The Emperor Has No Cloths

Posted By on March 12, 2010

Emperor Has No Cloths

Silverstein May Default on Debt for 575 Lexington Now Faces “Imminent Default” On Debt Tied To The Property

Posted By on March 11, 2010

Silverstein May Default on Debt for 575 Lexington


By Brian Louis and David M. Levitt

March 10 (Bloomberg) — New York developer Larry Silverstein, who teamed with the California State Teachers Retirement System to buy a 35-story skyscraper in 2006, now faces “imminent default” on debt tied to the property, Fitch Ratings said today.

Silverstein and Calstrs paid $400 million for the tower at 575 Lexington Ave. in Midtown Manhattan near the height of the U.S. property boom. A loan balance of $325 million was turned over to so-called special servicing today, Fitch said.

The transfer “was done at our request to help facilitate ongoing discussions with our lender about a modification to our loan, which is not currently in default,” Silverstein spokesman Dara McQuillan said in an e-mailed statement.

Investors are defaulting on loan payments for commercial real estate at record levels as vacancies at malls, offices and industrial properties climb and rents fall. Delinquencies on loans packaged and sold as commercial mortgage-backed securities rose to a record 6.7 percent in February from 1.7 percent a year earlier, according to New York-based research firm Trepp LLC.

Kushner Cos. said last week that it sought special servicing on the debt it used to buy Manhattan’s 666 Fifth Ave. in 2007 for $1.8 billion, what was then a record price for a U.S. office building. Vornado Realty Trust, the New York-based real estate investment trust founded by Steven Roth, last week asked that a $217 million loan on properties it owns in North Carolina be sent to a special servicer, saying it wasn’t prepared to fund any shortfalls on the debt.

Income Tax Rates For The 10 Highest Tax Countries…..Hint, The U.S. Isn’t On This List!

Posted By on March 11, 2010

Here‘s a rundown of average income tax rates for 10 high-tax countries, based on information from the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development. The data are for 2008, the most recent numbers available.

 10. Australia

Income tax rates:

Single, no child: 22.6%

Single, two children: 22.6%

One-earner married couple, no child: 19.1%

One-earner married couple, two children: 22.6%

Average income tax: 21.7%

It was recently reported that Australia’s federal government may raise taxes soon “to pay for an ambitious takeover of the nation’s ailing public health care system.” Looks like health care legislation is hot, even down under.

9. France

Income tax rates:

Single, no child: 27.8%

Single, two children: 22.5%

One-earner married couple, no child: 23.9%

One-earner married couple, two children: 21.9%

Average Income Tax: 24%

Slow times are ahead for France’s economy. As BusinessWeek reported, “France’s economy will expand at a slower pace in the first quarter than previously estimated, growing 0.4% compared with an initial prediction of 0.5%, the central bank said in today’s statement.”

8. Italy

Income tax rates:

Single, no child: 29.3%

Single, two children: 24.3%

One-earner married couple, no child: 26.7%

One-earner married couple, two children: 21.9%

Average income tax: 25.6%

Italy’s economy has hit an unexpected speed bump, BusinessWeek reported: “Italy’s economy unexpectedly shrank in the fourth quarter as manufacturers cut back on production even after the country emerged from its worst recession in more than six decades.”

7. Greece

Income tax rates:

Single, no child: 26.3%

Single, two children: 25.5%

One-earner married couple, no child: 27.4%

One-earner married couple, two children: 26.6%

Average income tax: 26.5%

In case you haven’t heard, Greece is having a bad year. Its government is in massive debt, and its citizens oppose the government’s plans to correct the problem.

Those who work for the tax authorities in Greece are among the strikers who oppose the government’s new “austerity” plan to get its budget deficit under control.

6. Finland

Income tax rates:

Single, no child: 30%

Single, two children: 30%

One-earner married couple, no child: 30%

One-earner married couple, two children: 30%

Average Income Tax: 30%

They may be taxed at a pretty high 30%, but at least everyone is taxed evenly. Unfortunately, flat taxes aren’t helping the country’s economy fight the global recession. According to one recent report, Finland’s “economy last year saw its biggest annual fall since 1918 as the global downturn dampened demand for key exports like paper and mobile phones.”

When we can’t afford our Nokia (NOK) smart phones, it hurts Finland’s economy.

