wednesday

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

August 18, 2010

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

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Zipcar Expands Harvard Cars Sharing Program

August 18, 2010

BOSTON — Zipcar will expand its car-sharing service at Harvard University to drivers under 21, a move the company and school said Wednesday will make it easier for students to forgo bringing a car to campus. Zipcar said it will double its fleet of cars at Harvard to 20 to accommodate younger drivers. It also plans to partner with Zimride, an online ride sharing company, to enable Harvard students, faculty and staff to better share drives using Zipcars. Zipcar Inc. has partnered with Harvard for 10 years, making it one of the Cambridge, Mass.-based company’s oldest car sharing programs.

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Hedge-Fund Manager Allegedly Swindled Universities Out Of Millions Of Dollars, Bought Mansions, Books, Collectible Teddy Bears

July 29, 2010

A former hedge-fund manager has pleaded guilty to criminal charges in an investment scam in which he bilked as much as $900-million from investors, including four university endowments. In his plea, Paul R. Greenwood said on Wednesday that he and his partner, Steven Walsh, had spent money from the investment accounts on themselves and their family members. According to investigators, the two spent at least $160-million on mansions, horses, rare books, and an $80,000 collectible teddy bear. Mr. Walsh has pleaded not guilty, and Mr. Greenwood will testify against him at trial.

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California State Of Emergency Declared By Schwarzenegger Over $19 Billion Budget Gap

July 29, 2010

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency over the state’s finances on Wednesday, raising pressure on lawmakers to negotiate a state budget that is more than a month overdue and will need to close a $19 billion shortfall.

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Small Business Jobs Bill BLOCKED By GOP

July 22, 2010

WASHINGTON — Perhaps the last best hope of Democrats to pass legislation aimed at creating jobs before the November elections seemed to be crumbling in the Senate on Wednesday as Republicans signaled that they would block a bill to expand government lending programs and grant an array of tax breaks to small businesses.

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Inland Announces $209M in Retail Acquisitions

July 21, 2010

Inland Real Estate Acquisitions (IREA), announced Wednesday that it has recently purchased five shopping centers totaling 1.3 million square feet, for a combined total of $209 million. IREA acquired the properties on behalf of Inland American Real Estate…

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David Leonhardt: Climate Bill, Like The Country, Overcome By Heat And Inertia

July 20, 2010

This city just endured its hottest June since records began in 1872, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. So did Miami. Atlanta suffered its second-hottest June, and Dallas had its third hottest. In New York, the weather was relatively pleasant: only the fourth-hottest June since 1872. Then again, New York is on pace for its hottest July on record. Yet when United States senators and their aides file into work on Wednesday, on yet another 90-degree day, they may be on the verge of deciding to do approximately nothing about global warming. The needed 60 votes don’t seem to be there, at least not at the moment.

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Obama Hails House Passage Of Financial Reform

June 30, 2010

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama says House passage of a massive overhaul of financial regulations is a victory for everyone who was hurt by what he is calling Wall Street “recklessness and irresponsibility” that caused the financial meltdown and millions of job losses. House lawmakers voted 237-192 Wednesday in favor of the bill, sending it to the Senate for a vote expected in mid-July. Obama says the legislation provides a sensible framework of rules and regulations that will hold financial institutions accountable for their actions and help prevent another economic crisis like the one the U.S. is still recovering from.

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Scott Brown STILL Won’t Say If He’ll Vote For Financial Reform Bill

June 30, 2010

WASHINGTON — Despite lawmakers’ last-minute change to win his vote, Republican Sen. Scott Brown said Wednesday he needs more time to study a sweeping overhaul of financial regulations before committing his vote. His stance leaves Democrats short, for now, of the 60 votes they need to overcome procedural hurdles to the bill. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said the Senate will have to wait until after the weeklong July 4 congressional break to take up the bill. The House was expected to vote on a final, combined House-Senate bill, late Wednesday afternoon. Congressional Democrats have been inching closer to passage of a major rewrite of financial industry regulations, making fixes as they go in hopes of securing the votes of straying Republicans. On Tuesday, House and Senate negotiators reconvened to remove a $19 billion fee on large banks and hedge funds after Brown threatened to vote against the bill. Brown, of Massachusetts, supported a Senate version of the bill last month but said he objected to the fee, inserted by negotiators last week. In a statement Wednesday, Brown said he appreciated the removal of the fee, but said he would review the bill over next week’s recess. “I remain committed to putting in place safeguards to prevent another financial meltdown, ensure that consumers are protected, and that this bill is paid for without new taxes,” he said. President Barack Obama on Wednesday said Congress was on the verge of passing “the most comprehensive financial reform since the Great Depression” and decried Republican opposition to the bill. In an advance text of his remarks in Racine, Wis., Obama took aim at House Republican leader John Boehner of Ohio for remarking in a newspaper interview that the financial regulation bill was like using a nuclear weapon on an ant. “If the Republican leader is that out of touch with the struggles facing the American people, he should come here to Racine and ask people if they think the financial crisis was an ant,” Obama said. Brown was one of only four Senate Republicans to vote for a Senate version of the bill last month. That bill did not contain the $19 billion bank fee. House and Senate Democrats had already made changes to the bill to ensure Brown’s vote, adding exceptions to limits on bank trading that would help Massachusetts financial institutions such as Boston-based State Street Corp., a bank holding company with about $150 billion in assets. The death of Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., this week and fresh objections from Brown and Republicans Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe of Maine had threatened to derail the bill, already a year in the making. Brown, Snowe and Collins were three of 61 senators who had previously backed a Senate version of the bill. Eager to salvage one of President Barack Obama’s legislative priorities, Democrats dropped the fee that would have helped pay for the legislation. Banks with assets of over $50 billion and hedge funds with assets of more than $10 billion would have footed the bill. Instead, House and Senate negotiators, voting along party lines, agreed to pay for the bill with $11 billion generated by ending the unpopular Troubled Asset Relief Program – the $700 billion bank bailout created in the fall of 2008 at the height of the financial scare. They also agreed to increase premium rates paid by commercial banks to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to insure bank deposits. The premiums would increase from 1.15 percent of insured deposits to 1.35 percent by September 2020. The additional premium would be paid by banks with assets greater than $10 billion. The bank fee was proposed by Rep. Barney Frank, the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, as a way to meet House rules that require spending cuts or revenue increases to pay for the costs of legislation. Neither the House nor the Senate had voted for the bank assessment. By reluctantly ending TARP early, Democrats lost any hope of using some of the money toward unemployment extensions and other job related spending. It also prevented any savings realized by ending the program from being used toward lowering the deficit. Republicans complained the solution was budget gimmickry and that it went against Congress’ desire to use TARP repayments to reduce the debt. “I’m getting caught in the middle of an intra-Republican debate here,” Frank said after hearing Republicans on the House-Senate conference committee angrily deride the TARP-FDIC plan. Besides the three Republicans, Democrats also were working to win the support of Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., who voted against the Senate version last month. She complained the bill was not tough enough on banks. If unable to secure 60 votes, Democrats would have to wait for West Virginia’s Democratic governor, Joe Manchin, to appoint Byrd’s successor. Manchin has said he has no timetable for his decision.

