the trading floor, the officials decided to cut the sale to $4.14 billion — $1.31 billion in tax-exempts, $1.75 billion in Build America Bonds and $1.07 billion in other taxable bonds. They also increased some yields again as institutions grew more wary of the state’s finances. Tax-exempt rates ended up 8 to 37 basis points higher than estimated, including the 20-year, which was boosted to 5 percent from 4.66 percent. Debt due in 2025 went to 4.69 percent from 4.42 percent. Four taxable issues, including the Build America Bonds, cost the state 12.5 to 25 basis points more than the low end of estimated ranges. Two priced at the high end, and two were above it. Extra Interest The yields, averaging almost a quarter-point more than estimated, will result in California paying $8.1 million a year more in interest than it would have at the lower rates. If the bonds all are outstanding at maturity, the extra interest would total $123.5 million, data compiled by Bloomberg show. “It’s justified for Cal to be paying a little higher price in order to sell its debt, given its credit issues,” Deutsche Bank’s Pollack said in an interview that day. “Their budget was not as tight and strong as I think a lot of people would have liked it to be.” The sale’s biggest maturity, $1.75 billion of 30-year Build America Bonds, was priced to yield 7.23 percent, 95 basis points more than comparable corporate bonds and 325 basis points more than Treasuries with similar maturities. With the subsidy, California’s net cost is about 4.7 percent. Ten-year Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. bonds with the same Moody’s ratings as California traded at 122 basis points more than Treasuries that same week. ‘Best Shot’ “They just got a little aggressive in where they wanted to price it,” said David Blair , a Pimco analyst in Newport Beach, California, the day after the sale. “Most people still recognize that there’s budget deficits the state is trying to deal with,” said Blair, whose company oversees $20 billion in municipal bonds. Lockyer’s spokesman portrayed the sale as a success. “To say that the market conditions were not as favorable as they had been doesn’t mean that you go in conceding hundreds of millions of dollars; you go in and give it your best shot because there’s a lot at stake,” Dresslar said. “Given the cold market and the inhospitable attitude of investors, to pull off a $4.1 billion deal, we believe, is an impressive achievement,” Dresslar said. “We would have been derelict in our duty to taxpayers if we sold a bond of this size through a competitive sale. We would have gotten hosed.” Highest Rate By Oct. 15, 20-year yields had risen 0.38 percentage point to 4.32 percent from its previous low, the biggest two-week increase in 10 months, the Bond Buyer index shows. California has since sold $7.3 billion in debt. On Oct. 22, it paid 8.361 percent on $250 million of lower-rated Build America Bonds — then the highest coupon rate for a $100 million-plus issue since the program began. A week later, the state was able to cut estimated yields as much as 0.15 percentage point on $3.5 billion in better-rated tax-exempt bonds when individuals placed orders for almost 72 percent, including debt due in 2022 that cost the state 4.85 percent, up from 4.47 percent in the early October sale. California sold $908 million in Build America Bonds on Nov. 3, pricing the 30-year securities to yield 7.26 percent, or 3 percentage points more than Treasuries, down from October’s 3.25-point spread. Lockyer has said the state may issue more debt before the fiscal year ends on June 30 without specifying how much. “Everybody thinks there’s still an appetite for California bonds,” the treasurer said in the Oct. 9 interview. “If the market is inhospitable, we won’t go,” he said. “We’ll just have to wait and see how the feelings are when we get ready to think about it again.” Tom Dalpiaz , who helps Advisors Asset Management oversee $3.3 billion in Melville, New York, said California and its bankers had flooded a glutted municipal bond market with too much supply. The sale gave investors “sticker-shock syndrome,” said Dalpiaz. “It was a very large bond issue to digest.” To contact the reporter on this story: Michael B. Marois in Sacramento at mmarois@bloomberg.net .