5. Austria


Income tax rates:

Single, no child: 33.9%

Single, two children: 32.2%

One-earner married couple, no child: 33%

One-earner married couple, two children: 32.2%

Average income tax: 32.8%

Austria was hit by the global economic downturn, but not as severely as many other countries: “Austrian GDP contracted 3.6% in 2009 and it will probably see positive growth of nearly 1% in 2010. Unemployment has not risen as steeply in Austria as elsewhere in Europe, partly because its government has subsidized reduced working hour schemes to allow companies to retain employees,” according to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.

4. Germany

Income tax rates:

Single, no child: 42.7%

Single, two children: 32.1%

One-earner married couple, no child: 33.2%

One-earner married couple, two children: 24.1%

Average income tax: 33%

Now this is interesting: “Thousands of wealthy Germans have come forward after authorities said they would buy a stolen CD with the names of up to 1,500 German citizens hiding cash away in Switzerland.”

The German government intends to purchase a disc for around 2.5 million euros ($3.4 million) that discloses the many rich German citizens who have been stashing cash in Switzerland to shirk German taxes. But now the tax man may have the upper hand.

3. BelgiumIncome tax rates:

 

Single, no child: 42.5%

Single, two children: 39%

One-earner married couple, no child: 33.8%

One-earner married couple, two children: 31.3%Belgium’s high tax rates make it difficult for retail workers to survive, says The Economist. “There are some genuinely tragic stories out there in this recession. For example, in Belgium, shop workers from the Carrefour supermarket chain are braced for a nationwide strike over plans to lay off nearly 2,000 staff at Belgian stores and depots. According to Le Soir newspaper, a 32-year-old cashier with five years’ experience at Carrefour is paid 1,705 euros a month, gross. After Belgian taxes and social security charges are deducted, that is a brutally small amount to live on.”

Average income tax: 36.7%

 

2. Denmark

Income tax rates:

Single, no child: 40.9%

Single, two children: 40.9%

One-earner married couple, no child: 35.6%

One-earner married couple, two children: 35.6%

Average income tax: 38.25%

Denmark’s unemployment rate is much lower than ours. As recently reported by The Wall Street Journal, “Denmark’s unemployment rate held steady in January for the third straight month, showing the same kind of resilience that has surprised market watchers in neighboring Norway and Sweden.”

1. Hungary

Income tax rates:

Single, no child: 38.3%

Single, two children: 38.3%

One-earner married couple, no child: 38.3%

One-earner married couple, two children: 38.3%

Average income tax: 38.3%

According to a recent article in the Budapest Times, Hungarian politicians feel the tax burden needs to be lowered in order to stabilize the nation’s economy: “Tax cuts and employment growth are the main prescriptions offered by Hungary’s major political parties to cure the country’s lackluster competitiveness and its social ills.”

 Complete article at  http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Taxes/blog/page.aspx?post=1692807&_blg=1,1692807

A Little Color On State Bankruptcy Procedures

Posted By on March 11, 2010

From Art Cashin on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange………A little color on state bankruptcy procedures.  

California And Bankruptcy – Earlier this week Slate ran an informative piece explaining why California can’t go into bankruptcy.  The simple reason is that there is no law to allow it to do so.  Here’s a bit from the essay:

Chapter 9 of the U.S. bankruptcy code allows individuals and municipalities (cities, towns, villages, etc.) to declare bankruptcy. But that doesn’t include states. (The statute defines “municipality” as a “political subdivision or public agency or instrumentality of a State”—that is, not a state itself.) For one thing, states are said to have sovereign immunity, as protected by the 11th Amendment, which means they can’t be sued. In other words, they don’t need any protection from angry creditors who would take them to court for failing to pay their debts. As a result, states can simply borrow money ad infinitum.

Say the state can’t make its debt payments, and no one will lend it any more money. In that case, the federal government can step in and put the state into receivership. This would involve the assignment of an accountant to manage the state’s debt, overseen by a judge. It would be a lot like bankruptcy, except instead of following a structured set of steps—informing creditors, appointing creditors’ committees, a 120-day window to file a plan, etc.—a receiver has the authority to force creditors to renegotiate loans in a speedy fashion. However, the accountant in charge would not have the power to make decisions about the state’s budget, such as which programs needed to be cut and which taxes had to be raised. (No state has ever gone into receivership.)

As you can see, a default by California and subsequent receivership, would not only be unprecedented, it would be unwieldy and probably ugly.  The same would be true in the case of other states.