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Hundreds Of Oil-Covered Birds Flooding Into Louisiana Wildlife Center

June 9, 2010

NEW ORLEANS — A wildlife rescue center in Louisiana says it has gotten more than five times as many oily birds in the past few days than in the previous six weeks combined. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reported Wednesday that the center at Fort Jackson has reported a little more than 400 birds since the BP well in the Gulf of Mexico blew out April 20. The report says more than 350 of those have been reported since Thursday. Oil from the leak has washed up on shores from Louisiana to Florida. The Coast Guard has said the cleanup could ultimately take years.

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ESPN Zone To Close

June 9, 2010

LOS ANGELES — The Walt Disney Co. plans to close five ESPN Zone restaurants in Baltimore, Chicago, New York, Las Vegas and Washington, D.C., saying the economics of the business were “very challenging.” The company said Wednesday that the two ESPN Zone restaurants in Los Angeles and Anaheim will remain open and operated by other companies. The sports bar and restaurant had arcade games and big-screen TVs and served up burgers and beer. The first ESPN Zone opened in Baltimore in July 1998 in the tourist attraction area known as Inner Harbor.

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Walgreens Will Not Stock Genetic Test By Pathway Genomics Without ‘Further Clarity’

May 13, 2010

WASHINGTON — The largest U.S. drugstore chain, Walgreen Co., said Wednesday it will hold off selling what was poised to be the first over-the-counter genetic test, after the Food and Drug Administration said the kit has not been proven effective. Pathway Genomics announced Tuesday that its saliva swab would be on Walgreen’s shelves later this month, offering millions of Americans the chance peek into their genetic code for signs of inheritable diseases like Alzheimer’s. But within 24 hours the company’s plan was met with stiff response from FDA regulators who said the products may run afoul of federal laws governing medical tests. On Wednesday, the FDA posted a letter to Pathways online, indicating the San Diego-based company never submitted its product for federal review, a requirement for medical devices. “These kits have not been proven safe, effective or accurate and patients could be making medical decisions based on data from a test that hasn’t been validated by the FDA,” said agency spokeswoman Erica Jefferson, in an earlier statement Wednesday. Walgreen said late Wednesday that the Deerfield, Ill., company had decided not to stock the tests until it has “further clarity” on the issue. Pathway’s test would have been the first low-cost, mass-marketed version of kits that screen for genes associated with diseases like prostate cancer, cystic fibrosis and diabetes. A saliva collection kit plus full genetic analysis from Pathway was slated to cost about $275. Companies like 23andMe and Navigenics have sold similar kits online for years, with prices ranging between $400 and $1,000. Those products have never been reviewed by the FDA, even though the agency has the power to regulate all such laboratory-developed medical tests. But agency officials said Wednesday that Pathway crossed “sanctioned boundaries” for such products by seeking to sell its products in retail pharmacies. The agency’s letter to Pathways, dated May 10, requests a response within 15 days. “We give them a chance to respond and tell us why do you think that this is, in fact, actually a legal product,” said Dr. Alberto Gutierrez, the FDA’s director of diagnostic testing. Pathways said in a statement it is communicating with the FDA and respects Walgreen’s decision to hold off stocking the product. The proliferation of consumer-marketed genetic tests has troubled many public health officials and doctors who worry that the products are built on flimsy data. “The problem with all of these products is they’re based on incomplete, invalidated data and we don’t know what the impact on consumers will be,” said Dr. Muin Khoury, director of the National Office of Public Health Genomics at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The biology of how DNA variations actually lead to certain diseases is still poorly understood, although a number of public and private institutions have been racing to find answers. Khoury said that knowing a patient’s medical history – including whether diabetes or heart disease run in their family – is actually more useful than current genetic testing. He and other experts worry that increasing prevalence of genomic tests could pressure doctors to order unnecessary tests and treatment. “I think it’s going to be a headache for both primary care physicians and for consumers themselves who are going to get these reports back and not know what to do with the information,” said Dr. Peter Kraft, professor of epidemiology at Harvard School of Public Health. But the prospect of millions of patients walking into their doctor’s office with DNA test results may be unrealistic. A CDC survey found that just 22 percent of Americans were aware of genomic testing. And a sampling of consumers interviewed by The Associated Press found that they have real concerns about the cost and potential misuses of such information. Deon Green, 36, of Indianapolis, said he might consider getting a genetic test, though the prices seem steep to him. “I couldn’t see myself spending $200,” he said. Although, he added, “$100 would be more suitable to my budget.” David Jones, 60, said he sees many good uses for genetic testing, but has no interest in taking one himself because of how the information might be used. Specifically, he worries that an insurer might cancel coverage because of test results, and he doesn’t trust laws that aim to prevent such discrimination. “I don’t care how many laws you have, laws don’t stop abuses from happening,” he said. ____ AP Business Writers Tom Murphy in Indianapolis and Richard Jacobsen in San Francisco contributed to this story.