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GM Chairman Ed Whitacre: Unless Employees Take Risks, Resist Bureaucracy, "We’re Not Going To Make It"

December 4, 2009

DETROIT (TOM KRISHER and DEE-ANN DURBIN –AP) – General Motors Co. Chairman Ed Whitacre Jr. urged the troubled automaker’s employees to forget their old bureaucratic culture, telling them Friday not to fear being fired for taking risks. Whitacre, who also announced key management changes, wants to speed up the automaker’s shift to an entrepreneurial culture where decisions are made quickly. “We want you to step up. We don’t want any bureaucracy,” Whitacre told employees, strolling back and forth across a stage at the company’s headquarters here. “We’re not going to make it if you won’t take a risk,” he told the audience of 800. In a 45-minute presentation that was broadcast to employees on internal television networks and over the Internet, Whitacre also unveiled a mission statement to design, build and sell the world’s best vehicles. Whitacre, who peppered his address with self-deprecating humor, named Vice Chairman Bob Lutz, who has long advocated for a more risk-taking culture, as his adviser for product development. Whitacre also said he is recombining sales and marketing, placing them under Susan Docherty. She became head of sales when former CEO Fritz Henderson separated the roles of sales and marketing. Henderson left the company earlier this week. Lutz, 77, who had been in charge of marketing, will help Whitacre learn about the business, he said. In another key move, the chairman, who joined GM in June, promoted engineering chief Mark Reuss to run North American operations. Reuss recently was named head of engineering, and before that ran the company’s Holden operations in Australia. GM board member Stephen Girsky, a former auto analyst with Morgan Stanley, also will be an adviser to Whitacre. Girsky worked briefly as an analyst in the treasurer’s office at GM in the late 1980s, and also was an adviser to former CEO Rick Wagoner in 2005 and 2006. During his speech, Whitacre set a tone of humility and encouraged employees to give him ideas. “I’m on the 39th floor of the RenCen. You’re all welcome,” he said, referring to GM’s headquarters. He also said he would be roving around GM’s operations, drawing laughter. Recently, former auto task force leader Steven Rattner criticized GM executives for using a private elevator that took them directly to their offices, bypassing employees. When one employee asked Whitacre if he would consider reviving the Pontiac or Saab brands, Whitacre shrugged. “I’d say the probability is low. But I don’t know. I’m new to this business,” he said. He was also effusive with his praise, calling GM “intellectually better” than its rivals. “You’re a terrific bunch of employees. You have our support. Let’s go hit it and make this thing big,” he said. Whitacre also named new leaders in several other key positions. Nick Reilly, who has been leading restructuring efforts in Europe, was named president of GM Europe. Tim Lee, GM’s former manufacturing and labor chief, was named president of GM International Operations, overseeing GM’s Asia-Pacific, Latin America, Africa, and Middle East operations. Diana Tremblay, GM’s former labor relations chief, is now vice president of manufacturing and labor relations. (This version CORRECTS spelling of Rattner’s first name to ‘Steven’) )

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Missouri State Appoints Investment Head

November 23, 2009

Clint Zweifel the Missouri State Treasurer has appointed Andrew Maschhoff as director of investments

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Cal-Bay International, Inc. Announces New Board and Management

November 19, 2009

LAS VEGAS, NV–(Marketwire – November 19, 2009) – Cal-Bay International, Inc. ( PINKSHEETS : CBYI ) today announces the election and appointment of Shaun Bailey as an officer and director of the company. Mr. Bailey will serve in the positions of President, Secretary and Treasurer. Effective on March 2, 2009, Shaun Bailey was filed with the State of Nevada as the President, Secretary, and Treasurer of Cal-Bay International, Inc. (the “Company”) pursuant to a Resolution of the Company dated March 2, 2009. Mr. Bailey was also appointed as Chief Executive Officer of the Company.

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Kansas Launches $34M Energy Efficiency Program