This Chart Says It All…..Absolute Debt To GDP

Posted By on March 10, 2010

Absolute Debt To GDP

Pimco’s El-Erian Says Public Finance Shock May Deepen

Posted By on March 10, 2010

Pimco’s El-Erian Says Public Finance Shock May Deepen 

By Garfield Reynolds

March 11 (Bloomberg) — Mohamed A. El-Erian, whose company runs the world’s biggest mutual fund, said deteriorating public finances around the world may affect the global economy more than is currently realized.

“The importance of the shock to public finances in advanced economies is not yet sufficiently appreciated and understood,” El-Erian, co-chief investment officer at Pacific Investment Management Co., wrote in an article on the Financial Times Web site. The potential damage from increased government borrowings is “at present being viewed primarily — and excessively — through the narrow prism of Greece,” he wrote.

Governments may have to raise taxes and slash spending to cope with swelling deficits after nations including the U.S. borrowed unprecedented amounts to stave off the global financial crisis, said El-Erian, 51, who shares his job title with Bill Gross. A failure to carry out fiscal measures in time would raise the possibility of governments seeking to eliminate excessive debt through inflation or default, he said.

Pimco has said debt strains in Greece, Portugal and Spain underscore its view that 2010 will be a year of slower-than- average growth, and predicts there will be a shrinking global role for the U.S. economy.

Greece, which had the European Union’s widest budget deficit at 12.7 percent of output last year, has struggled to convince investors it can bring the shortfall within the bloc’s limit of 3 percent. The government last week announced spending cuts and tax increases totaling 4.8 billion euros ($6.55 billion), the third round of austerity measures this year.

The worst of Greece’s financial crisis is over and other European nations won’t follow in its path, former European Commission President Romano Prodi said.

“For Greece, the problem is completely over,” said Prodi, who was also Italian prime minister, in an interview in Shanghai yesterday. “I don’t think there is any reason to think the euro system will collapse or will suffer greatly because of Greece.”

The euro has weakened 4.8 percent against the dollar this year as Greece’s struggle to rein in its budget deficit eroded confidence in the European currency.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said March 7 the 16-nation euro region must support Greece, which has more than 20 billion euros of debt maturing in April and May, or risk destroying the currency. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has so far refused to give the green light to any aid package.

Gross advised investors in a commentary published in January to seek investments in “less levered” countries such as China, India and Brazil whose economies are not as prone to “bubbling.” He called the U.K. “a must to avoid,” while recommending Germany and Canada.

The increasing debt burdens of countries including the U.S. mean many nations classified as advanced economies now may have weaker prospects than emerging economies, El-Erian wrote in Financial Times’ article.

“U.S. sovereign indebtedness has surged by a previously unthinkable 20 percentage points of gross domestic product in less than two years,” El-Erian said. “Countries will thus be forced to make difficult decisions relating to higher taxation and lower spending. If these do not materialize on a timely basis, the universe of likely outcomes will expand to include inflating out of excessive debt and, in the extreme, default and confiscation.”

Japan’s Finance Minister Naoto Kan last month said the government will start debate on overhauling the sales tax in March to help repair the country’s finances.

President Barack Obama on Feb. 12 signed a bill into law that raised the federal debt limit by $1.9 trillion to $14.3 trillion and placed new curbs on spending in an attempt to prevent this year’s record deficit from becoming worse.

Last Updated: March 10, 2010 21:01 EST

Read the entire article at http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aYI_3n1Zc13s&pos=3#

Oil Companies Looking At Permanent Refinery Cutbacks

Posted By on March 10, 2010

The response to slumping gasoline use would likely mean higher prices for drivers.  

 

Some of the nation’s biggest oil companies are looking at permanently reducing how much gasoline and diesel fuel they make, a move that analysts say would almost certainly trigger higher prices for drivers.

Energy companies are suffering huge losses from refining because of slumping gasoline use — a product of the economic downturn and changing consumer habits and preferences. Energy experts say refining cutbacks have already begun and will accelerate as corporations strive for profits.

Major refiners have been circumspect about their plans, saying they are considering options that could include closing refineries, selling parts of their operations, laying off workers or slashing spending.

“Refineries will have to be closed,” said Fadel Gheit, senior energy analyst with Oppenheimer & Co. “Unless this excess capacity is permanently shuttered, a recovery in refining margins is unsustainable.”