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Walgreens Will Not Stock Genetic Test By Pathway Genomics Without ‘Further Clarity’

May 13, 2010

WASHINGTON — The largest U.S. drugstore chain, Walgreen Co., said Wednesday it will hold off selling what was poised to be the first over-the-counter genetic test, after the Food and Drug Administration said the kit has not been proven effective. Pathway Genomics announced Tuesday that its saliva swab would be on Walgreen’s shelves later this month, offering millions of Americans the chance peek into their genetic code for signs of inheritable diseases like Alzheimer’s. But within 24 hours the company’s plan was met with stiff response from FDA regulators who said the products may run afoul of federal laws governing medical tests. On Wednesday, the FDA posted a letter to Pathways online, indicating the San Diego-based company never submitted its product for federal review, a requirement for medical devices. “These kits have not been proven safe, effective or accurate and patients could be making medical decisions based on data from a test that hasn’t been validated by the FDA,” said agency spokeswoman Erica Jefferson, in an earlier statement Wednesday. Walgreen said late Wednesday that the Deerfield, Ill., company had decided not to stock the tests until it has “further clarity” on the issue. Pathway’s test would have been the first low-cost, mass-marketed version of kits that screen for genes associated with diseases like prostate cancer, cystic fibrosis and diabetes. A saliva collection kit plus full genetic analysis from Pathway was slated to cost about $275. Companies like 23andMe and Navigenics have sold similar kits online for years, with prices ranging between $400 and $1,000. Those products have never been reviewed by the FDA, even though the agency has the power to regulate all such laboratory-developed medical tests. But agency officials said Wednesday that Pathway crossed “sanctioned boundaries” for such products by seeking to sell its products in retail pharmacies. The agency’s letter to Pathways, dated May 10, requests a response within 15 days. “We give them a chance to respond and tell us why do you think that this is, in fact, actually a legal product,” said Dr. Alberto Gutierrez, the FDA’s director of diagnostic testing. Pathways said in a statement it is communicating with the FDA and respects Walgreen’s decision to hold off stocking the product. The proliferation of consumer-marketed genetic tests has troubled many public health officials and doctors who worry that the products are built on flimsy data. “The problem with all of these products is they’re based on incomplete, invalidated data and we don’t know what the impact on consumers will be,” said Dr. Muin Khoury, director of the National Office of Public Health Genomics at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The biology of how DNA variations actually lead to certain diseases is still poorly understood, although a number of public and private institutions have been racing to find answers. Khoury said that knowing a patient’s medical history – including whether diabetes or heart disease run in their family – is actually more useful than current genetic testing. He and other experts worry that increasing prevalence of genomic tests could pressure doctors to order unnecessary tests and treatment. “I think it’s going to be a headache for both primary care physicians and for consumers themselves who are going to get these reports back and not know what to do with the information,” said Dr. Peter Kraft, professor of epidemiology at Harvard School of Public Health. But the prospect of millions of patients walking into their doctor’s office with DNA test results may be unrealistic. A CDC survey found that just 22 percent of Americans were aware of genomic testing. And a sampling of consumers interviewed by The Associated Press found that they have real concerns about the cost and potential misuses of such information. Deon Green, 36, of Indianapolis, said he might consider getting a genetic test, though the prices seem steep to him. “I couldn’t see myself spending $200,” he said. Although, he added, “$100 would be more suitable to my budget.” David Jones, 60, said he sees many good uses for genetic testing, but has no interest in taking one himself because of how the information might be used. Specifically, he worries that an insurer might cancel coverage because of test results, and he doesn’t trust laws that aim to prevent such discrimination. “I don’t care how many laws you have, laws don’t stop abuses from happening,” he said. ____ AP Business Writers Tom Murphy in Indianapolis and Richard Jacobsen in San Francisco contributed to this story.