November 17, 2009

TOPEKA, Kan. — Kansas launched a new energy efficiency program Tuesday to make low-interest loans available to several thousand home owners and small businesses for upgrading insulation, installing new furnaces and sealing air-leaking doors and windows. Gov. Mark Parkinson said officials have discussed creating such a program a few years, but the state couldn’t afford one until federal economic stimulus dollars became available this year. The state will make $34 million in stimulus funds available to private lenders, who will then write loans. State officials said during a news conference that home owners and businesses participating in the Efficiency Kansas program will pay back their loans from the savings on their monthly energy bills, so they don’t face out-of-pocket expenses for making improvements. Also, the program isn’t limited to poor or middle-class families. Parkinson said state officials decided to set up a loan program so that when the money is repaid, it can be loaned out again. “We now have a cutting-edge energy efficiency program that will last indefinitely,” Parkinson said. “It’s the type of program that we had dreamed about two or three years ago. We just didn’t have the money to do it.” Home owners will be eligible for loans of up to $20,000 and small businesses, up to $30,000. But officials at the Kansas Corporation Commission, which regulates utilities, said loans typically should be between $5,000 and $6,000. Interest rates are capped at 4 percent. To participate, a home owner or small business must undergo an energy audit and make what the audit determines are the most cost-effective changes first. The state is working through a network of 14 banks with nearly 90 branches statewide. Dave Hill, president of the MidAmerica Bank in Baldwin City, acknowledged it will be difficult for people with bad credit or little equity in their homes to obtain loans, but he said the program still will help Kansans make improvements – and generate economic activity. State Treasurer Dennis McKinney said the state will rely upon the banks to screen loan applicants and market the program so that there’s no additional government bureaucracy. “We think we’re engaging good, private sector resources to make sure the money’s used efficiently and effectively,” he said. State officials said they hope to increase the number of private lenders participating in the program over time. Susan Duffy, the KCC’s executive director, said the commission also hopes to have utilities themselves making loans starting next year. The program’s Web site allows consumers to look for participating lenders and companies and individuals trained to perform energy audits.

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Asian Stocks Gain on G-20, Axa Takeover; Gold Rises to Record on Dollar