This week, Chevron Corp. launched an overhaul of its fuel-making and retailing business with a plan to cut at least 2,000 jobs, put a refinery in Wales up for sale and take a hard look at its Hawaii refinery.

Royal Dutch Shell said it is reviewing its refinery operations with the idea of keeping only those with the best growth potential. Sunoco Inc. has sold one plant and said last month that its previously idled Eagle Point, N.J., refinery was being shut down permanently.

Valero Energy Corp., the nation’s largest refiner, last year closed a Delaware refinery, laying off 500 workers, and mothballed a plant in Aruba.

“We’re actually assessing the entire East Coast, whether we should be there or not,” Valero Chief Executive William R. Klesse told executives at a recent energy summit.

Energy industry executives say they are facing up to what was previously inconceivable: that the nation’s appetite for petroleum products may never return to levels seen earlier in the decade, even if a strong economic recovery takes hold.

“None of us will sell more gasoline than we did in 2007,” Tony Heyward, group chief executive for oil giant BP, said during a recent earnings teleconference.

“We know from internal documents from the last time we had a situation like this, in the 1990s, that there was an intentional strategy on the part of some companies to drive up profit margins by shuttering or closing refineries,” said Tyson Slocum, director of Public Citizen’s energy program. “Consumer prices will be acutely sensitive to any significant change in refining capacity.”

The recession contributed to declining fuel demand. But in that same period, vast — some think permanent — changes happened.

Americans drove less and switched to vehicles that got better mileage or didn’t use gasoline at all. They used mass transit in record numbers. Baby boomers began retiring and stopped commuting. And gasoline gained even more of something that didn’t have to be refined from oil — ethanol.

Few in the refining industry saw what was happening. The belief, particularly after hurricanes Katrina and Rita temporarily devastated the Gulf Coast petroleum network in 2005, was that more refineries were needed.

Critics complained that no new U.S. refinery had been built since 1976, leaving the country’s gasoline supplies vulnerable. In fact, between 1998 and 2009, U.S. refining capacity increased by 2.2 million barrels a day, to 17.67 million barrels a day, by adding equipment and improving processes at existing facilities, Energy Department data show.

Refiners raked in big profits from 2003 to 2006, but “by 2007, it was largely over,” said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst for the Oil Price Information Service, an energy information firm in Wall, N.J. “Now, along with very weak demand numbers for gasoline, everything points to biofuels getting a larger and larger share in the future.”

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

Jim Sinclair’s Commentary

Posted By on March 10, 2010

There are two considerations here…….

1. Wall Street owns Washington and derivatives are their main source of income. That makes it doubtful that meaningful changes will occur.


 2. The argument will be that they did not play the euro short via CDS pressure on debt. They are correct. They played the debt itself short.

                                                                                         Jim Sinclair

 

CFTC Chairman Gensler Urges End To Derivatives Secrecy
By Aline van Duyn
Financial Times, London
Wednesday, March 10, 2010

A leading US financial regulator on Tuesday called for the prices of derivatives trades to be disclosed in the same way as stock prices, saying only large Wall Street banks benefited from the current lack of transparency.

Gary Gensler, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), said standard credit default swaps and other privately traded over-the-counter derivatives needed drastic reform, reflecting their role in the financial crisis.

His call came as European leaders including Angela Merkel, German chancellor, called for a clampdown on speculative trading in sovereign credit default swaps, which offer investors protection against a government default.

“The only parties that benefit from a lack of transparency are Wall Street dealers,” Mr Gensler told a New York derivatives conference. “Right now we have a dealer-dominated world, and that nearly drove us off a cliff.”

Mr Gensler, a former Goldman Sachs executive, said: “To promote public transparency, standard over-the-counter derivatives should be traded on exchanges or other trading platforms.” He also called for explicit regulation of derivatives dealers and the use of clearing for standard OTC derivatives.

Interesting Tid Bit About The Black Plague Epidemic Back Around The Year 1349

Posted By on March 10, 2010

From Art Cashin on the floor of the NYSE………

On this day in 1349, in the midst of the infamous Black Plague epidemic, the forces of government, science and academia came together with a plan to save the people.  As you recall from earlier episodes, the Black Plague had spread from the eastern Mediterranean throughout most of Europe killing millions over the preceding three years.  People searched everywhere for the source of the plague…..a heavenly curse; a burden of immigrants; the result of spices in the food.  It was tough to figure however, since whenever they held a conference either the host area caught the plague or the visitors did…..so…..not too many conferences.