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Simon Property Makes New Offer for General Growth Properties

April 14, 2010

Simon Property Group Inc. on Wednesday offered to invest $2.5 billion to help General Growth Properties Inc. (NYSE: GGP) emerge from bankruptcy, a significantly scaled-back proposal that would give Simon a smaller stake in its troubled rival. GGP previously…

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OECD Trims 2011 Global Growth Outlook

April 11, 2010

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development lowered its forecasts for global economic growth in 2011 on Wednesday and warned policymakers that accommodating fiscal policy should be maintained into 2012 according to The Wall Street Journal

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Syracuse Students Protest JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon’s Commencement Speech

April 9, 2010

About 30 students gathered in Schine Student Center’s Panasci Lounge on Wednesday to form a plan of action to remove JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon as the 2010 commencement speaker.

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Borders Repays $42.5 Million Loan

April 1, 2010

The Borders Group said late Wednesday that it had repaid a $42.5 million loan from William A. Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management, its largest investor, and secured a new $700 million credit line from Bank of America and other banks. The struggling bookseller said it had also closed on a new $90 million term line.

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Borders Repays $42.5 Million Loan

April 1, 2010

The Borders Group said late Wednesday that it had repaid a $42.5 million loan from William A. Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management, its largest investor, and secured a new $700 million credit line from Bank of America and other banks. The struggling bookseller said it had also closed on a new $90 million term line.

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Man Group Assets Shrink Further

March 24, 2010

WSJ – Man Group PLC Wednesday said its business is continuing to shrink because of poor performance at its AHL trading program, and estimated full-year pretax profit will be less than half that in the previous year. The hedge-fund operator, which has seen its assets fall to $39.1 billion from a peak of $79.5 billion before the financial crisis, said it expects pretax profit for the year to be around $530 million, compared with $1.24 billion in fiscal 2009 and below average analyst estimates of around $550 million. Read Complete Article Tags: Syndicated Related posts No related posts.

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Owen Hegarty (G-Resources Group HKG:1051) to Present at Melbourne Symposium Wednesday 17th March, 2010

March 18, 2010

Owen Hegarty (G-Resources Group HKG:1051) to Present at Melbourne Symposium Wednesday 17th March, 2010

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House Votes To Repeal Antitrust Exemption For Health Insurers

February 24, 2010

The House voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to repeal the antitrust exemption currently granted to health insurance companies.

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Fed Unemployment Projection: Jobless Rate Will Stay High For Next 2 Years

February 17, 2010

WASHINGTON — With the economy healing, Federal Reserve officials debated last month when to reel in the extraordinary stimulus aid they injected into the economy. Some officials wanted to start selling assets on its books “in the near future,” documents released Wednesday show. Selling assets would sop up some of the stimulus money and shrink the Fed’s $2.2 trillion balance sheet. But many members expressed concern that such transactions could drive up interest rates and hurt the economic recovery. Last week, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said he didn’t expect any asset sales soon. The documents on the Fed’s closed-door meeting last month pointed to divergent thoughts about the timing and tools to reverse course and start tightening credit. The Fed also released a forecast Wednesday predicting unemployment will stay high over the next two years because recession-scarred Americans are likely to stay cautious. At the Jan. 26-27 meeting, the Fed left rates at a record low near zero to help nurture the recovery and drive down unemployment. And it pledged to hold rates at “exceptionally low” levels for an “extended period.” One Fed official, Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, objected to maintaining that pledge. He feared it would increase inflationary pressures, the documents show. Instead, Hoenig wanted to change the language to say rates would stay low for “some time.” Hoenig said he thought such a change would give the Fed more flexibility to start raising rates, the documents said. Hoenig also thought a move toward “modestly higher” interest rates should happen soon. Bernanke, in remarks last week, suggested the Fed is still months away from raising rates and draining money out of the financial system. The recovery is still fragile and unemployment, now at 9.7 percent, is high. In its economic forecast, Fed policymakers said it will take “some time” for the economy and the jobs market to get back to normal. They did not spell out how long that would be. Previously, they suggested it could take five or six years for economic conditions to return to full health. A “sizable minority,” though, said they thought it could take more than five or six years for the economy and the job market to return to normal. The Fed said the unemployment rate this year could hover between 9.5 percent and 9.7 percent and between 8.2 percent and 8.5 percent next year. By 2012, the rate will range between 6.6 percent and 7.5 percent, it predicted. Those forecasts are little changed from projections the Fed released in late November. But they suggest unemployment will remain elevated heading into this year’s congressional elections and the presidential election in 2012. A more normal unemployment rate would be between 5.5 percent and 6 percent. Fed policymakers “expect that the pace of the economic recovery will be restrained by household and business uncertainty, only gradual improvement in labor market conditions and a slow easing of credit conditions in the banking sector,” according to the forecast. Against that backdrop, the Fed expects the economy will grow between 2.8 percent and 3.5 percent this year. Growth will pick up to between 3.4 percent and 4.5 percent next year and log similar growth in 2012. The economy would need to grow by at least 5 percent a year to make a dent in the unemployment rate, analysts say. As Fed policymakers debated ways to bring policy closer to normal, most thought that a future program of “gradual” asset sales could be helpful in shrinking the Fed’s balance sheet.Among those the Fed’s assets are mortgage securities it has bought from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Fed is scheduled to end $1.25 trillion worth of such purchases at the end of March. The purchases are aimed at lowering mortgage rates and bolstering the housing market. The Fed has held the door open to extending the program if the economy weakened. Some analysts fear that once the program ends, mortgage rates could rise, hurting the recovery in housing and the overall economy. Last week, Bernanke said the central bank will likely start to tighten credit by boosting the rate it pays banks on money they leave at the central bank. Doing so would raise rates tied to commercial banks’ prime rate and affect many consumer loans. Fed officials said that bumping up the interest on bank reserves would be a key element of their exit strategy, according to Wednesday’s documents. Officials offered a range of strategies on how this and other tools could be used.