November 9, 2009

By Darren Boey and Jonathan Burgos Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) — Asian stocks rose after Group of 20 governments agreed to maintain stimulus efforts and Axa SA and AMP Ltd. made the region’s biggest takeover offer this year. Gold climbed to a record after the dollar fell. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index advanced 0.7 percent to 117.18 as of 4:50 p.m. in Tokyo. Gold for immediate delivery reached an all-time high of $1,107.91 an ounce as the weakening U.S. currency prompted investors to increase bullion holdings as a store of value. The dollar declined against 13 of its 16 major counterparts amid expectations of low borrowing costs in the U.S. Oil rose as a hurricane disrupted Gulf of Mexico production. “Maintaining stimulus measures will help support a further rally in equities and commodities, though it’s not necessarily a positive thing,’ said Pauline Dan , Hong Kong-based chief investment officer at Samsung Investment Trust Management, which oversees $100 billion in assets. “That means the economy is not recovering at a desirable pace. The U.S., for instance, does not really have a choice but to keep its monetary policy loose.” Axa Asia Pacific Holdings Ltd. shares surged 33 percent in Sydney after rejecting a hostile bid from its parent and AMP, Australia’s No. 2 insurer by value. The country’s benchmark S&P/ASX 200 Index rallied 1.8 percent, buoyed by Commonwealth Bank of Australia’s report of A$1.4 billion ($1.3 billion) in first-quarter profit. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index gained 1.7 percent as Moody’s Investors Service upgraded its outlook on Hong Kong and China’s debt ratings to “positive” from “stable.” Futures on the U.S. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index added 0.6 percent. Carry Trades Yields on 10-year Treasury notes rose three basis points to 3.52 percent, according to BGCantor Market Data. The U.S. House approved health-care legislation that would cost more than $1 trillion over 10 years, indicating the government will have to increase its debt sales to pay for it. Gold for immediate delivery advanced 1.1 percent to $1,107.19 an ounce. Prices of the precious metal jumped 5.5 percent in the past month as the Dollar Index, which measures the U.S. currency against 6 major counterparts, lost 1.5 percent. “It’s inextricably linked to the dollar,” said Geoff Clear , head of Asia commodities at Australian & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. “All commodities are reflecting dollar weakness and gold at a record is a result of investor appetite and safe-haven buying.” The Dollar Index dropped 0.7 percent today. The International Monetary Fund said in a Nov. 7 report traders are probably using the dollar to fund so-called carry trades around the world and it may still be overvalued. Maintaining Support The U.S. currency fell to $1.4957 per euro in Tokyo from $1.4847 in New York on Nov. 6. It dropped to as low as $1.496, the weakest since Oct. 26. The dollar traded at 90.25 yen from 89.88 yen. Alistair Darling, hosting in the U.K. a meeting of finance ministers from G-20 nations, said his colleagues decided to keep supporting their economies. Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan said on Nov. 8 that it’s too early to retract government stimulus. The New Zealand currency rose 1.7 percent to 73.70 U.S. cents as Auckland-based Fonterra Cooperative Group Ltd. , the world’s biggest dairy exporter, raised its forecast for milk prices by 19 percent amid growing global demand. Fonterra accounts for about 40 percent of the global trade in butter, milk powder and cheese. “Dairy prices are one of the fundamental drivers of the New Zealand dollar so with that on board we’ll see more support for the kiwi this week,” said Mike Jones , a currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand Ltd. in Wellington. Hurricane Ida Crude oil for December delivery in New York rose as much as 1.7 percent to $78.78 a barrel in after-hours trading as Hurricane Ida, packing 105 mile-an-hour winds, entered the southern Gulf of Mexico. Offshore output along the U.S. Gulf accounted for 28 percent of national output in June, according to U.S. Energy Department data . Chevron Corp. said it began evacuating some personnel. Petroleos Mexicanos, the government-owned oil company, shut 90 wells at onshore fields in the western states of Veracruz and Tabasco, the EFE news service reported. Ida “could be a mildly bullish event” for oil if any production gets shut-in as a result, said Toby Hassall , research analyst with CWA Global Markets Pty in Sydney. “The market doesn’t have the same sensitivity to supply-side issues that it did a couple of years ago.” Oil, which was recently at $78.65, reached a one-year high of $82 on Oct. 21 as rising stock markets boosted investor confidence and a falling dollar encouraged buying of physical assets. Axa Takeover Shares of Cnooc Ltd. , China’s largest offshore oil producer, gained 1.8 percent to HK$12.48. Woodside Petroleum Ltd., Australia’s No. 2 oil company, added 1.3 percent to A$48.51. Axa Asia Pacific soared 33 percent to A$5.70 after rejecting the takeover bid, which is worth about $10 billion. Sydney-based AMP planned to buy Axa Asia Pacific, keep the Australian and New Zealand units, and sell the Asian divisions to Paris-based Axa for A$7.7 billion ($7.1 billion). “The companies that have come through the crisis best are reasonably cashed up and are looking at how to deploy that cash,” said Angus Gluskie , who oversees about $300 million at White Funds Management Pty. in Sydney, including AMP and Axa Asia Pacific shares. Commonwealth Bank’s profit report drove the shares up by 4.5 percent to A$55.08 even as Chief Executive Officer Ralph Norris pledged to maintain “conservative business settings.” The MSCI Asia Pacific Index has climbed 66 percent from a more than five-year low on March 9, outpacing gains by the S&P 500 and Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index. Stocks in the MSCI gauge are valued at 22 times estimated earnings, compared with 17 times for the S&P and 15 times for the Stoxx. Japanese insurers climbed after boosting profit forecasts. Casualty insurer Aioi Insurance Co. gained 8.7 percent to 427 yen after doubling its full-year net income projection, citing fewer-than-expected typhoons and other natural disasters. To contact the reporters on this story: Darren Boey in Hong Kong at dboey@bloomberg.net ; Jonathan Burgos in Singapore at jburgos4@bloomberg.net .

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California Answers Investor Call for $750 Million in Build America Bonds