Then in the six months preceding this date the death rate leveled off…..or seemed to.  So in castles and universities and town halls across Europe, great minds pondered the cause of the plague.  And they came pretty close.  The collective governmental/academic wisdom was that the source of the Black Plague was fleas – (absolutely correct).

So the word went out from town to town across Europe – to stop the plague – kill the fleas -by killing all the dogs.  And immediately the slaughter of all dogs began.

But like lots of well-intentioned governmental/academic ideas it was somewhat wide of the mark…and had unexpected consequences.  The cause was fleas alright but not dog fleas…..it was rat fleas.  And in the 1300’s what was the most effective way to hold down the rat population…..you guessed it – dogs.  So by suggesting that townsfolk kill their dogs, the wise authorities had unwittingly allowed the rat population to flourish and thus a new vicious rash of Black Plague began.  Before it was over, three years later, nearly 1 out of 3 people in the world had died of the plague.

(Historic footnote…..Published sources say that with so many people dying, millions of estates had to be settled – result…..the fallout of the plague was a huge growth in….the number of lawyers.)

Stratfor……China’s Challenge

Posted By on March 9, 2010

China’s Challenge

March 9, 2010 | 0958 GMT

 

By Jennifer Richmond and Rodger Baker

China’s National People’s Congress (NPC) remains in session. As usual, the meeting has provided Beijing an opportunity to highlight the past year’s successes and lay out the problems that lie ahead. On the surface at least, China has shown remarkable resilience in the face of global economic crisis. It has posted enviable gross domestic product (GDP) growth rates while keeping factories running (if at a loss) and workers employed. But the economic crisis has exposed the inefficiencies of China’s export-dependent economic model, and the government has had to pump money into a major investment stimulus package to make up for the net drain the export sector currently is exacting on the economy.

Related Special Topic Page

China’s Economic Imbalance

For years, China’s leaders have recognized the risks of the current economic model. They have debated policy ideas to shift from the current model to one that is more sustainable in the long run and incorporates a more geographically equitable growth and a hefty rise in domestic consumption. While there is general agreement on the need for change, top leaders disagree on the timing and method of transition. This has stirred internal debates, which can lead to factionalization as varying interests align to promote their preferred policy prescription. Entrenched interests in urban areas and the export industry — along with constant fears of triggering major social upheaval — have left the government year after year making only slight changes around the margins. Often, Beijing has taken one step forward only to take two back when social instability and/or institutional resistance emerge.

And this debate becomes even more significant now, as China deals simultaneously with the aftermath of the global economic slowdown and preparations for a leadership transition in 2012.

The Hu Agenda

Chinese President Hu Jintao came into office eight years ago with the ambitious goal of closing a widening wealth gap by equalizing economic growth between the rural interior and coastal cities. Hu inherited the results of Deng Xiaoping’s opening and reform, which focused on the rapid development of the coastal areas, which were better geographically positioned for international trade. The vast interior took second billing, being kept in line with the promise that in time the rising tide of economic wealth would float all ships. Eventually it did, somewhat. But while the interior saw significant improvements over the early Mao period, the growth and rise in living standards and disposable income in the urban coastal areas far outstripped rural growth. Some coastal urban areas are now approaching Western standards of living, while much of the interior remains mired in Third World conditions. And the faster the coast grows, the more dependent China becomes on the money from that growth to facilitate employment and subsidize the rural population.

Hu’s predecessor, Jiang Zemin, also recognized these problems. To address them, he promoted a “Go West” economic policy designed to shift investment further inland. But Jiang faced the same entrenched interests that have opposed Hu’s efforts at significant change. While Jiang was able to begin reform of the bloated state-owned enterprises, he softened his Westward economic drive. Amid cyclical global economic downturns, China fell back on the subsidized export model to keep employment levels up and keep money flowing in. Concern over social instability held radical reform in check, and the closer Jiang got to the end of his term in power, the less likely he was to make significant changes that could undermine social cohesion. No Chinese leader wants to preside over a major economic policy that fails out of fear of being the Chinese Mikhail Gorbachev.