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Fed Unemployment Projection: Jobless Rate Will Stay High For Next 2 Years

February 17, 2010

WASHINGTON — With the economy healing, Federal Reserve officials debated last month when to reel in the extraordinary stimulus aid they injected into the economy. Some officials wanted to start selling assets on its books “in the near future,” documents released Wednesday show. Selling assets would sop up some of the stimulus money and shrink the Fed’s $2.2 trillion balance sheet. But many members expressed concern that such transactions could drive up interest rates and hurt the economic recovery. Last week, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said he didn’t expect any asset sales soon. The documents on the Fed’s closed-door meeting last month pointed to divergent thoughts about the timing and tools to reverse course and start tightening credit. The Fed also released a forecast Wednesday predicting unemployment will stay high over the next two years because recession-scarred Americans are likely to stay cautious. At the Jan. 26-27 meeting, the Fed left rates at a record low near zero to help nurture the recovery and drive down unemployment. And it pledged to hold rates at “exceptionally low” levels for an “extended period.” One Fed official, Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, objected to maintaining that pledge. He feared it would increase inflationary pressures, the documents show. Instead, Hoenig wanted to change the language to say rates would stay low for “some time.” Hoenig said he thought such a change would give the Fed more flexibility to start raising rates, the documents said. Hoenig also thought a move toward “modestly higher” interest rates should happen soon. Bernanke, in remarks last week, suggested the Fed is still months away from raising rates and draining money out of the financial system. The recovery is still fragile and unemployment, now at 9.7 percent, is high. In its economic forecast, Fed policymakers said it will take “some time” for the economy and the jobs market to get back to normal. They did not spell out how long that would be. Previously, they suggested it could take five or six years for economic conditions to return to full health. A “sizable minority,” though, said they thought it could take more than five or six years for the economy and the job market to return to normal. The Fed said the unemployment rate this year could hover between 9.5 percent and 9.7 percent and between 8.2 percent and 8.5 percent next year. By 2012, the rate will range between 6.6 percent and 7.5 percent, it predicted. Those forecasts are little changed from projections the Fed released in late November. But they suggest unemployment will remain elevated heading into this year’s congressional elections and the presidential election in 2012. A more normal unemployment rate would be between 5.5 percent and 6 percent. Fed policymakers “expect that the pace of the economic recovery will be restrained by household and business uncertainty, only gradual improvement in labor market conditions and a slow easing of credit conditions in the banking sector,” according to the forecast. Against that backdrop, the Fed expects the economy will grow between 2.8 percent and 3.5 percent this year. Growth will pick up to between 3.4 percent and 4.5 percent next year and log similar growth in 2012. The economy would need to grow by at least 5 percent a year to make a dent in the unemployment rate, analysts say. As Fed policymakers debated ways to bring policy closer to normal, most thought that a future program of “gradual” asset sales could be helpful in shrinking the Fed’s balance sheet.Among those the Fed’s assets are mortgage securities it has bought from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Fed is scheduled to end $1.25 trillion worth of such purchases at the end of March. The purchases are aimed at lowering mortgage rates and bolstering the housing market. The Fed has held the door open to extending the program if the economy weakened. Some analysts fear that once the program ends, mortgage rates could rise, hurting the recovery in housing and the overall economy. Last week, Bernanke said the central bank will likely start to tighten credit by boosting the rate it pays banks on money they leave at the central bank. Doing so would raise rates tied to commercial banks’ prime rate and affect many consumer loans. Fed officials said that bumping up the interest on bank reserves would be a key element of their exit strategy, according to Wednesday’s documents. Officials offered a range of strategies on how this and other tools could be used.

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Toll Brothers’ Website to Broadcast Its February 24, 2010 "First Quarter 2010 Earnings" Conference Call Live

February 5, 2010

HORSHAM, Pa., Feb. 5, 2010 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Toll Brothers, Inc. (NYSE:TOL), the nation’s leading builder of luxury homes, will broadcast live on its website, www.tollbrothers.com, a conference call to discuss its FY 2010 first quarter results. The event is scheduled for 2:00 P.M. (EST) on Wednesday, February 24, 2010. It will follow announcement of the Company’s first quarter 2010 results for earnings, revenues, contracts and backlog before the market opens on Wednesday, February 24, 2010. The call will be hosted by Robert I. Toll, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.

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Yahoo Sells HotJobs To Monster For $225 Million

February 3, 2010

SUNNYVALE, Calif. — Yahoo is selling its online help-wanted site, HotJobs, to rival Monster Worldwide for $225 million in cash. The deal announced Wednesday reflects HotJobs’ diminishing value as the high unemployment rate undercuts the demand for help-wanted advertising. Yahoo bought HotJobs for $439 million in 2002. The sale is part of Yahoo’s effort to jettison services that aren’t doing well or don’t fit with its focus on news, entertainment and communications. As part of the deal, Monster.com will provide Yahoo with job listings and other employment content. Monster hopes to take control of HotJobs between June and October.

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Obama: Send $30 Billion In Big Bank Bailout Money To Community Lenders For Small Business

January 28, 2010

President Obama devoted the biggest portion of his first State of the Union address on Wednesday night to various aspects of job creation. While I appreciate Obama’s aspirational and inspirational speeches — in Cairo on Islamic relations and in Oslo on waging war, to name two standouts — I welcome some nitty-gritty coming from the president.