November 3, 2009

By Jeremy R. Cooke and Andrew Frye Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) — California is responding to investor demand for more of the state’s Build America Bonds by offering about $750 million today after a so-called reverse inquiry that is more common for corporate issues than for municipals. The U.S. state with the most people and lowest credit ratings, which earlier said it intended to sell $1.5 billion of tax-exempt debt this week, announced plans yesterday to answer a request by offering another taxable issue for which the U.S. government pays 35 percent of the interest. Citigroup Inc. is handling the deal. Investors such as life insurers and taxable-bond funds already have been drawn to the $7 billion in Build America issues brought out so far by California. The bonds, backed by its general obligation pledge, carry higher yields and longer terms than most similarly rated company debt. “It’s a good sign of investor demand generally for the state,” said Matt Fabian , senior analyst and managing director for Municipal Market Advisors, an independent research firm based in Concord, Massachusetts. “Despite all of its credit and supply issues, there’s at least one buyer” with a “sizeable” appetite. Neither California nor Citigroup, in brief statements yesterday, identified the investor or investors who asked the state to create a new issue of its taxable debt. “Reverse inquiry is much more common in taxables,” Fabian said in an interview. “It doesn’t happen a lot in munis.” The state will “provide other potential investors with an opportunity to participate in the offering” today, New York- based Citigroup said in the statement. California Economy California, whose economy is bigger than all except seven world nations, may sell as much as $15 billion in bonds by July to fund public infrastructure or refinance debt, Treasurer Bill Lockyer said last month. The state’s general pledge to meet its obligations to bondholders is rated BBB by Fitch Ratings, Baa1 by Moody’s Investors Service and A by Standard & Poor’s, the second-, third- and fifth-lowest investment grades, respectively. Taxable bonds due in April 2039 with a 7.55 percent taxable coupon interest rate traded to customers at prices to yield about 7.2 percent yesterday, Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board trade data show. The yield is about 295 basis points more than comparable-maturity Treasuries, down from 365 basis points at issue on April 22. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. California’s so-called spread compares with 219 basis points on a Merrill Lynch index of U.S. company bonds rated BBB and A and due in 15 years or more. Benchmark Yields Benchmark 30-year tax-exempt bonds had a median yield of 5.03 percent yesterday, matching the two-month high reached last week, according to a daily survey by Municipal Market Advisors. Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America, a policyholder- owned insurer based in New York, is among the institutional investors that have reported holdings in Build America Bonds, known as BABs. “There really is a dearth of 30-year paper,” Thomas Sorell , chief investment officer at Guardian Life, which manages about $28 billion, said in an interview last month. “The BABs are attractive investments. Not all of them obviously, but a lot of them. That market has performed exceptionally well.” The Wells Fargo Build America Bond Index returned 7.7 percent from May through October. During the same period, the Merrill Lynch Municipal Master Index, which tracks the broader market for state and local debt, gained 5.7 percent. Build America Bonds “remain an area of interest” for Guardian, which didn’t make the reverse inquiry to California, spokesman Richard Jones said. Municipal issuers have sold more than $47 billion in Build America Bonds to finance infrastructure since April under the Obama administration’s stimulus program, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The program is set to end in 2010. Following are descriptions of some pending sales of municipal bonds; the timing and amounts may change. SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY, the Boston school with the second- highest-paid president among private colleges, plans to sell almost $310 million in fixed-rate bonds to refinance its long- term debt and pay termination costs for interest-rate swap contracts. The Massachusetts Health and Educational Facilities Authority and underwriters led by Morgan Stanley are handling the deal. The university, which enrolls the equivalent of about 8,400 full-time students, is rated BBB by S&P and Baa2 by Moody’s. President David Sargent’s compensation of almost $1.5 million ranked him behind only Shirley Ann Jackson’s $1.6 million as head of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in New York, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education. (Added Nov. 3) CALIFORNIA plans to borrow $1.3 billion for public works and to refinance almost $200 million of debt this week. A group of investment banks led by De La Rosa & Co., Stone & Youngberg LLC and Siebert Brandford Shank & Co. will market the tax-exempt debt to individual investors today and institutional buyers tomorrow. (Updated Nov. 3) GEORGIA plans to sell $700 million of its top-rated general obligation securities as soon as today, including about $400 million of Build America Bonds. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is handling the sale. The money raised will be used to refinance about $100 million of debt and pay for construction costs on public schools, higher-education facilities and various state projects. Georgia is the most populous U.S. state whose full faith and credit pledge is rated AAA by S&P, Moody’s and Fitch. (Updated Nov. 3) SAN FRANCISCO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT plans to sell $512.7 million of fixed-rate bonds through Citigroup Inc. this week. The tax-exempt bonds are backed by net revenue generated by the city-owned airport, the 10th-busiest in the U.S. by passenger traffic last year, according to Airports Council International . The proceeds will help pay for expanding and earthquake-proofing Terminal 2 and repay commercial paper used as interim financing, according to Moody’s. The bonds are rated A1 by Moody’s, A by S&P and A+ by Fitch. (Added Nov. 2) PENNSYLVANIA COMMONWEALTH FINANCING AUTHORITY will borrow $400 million through Morgan Stanley this week to provide grants for local water, sewer, storm-water and flood-control projects, mostly through the Build America Bonds program. The issue will be the first under the H2O PA Act, which authorized $800 million in borrowing for such purposes. The federally subsidized, taxable portion of the transaction comprises $275.6 million of 30-year bonds and almost $60 million of 15-year securities. The rest will be tax-exempt debt due from 2013 through 2019. The revenue bonds, payable from state legislative appropriations, are rated AA- by Standard & Poor’s and Fitch and A1 by Moody’s. (Added Nov. 2) NEW YORK UNIVERSITY intends to raise about $400 million by selling tax-exempt bonds this week in a deal arranged by New York state’s Dormitory Authority and Morgan Stanley. The Greenwich Village-based institution sold $103 million of taxable bonds last week. The largest private nonprofit university in the U.S. will use the proceeds to renovate and reconstruct academic buildings, buy a new 735-bed residence hall on East 12th Street in Manhattan and refinance bank loans. The university, with almost 55,000 full- and part-time students, carries ratings of AA- from S&P and Aa3 from Moody’s. (Added Nov. 2) MONTGOMERY COUNTY, MARYLAND, the state’s most populous county, will take bids today from investment banks seeking to underwrite $387.4 million of its top-rated general obligation bonds. About $77 million of the deal will refinance long-term tax-exempt debt. The rest will provide permanent financing for county projects including public schools and colleges, roads, storm drainage and mass transit. Banks may choose to bid $232 million of the bonds as taxable, federally subsidized Build America Bonds. (Updated Nov. 3) PUERTO RICO , rated at the lowest investment grade, plans to sell $350 million of tax-exempt bonds through banks led by Morgan Stanley this week to restructure debt originally issued for public improvements. The island commonwealth’s general- obligation pledge to repay debt is ranked Baa3 by Moody’s and BBB- by S&P, lower than any U.S. state. (Updated Nov. 2) To contact the reporters on this story: Jeremy R. Cooke in New York at jcooke8@bloomberg.net ; Andrew Frye in New York at afrye@bloomberg.net .