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New Home Construction Takes Big Dive In December

January 20, 2010

WASHINGTON — The housing market remains a significant risk to the economy, data Wednesday showed, as bad weather across much of the country hammered the construction industry. Along with icy storms, the real estate recovery is facing man-made headwinds. On Wednesday, the government said buyers will face higher fees and tougher standards for home loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration, a popular source of loans for first-time buyers. Unemployment is expected to remain high throughout the year, which will drive the foreclosure rate to new records. “If we don’t get some jobs, it’s not going to make a difference,” said Rick Jenkins, owner of R.J. Builders in Terre Haute Ind. Construction of new homes and apartments fell 4 percent in December to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 557,000 from an upwardly revised 580,000 in November, the Commerce Department said. Applications for future projects, however, increased strongly as the industry ramps up for the spring selling season. The results for new home construction were lower than the 580,000 forecast by economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters and were led by declines of 19 percent in the Northeast and Midwest. Construction fell 1 percent in the West, but rose more than 3 percent in the South. Like homeowners, builders are also having trouble getting loans. David Crowe, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders, said the industry has seen financing for new projects dry up steadily over the past 18 months. Applications for new building permits, a gauge of future activity, rose 11 percent to an annual rate of 653,000, a far stronger showing than economists had predicted and the highest level of activity since October 2008. Analysts were divided about the report’s significance. Patrick Newport, an economist with IHS Global Insight, noted that home permits have increased strongly for two straight months, which should lead to more hiring in the construction industry. “The economy has performed much better than we had anticipated that it would perform six months ago,” Newport said. However, Sal Guatieri, an economist at BMO Capital Markets, said the slowdown in construction in the last three months of the year will be a drag on economic output. While home construction usually snaps back at the start of an economic recovery, Guatieri expects the housing and financial crises to “leave an enduring footprint on this recovery.” The building industry has dramatically scaled back construction after the worst housing bust in decades. Thousands of foreclosed homes have been dumped on the market at bargain prices that make it difficult for the builders to compete. Another source of worry is that lending standards are also tightening too. The Federal Housing Administration, the dominant source of funding for first-time homebuyers, said Wednesday it would raise fees and standards for borrowers to qualify. The agency needs to shore up its precarious finances amid fears that it will need a taxpayer bailout. “The changes are a necessary adjustment but it does not mean that it won’t hurt a little,” said Chris Brown, a loan officer with Trinity Mortgage Co. in Orlando, Fla. The FHA does not make loans, but rather offers insurance against default. Borrowers are willing to pay for the insurance because FHA loans only require down payments of 3.5 percent of the purchase price – a minimum level that will remain the same under the new rules. Meanwhile, inflation pressures at the wholesale level eased in December as a drop in energy prices offset a big jump in food costs. The Labor Department said Wednesday that wholesale prices edged up 0.2 percent last month, much slower than the 1.8 percent surge in November. Energy prices, which had been up for two months, fell in December. The price performance at the wholesale level combined with last week’s benign reading on consumer prices supported the view that inflation is not a problem. But on Wall Street, investors instead focused on tighter lending rules in China. If the country’s huge economy slows, it could hurt demand for U.S. exports. In late afternoon trading, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 160 points from a 15-month high, its biggest drop since Oct. 30. ___ AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger contributed to this report. Real Estate Writers Alex Veiga and Adrian Sainz contributed reporting from Las Vegas and Miami.

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How high, how long? Commercial real estate vacancies expected to …

January 17, 2010

While the housing market could hit bottom this year, commercial real estate is expected to have a bleak 2010 no thanks to high vacancy rates and tight lending, industry insiders said Wednesday at the Builders Association of Northern …

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Michael Hirsh: Financial Crisis Commission ‘Was A Failure’

January 14, 2010

One sure measure of a successful Washington hearing is the presence of tension, lots of it. Key witnesses are put on the spot. Truths are revealed under close questioning. Embarrassing discrepancies are exposed. Think of the Watergate hearings. Or Iran-contra. Judged by that standard, the inaugural session of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission on Wednesday was a failure.

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Financial Crisis Commission Is NOT Living Up To Its 1930s Counterpart: Rolfe Winkler

January 14, 2010

Ferdinand Pecora turned a tame United States investigation of the 1929 Crash into an expose that spawned far-reaching banking reform. Despite flashes of incisiveness from Chairman Phil Angelides, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission’s debut with Wall Street bosses Wednesday lacked that kind of promise. It’s early days, but the panel needs to sharpen up.

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Economic Recovery In Cities Will Lag National Recovery By Two Years: Study

January 13, 2010

U.S. cities will face a collective budget shortfall of at least $56 billion over the next two years, with the current recession not seen hitting bottom until 2011, according to a report Wednesday.

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Disruptions expected Wednesday due to French air traffic strike

January 13, 2010

Disruptions expected Wednesday due to French air traffic strike

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FCIC Set To Question Bank CEOs In Search For ‘Accountability’ In Financial Crisis

January 12, 2010

Top executives from four of the biggest banks that got federal bailouts are likely to face tough questions Wednesday from a commission charged by Congress to do the most thorough investigation yet into the causes of the financial crisis.