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Australia Raises Key Rate by Quarter Point to 3.5%; Currency Pares Gains

November 3, 2009

By Jacob Greber Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) — Australia raised its benchmark interest rate by a quarter percentage point for the second straight month, becoming the only nation to increase borrowing costs twice this year as the global economy recovers. Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens lifted the overnight cash rate target to 3.5 percent in Sydney today, as forecast by 18 of 22 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The rest expected a half-point move. Australia’s dollar and bond yields fell as traders reduced bets on an increase in December after Stevens said higher rates would come “gradually.” Rising consumer confidence and Chinese demand for iron ore and coal will stoke economic growth while the currency’s 29 percent gain this year may hurt exporters and curb inflation, he said. “Today’s move strikes a nice balance — it edges the cash rate back to more normal levels without threatening the economic recovery,” said Craig James , a senior economist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia. “It is far from certain that rates will rise again in December.” The Australian dollar fell to 90.34 U.S. cents at 5:08 p.m. in Sydney from 90.88 cents just before the decision was released. The two-year government bond yield dropped 19 basis points to 4.54 percent. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. Investors pared bets on whether Stevens will increase the key rate by a quarter point on Dec. 1, according to Bloomberg calculations based on interbank futures on the Sydney Futures Exchange. There is a 52 percent chance of such a move, the futures showed at 4:28 p.m. Prior to today’s announcement expectations were at 96 percent. Changed Outlook Treasurer Wayne Swan said yesterday the economy will expand faster than he previously forecast, growing 1.5 percent in the 12 months to June 30, 2010. In May, he forecast a 0.5 percent contraction. GDP will accelerate to 2.75 percent the following fiscal year, he said yesterday. The economy grew 1 percent in the first six months of this year. “The adjustments at the October and November meetings will work to increase the sustainability of growth in economic activity and keep inflation consistent with the target over the years ahead,” Stevens said today. “The board noted that the rise in the exchange rate is likely to constrain output in the tradeables sector and dampen price pressures,” he said. Investors, hungry for China’s economic growth, have been betting the Australian dollar is headed toward parity with the U.S. currency for the first time, buying into the world’s biggest exporter of iron ore used in making steel. Hedge Funds Citigroup Inc., Calyon, Barclays Capital and National Australia Bank Ltd. forecast it will trade at 1 U.S. dollar next year, implying an additional 11 percent gain. Hedge funds and other large traders have more bets than at any time since July 15, 2008, that the rally will continue, data from the Washington-based Commodity Futures Trading Commission show. Stevens has tempered his comments on the pace of rate increases and their effect on the currency, after last month signaling he was prepared to keep raising borrowing costs and tolerate further appreciation in the local dollar, the best- performing in the past 12 months of 171 currencies tracked by Bloomberg, as it “may help contain inflation.” The central bank’s measure of core inflation, the so-called weighted median index of consumer prices, rose 3.8 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, holding above the top of Governor Stevens’s target range of between 2 percent and 3 percent for a ninth straight quarter, a report showed on Oct. 28. Global Rates Stevens also raised the rate by a quarter point on Oct. 6. The only other countries to increase borrowing costs this year are Israel and Norway. By contrast, the U.S. Federal Reserve has kept its benchmark rate close to zero for almost a year. The European Central Bank and Bank of England benchmark rates are at record lows of 1 percent and 0.5 percent respectively. “The absence of more assertive rhetoric in today’s statement signals clearly that the Reserve Bank will remove the policy accommodation ‘gradually’, a key word that once again was prominent in today’s statement,” said Stephen Walters , chief economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Sydney. Stevens also dropped references in today’s statement, last made in the minutes of the bank’s October meeting, that the “very expansionary setting” of monetary policy was “possibly imprudent.” ‘Subtle Shift’ “A subtle shift in the tone of the commentary hints that officials are inclined to take each meeting on its merits,” Walters said. Australia’s economy is growing faster and generating more jobs than Treasurer Swan and Prime Minister Kevin Rudd forecast six months ago, helped by A$20 billion ($18 billion) in government cash handouts to consumers and Stevens’s record interest-rate cuts between September 2008 and April, when he slashed the benchmark rate by 4.25 percentage points to a half- century low of 3 percent. Unemployment is expected to peak at 6.75 percent in the second quarter of next year, well below the 8.5 percent rate Swan forecast in May for the three months through June 30, 2011, the government said yesterday. Today’s interest-rate increase will do nothing to resolve the nation’s housing shortage, said Housing Industry Association Chief Economist Harley Dale . “It would be prudent for the Reserve Bank to sit on its hands,” Dale said. The boost will add A$50 to monthly repayments on an average A$300,000 home loan. Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., Commonwealth Bank, National Australia Bank Ltd. and Westpac Banking Corp. raised their variable mortgage rates by a quarter point after today’s announcement. Tough Decisions “Today’s decision is a tough one for Australian families and businesses, but it’s also another indication that rates could not stay at 50-year emergency lows forever,” Swan told reporters in Brisbane today. Reports published in recent days show bank lending unexpectedly fell in September for the first time in nine months amid weaker demand for business credit, and manufacturing growth slowed in October. “It looks like the Reserve Bank is doing the right thing,” billionaire Gerry Harvey , chairman of Australian retailer Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd., said in an interview today. “Those people who are looking at interest rates at 3.5 percent are saying to themselves it’s still low and my mortgage is still a lot less than I was paying before” Harvey said by telephone. “It shouldn’t have a great effect in the marketplace.” To contact the reporter for this story: Jacob Greber in Sydney at jgreber@bloomberg.net

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Australia May Raise Interest Rate to At Least 3.5% as Economy Strengthens

November 2, 2009

By Jacob Greber Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) — Australia’s central bank will raise its benchmark interest rate today by at least a quarter percentage point, the second increase in four weeks, amid signs the economy is strengthening, economists and traders say. Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens will boost the overnight cash rate target to 3.5 percent from 3.25 percent at 2:30 p.m. in Sydney, according to 18 of 22 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The rest expect a half-point increase. Futures traders are betting on a quarter-point boost. Keeping borrowing costs at “very low levels” may be “imprudent” and threaten its inflation target, the bank said last month, amid surging consumer confidence, house price gains and Chinese demand for natural resources. Stevens, the first Group of 20 policy maker to raise borrowing costs since the height of the global recession, has also signaled this year’s 29 percent gain in the nation’s currency may help contain inflation. “The case for a larger-than-expected increase is always strongest at the early stages of the tightening cycle,” said Bill Evans , chief economist at Westpac Banking Corp. in Sydney, who predicts a half-point gain. “The risks of tightening too slowly are also high when policy is at its most stimulatory since imbalances are more likely to emerge.” Australia’s economy is growing faster and generating more jobs than Treasurer Wayne Swan forecast six months ago, helped by A$20 billion ($18 billion) in government cash handouts to consumers and Stevens’ record interest-rate cuts between September 2008 and April, when he slashed the benchmark rate by 4.25 percentage points to a half-century low of 3 percent. Economic Growth Stevens raised the rate by a quarter point Oct. 6. The only other countries to raise borrowing costs this year are Israel and Norway. Gross domestic product will expand 1.5 percent in the 12 months to June 30, 2010, Treasurer Wayne Swan said yesterday after scrapping his May prediction of a 0.5 percent contraction. GDP will accelerate to 2.75 percent the following fiscal year, he said. The economy grew 1 percent in the first six months of this year. Unemployment is also expected to peak at 6.75 percent in the second quarter of next year, well below the 8.5 percent rate Swan forecast in May for the three months through June 30, 2011. “The Australian economy has turned out to be quite a lot stronger than we thought,” Reserve Bank Assistant Governor Philip Lowe said last month. “It’s entirely appropriate we go back to a more normal setting in monetary policy. And that’s the process that’s under way.” House Prices There are also signs of a surge in some asset prices. A report published yesterday showed Australian house prices jumped 4.2 percent in the three months through September from the previous quarter, when they rose by the same amount. The nation’s benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index of stocks has climbed more than 20 percent this year. Stevens should raise borrowing costs today to keep a lid on an “irrational exuberance” in the housing market that is “arguably now out of line,” Mark Joiner , National Australia Bank Ltd.’s chief financial officer, told the Australian Financial Review in an interview published on Oct. 31. Still, Stevens has scope to limit today’s increase to a quarter-point move, which would add A$50 to monthly repayments on an average A$300,000 home loan. Reports published in recent days show bank lending unexpectedly fell in September for the first time in nine months amid weaker demand for business credit, and manufacturing growth slowed in October. Inflation Slows The consumer price index rose in the third quarter by an annual 1.3 percent, the smallest gain since the second quarter of 1999, after advancing 1.5 percent in the previous three months, a government report showed on Oct. 28. Inflation isn’t “sufficiently high to justify the Reserve Bank accelerating to a half-point hike,” said David de Garis , a senior economist at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Sydney. Investors are certain Stevens will raise the overnight cash rate target by a quarter point, according to Bloomberg calculations based on interbank futures on the Sydney Futures Exchange. They expect only an 8 percent chance of a half-point increase, the index showed at 8:33 a.m. The Reserve Bank, which scrapped its forecast in August for the economy to contract this year, will publish revised predictions on Nov. 6. Its most recent estimate was for GDP to expand 2.25 percent in 2010 and 3.75 percent in 2011. “The Reserve Bank’s rate hikes will come regularly — at every meeting until February — but in small steps,” said Stephen Walters , chief economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Sydney. “There is little to be gained from spooking the horses” today with a half-point gain. To contact the reporter for this story: Jacob Greber in Sydney at jgreber@bloomberg.net

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