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S&P 500's worst performers suffered from CRE loan exposure

December 31, 2009

Commercial and residential real estate mortgages played a big part in depressing the share prices of the worst-performing public companies on the Standard & Poor's 500 index in 2009. As of Wednesday, Marshall

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Icahn to Sell $2B in New Debt; Opens Tender Offers

December 30, 2009

Icahn Enterprises LP, billionaire Carl Icahn’s investing vehicle, on Wednesday said it will sell $2 billion of new senior debt securities in a private placement.

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Madoff Leaves Prison Hospital, Back In Cell

December 30, 2009

BUTNER, N.C. — Bernard Madoff has left his North Carolina prison’s hospital unit and returned to his cell. The 71-year-old disgraced financier had been transferred to a prison hospital on Dec. 18. Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman Denise Simmons said Wednesday he was transferred back to the medium security section of the complex Monday. She declined to discuss Madoff’s health. Madoff’s lawyer has said that Madoff had dizziness and high blood pressure. Prisons officials have said he was not assaulted. Madoff is serving a 150-year sentence after pleading guilty to fraud and admitting to cheating thousands of investors out of billions of dollars.

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GMAC’s Latest Bailout: $3.5 Billion More In Aid, According To Report

December 30, 2009

WASHINGTON — The government on Wednesday was moving ahead with a fresh multibillion dollar cash infusion to stabilize auto finance company GMAC Financial Services as it continues to struggle with big losses in its home mortgage unit, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because discussions weren’t complete, says the government aid would range around $3 billion. That would be less than the roughly $6 billion the government had earlier thought GMAC would need to stabilize the company. Shoring up GMAC has been a major component of the Obama administration’s massive effort to rescue ailing automakers General Motors and Chrysler. The lender provides critical wholesale financing to thousands of GM and Chrysler auto dealers, allowing them to stock their showroom floors with vehicles. GMAC has already received $12.5 billion in taxpayer money and is 35 percent owned by the federal government. But GMAC also operates a large residential mortgage business, ResCap, which was battered by the recent housing collapse. GMAC was obligated by the Treasury Department to raise $11.5 billion in additional capital earlier this year after failing the government’s stress test for banks, largely because of ResCap’s big losses. However, GMAC had difficulty raising money because of its financial woes, making an extra government infusion necessary. An announcement of the latest injection of aid could come late Wednesday or on Thursday. Treasury spokesman Andrew Williams declined to offer details, but said: “Treasury is in discussions with GMAC to ensure its capital needs as determined … by the stress tests are met.” GMAC spokeswoman Gina Proia said Wednesday that GMAC is weighing options for reviving ResCap. It is also reviewing its broader business as it tries to improve its financial health and eventually repay the taxpayer money it has already received. Michael Carpenter, who succeeded Alvaro De Molina as the company’s CEO in November, has said the company would need no more than $5.6 billion in aid. Lawmakers estimated the company would receive between $2 billion and $5 billion in additional aid. Despite the government support, GMAC still remains on shaky financial ground. Last month, it reported a quarterly loss of $767 million, though the results were an improvement over a giant loss a year ago. ResCap lost $747 million during the third quarter as homeowners continued to default on their mortgages in large numbers. GMAC has also been hurt by the rapid decline of the U.S. auto industry after sales crumbled due to the recession and financial woes of the big automakers. Sales of cars and trucks were down 24 percent through November compared with the same part of last year. Despite the drop in auto sales, GMAC’s auto lending business has shown some signs of revival. The auto financing division earned a profit of $395 million during the third quarter. The company’s online consumer banking unit, Ally Bank, has also been a bright spot by bringing in billions of dollars in new deposits by offering relatively high interest rates. __ AP Business Writers Candice Choi and Dan Strumpf in New York contributed to this report.

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Intrawest in talks with lenders (MalaysiaNews.net)

December 26, 2009

Intrawest ULC, a Vancouver-based ski-resort operator owned by private-equity firm Fortress Investment Group LLC, is in talks with lenders about a debt payment due Wednesday on a US$1.4- billion loan, …

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Debt uncertainty hits Dubai stocks

December 23, 2009

Arab region on Wednesday, with Dubai suffering its biggest daily loss in two weeks, as uncertainty over its debt continued to weigh on investor sentiment. Dubai’s benchmark fell 3.8 percent to 1,736 points. “Still people are feeling uncertain about real

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Lehman’s $50M Bonus Package For Employees Unwinding Derivatives Contracts Approved By Bankruptcy Judge

December 18, 2009

NEW YORK–A judge on Wednesday said Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. could pay $50 million in bonuses to employees still grappling with a huge derivatives portfolio 15 months after Lehman’s collapse.

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Brian Moynihan Named Bank Of America CEO

December 17, 2009

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Bank of America’s new CEO says he doesn’t expect to lead a major shift in strategy at the nation’s largest bank when he takes over from Ken Lewis on Jan. 1. But with loan losses continuing to mount amid double-digit unemployment rates, it remains to be seen whether investors will embrace staying the course. Bank of America’s board late Wednesday named its 50-year-old consumer and small business banking chief, Brian Moynihan, as president and CEO. The promotion ended a months-long search complicated by pay restrictions imposed by government pay czar Kenneth Feinberg before the bank repaid $45 billion of federal bailout loans needed to prevent its failure over the past year. “I am pleased that it’s finally over,” said Nancy Bush, managing member of NAB Research LLC in Annandale, N.J. Bush said there will be divergent opinions both on Wall Street and within the bank about Moynihan, but overall, she feels it was the smart move. “My concern about bringing in an external candidate was that somebody would come in and feel the need to put their stamp on the company through a restructuring or through a period of turbulence,” she said. “The bank just doesn’t need that right now. An internal candidate who knows the players and who knows what needs to be done … is probably a wiser choice at this point.” Analysts have said outside candidates likely would have wanted to break up the company, something Bank of America’s board reportedly is reluctant to do. “Brian’s wide range of experience, his relationships inside and outside of the company, and his demonstrated ability to understand business dynamics and effect constructive change made him the best person for the position,” said Bank of America Chairman Walter E. Massey, who led the CEO search. Massey said that while the bank did consider external candidates, the board decided that Moynihan’s experience was as good or better, “and he offered the advantage of a smooth transition.” Bank of America didn’t immediately return messages left seeking comment. But Moynihan told The Wall Street Journal Wednesday night that he doesn’t plan to exit any current businesses, nor does he foresee making any major changes to the bank’s strategy. “Clearly, customers and clients have benefited from the franchise Ken Lewis, Hugh McColl and others have built over the decades. Our business model has also worked for shareholders,” he said in a statement. “What we need to do now is very simple. We need to execute.” Moynihan joined the Charlotte, N.C.-based bank as part of its 2004 purchase of FleetBoston Financial Corp., where he led global wealth and investment management. Over the past year he has served as BofA general counsel, head of global corporate and investment banking and consumer banking chief. He will now join the bank’s board of directors. As the new CEO, Moynihan faces many daunting tasks. He must juggle regulatory investigations into the bank’s 2008 acquisition of Merrill Lynch while trying to repair relationship with regulators and members of Congress who sharply criticized Lewis after the bank required billions in aid. Some of those lawmakers, including Maryland Democrat Rep. Elijah Cummings, had also questioned Moynihan’s leadership skills during a hearing on the Merrill takeover. Moynihan takes over at time when the bank faces continued loan losses in the billions of dollars. It lost more than $2.2 billion in the third quarter as bad debt kept rising as consumers still struggled to pay their bills. Bank of America, which has about 53 million consumer and small business customers, is considered particularly vulnerable to unemployment, which remains at double-digit levels. Bank of America told the Treasury Department of its decision before making the announcement, and Treasury raised no objections, according to industry officials familiar with the matter. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the bank’s discussions were private. The Treasury Department declined to comment Wednesday evening. Lewis, 62, announced his departure in September in a move that surprised Bank of America’s board and left it scrambling for a replacement with no clear succession plan in place. Before then, Lewis had promised he would remain as CEO until the bank cleared up its financial problems. But the heavy regulatory scrutiny and shareholder fury that accompanied the Merrill deal drove Lewis to decide to step down early. Lewis said Wednesday he believes Moynihan “is the right person to lead our company forward.” Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, said he hopes Moynihan “appreciates the debt Bank of America owes to U.S. taxpayers, and is prepared to increase lending to consumers and small businesses in order to create jobs and grow the economy.” One thing Moynihan doesn’t have to worry about is repaying the government loans. The bank received $25 billion from the government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, as part of the initial round of investments into hundreds of financial institutions when the credit crisis peaked last fall. It then received an additional $20 billion shortly after it acquired Merrill Lynch in what was a heavily scrutinized deal. Bank of America repaid the money it received from TARP on Dec. 8. That freed the bank from the government restrictions that had hampered its search for a new CEO, including executive pay limitations. However, its negotiations with outside candidates continued to falter. Bank of New York Mellon Corp.’s CEO Robert Kelly told employees Monday that he wasn’t going anywhere, leaving BofA with one less candidate for its top job. Media reports had listed Kelly among the top choices to lead the bank. Other candidates reportedly had included: Bob Diamond, president of British bank Barclays PLC; Larry Fink, CEO of asset manager BlackRock Inc.; and New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, a former Goldman Sachs chairman and CEO. Bank of America’s chief risk officer, Gregory Curl, was also a top internal candidate for Lewis’ job. It wasn’t clear Wednesday night if Curl, 61, would remain at the bank. By picking someone from within, “you express an ability to create a culture that can produce leaders and that’s very important,” said Keith Springer, president of Sacramento, Calif.-based Capital Financial Advisory Services, which owns financial stocks. “It’s important for these companies to show they have longevity,” he said. “And if you can’t breed leaders, then you can’t survive.” ___ AP Business Writers Sara Lepro in New York and Daniel Wagner in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

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Realty Times – Part 2: Creating A Business Model from the Current …

December 9, 2009

Real Estate News And Advice – Part 2: Creating A Business Model from the Current Distressed Asset Marketplace. … consulting focuses are public speaking and media relations development and content delivery and management, Peter is also the host of the Voice America Network’s weekly radio program, “Income Property Investment Talk,” a one-hour program that brings the powerhouses of commercial and residential real estate to property investors every Wednesday at 11 a.m. EST. …

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Report: Indebted Dubai World rejected asset sale

November 29, 2009

as saying over past months Dubai World ‘rejected the idea of selling some of its good investment and real estate assets.’ Dubai World’s holdings range from ports to real estate. It said Wednesday it was seeking a debt payment deferment of at least six

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30-year-loan rates match record low (Washington Post)

November 27, 2009

Average rates for 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages fell this week, matching a record low set last spring. Rates are more than a full percentage point below what they were a year ago, Freddie Mac said Wednesday.

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