For those like Hu who have argued that rapid reform is worth the risk of potential short-term social dislocation, the global downturn was seen as validating their policies — and as confirming that the risks to China of not changing far outweigh the risks of changing now. The export industry’s drag on GDP has forced Beijing to enact a massive investment and loan program. By some accounts, fixed investments in 2009 accounted for more than 90 percent of GDP. Those arguing for faster reform have noted that the pace of investment growth is unsustainable in the long run, and that the flood of money into the system has created new inflationary pressures.

Much of this investment came in the form of bank loans that need to be serviced and repaid. But as the government tries to cool the economy, the risk of companies defaulting on their loans looms. Cooling the economy also threatens to burst China’s real estate bubble. This not only compounds problems in related industry sectors, it could also trigger massive social discord in the urban areas, where housing has taken the place of the stock market as the investment of choice.

Beijing’s Ongoing Dilemma

Chinese leaders face the constant dilemma of needing to allow the economy to maintain its three-decade long export-oriented growth pattern even though this builds in long-term weaknesses, but shifting the economy is not something that can be done without its own consequences. Social pressures are convincing the government of the need to raise the minimum wage to keep up with economic pressures. At the same time, misallocation of labor and new job formation incentives in the interior are causing shortages of labor in some sectors in major coastal export zones. If coastal factories increase wages to attract labor or appease workers, they run the risk of going under due to the already razor-thin margins. But if they don’t, the labor fueling these industries at best may riot and at worst might simply move back home, leaving exporters with little option but to close shop.

Looming demographic changes around the globe also impact the Chinese situation, and the government can no longer rely on an ever-increasing export market to drive the Chinese economy. Some international companies operating in China already are beginning to consider relocating manufacturing operations to places with cheaper labor or back to their home countries to save on transportation costs Chinese wages are no longer mitigating.

With its export markets unlikely to recover to pre-crisis levels any time soon, competition and protectionism are on the rise. The United States is growing bolder in its restrictions on Chinese exports, and China may no longer avoid having the U.S. government label it a currency manipulator. While this may be an extreme measure in 2010, the pressures for such a scenario are rising.

Amid its domestic and global challenges, Chinese leaders are engaged in economic policy debates. It appears that internal criticism is being directed against Hu as social tensions over issues like rising housing prices and inflation grow. In some ways, this is not unusual. National presidents often bear the brunt of dissatisfaction with economic downturns no matter whether their policies were to blame. In China, however, criticism against economic policy falls on the premier, who is responsible for setting the country’s economic direction. The focus on Hu reflects both the depth of the current crisis and the underlying political tensions over economic policy in a time of both global economic unpredictability and preparations for the end of Hu’s presidency in 2012.

To bridge the gulf between the urban coast and the rural interior, Hu and his supporters have pursued a multiphased plan. First, they sought to rein in some of the most independent of the coastal areas — Shanghai in particular, which served as a center of power and influence not only in promoting the continuation of unfettered coastal growth but also of Hu’s predecessor, Jiang. Second, a plan was put in motion to consolidate redundancies in China’s economy and to shift light- and low-skilled industry inland by increasing wages in the key coastal export manufacturing areas, reducing their cost competitiveness. And Beijing added an urbanization drive in traditionally rural and inland areas. Together, this represented a joint attempt to bring the jobs to the interior rather than continue the pattern of migrant workers moving to the coast.

The core of the Hu policies was an overall attempt to re-centralize economic control. This would allow the central government to begin weeding out redundancies left over from Mao’s era of provincial self-sufficiency, which the Deng and Jiang eras of uncoordinated and locally-directed economic growth often driven by corruption and nepotism exacerbated. In short, Hu planned to centralize the economy to consolidate industry, redistribute wealth and urbanize the interior to create a more balanced economy that emphasized domestic consumption over exports. However, Hu’s push, under the epithet “harmonious society,” has been anything but smooth and its successes have been limited at best.

Hu Meets Resistance

Institutional and local government resistance to re-centralization has hounded the policy from its inception, and resistance has grown with the economic crisis. Money is now pouring into the economy via massive government-mandated bank lending to stimulate growth through investments as exports wane. Consequently, housing prices and inflation fears now plague the government — two issues that could lead to increased social tensions and are already leading to louder questioning of Hu’s policies. With just two years to go in his administration, Hu already is looking to his legacy, weighing the risks and rewards between promoting long-term economic sustainability or short-term economic survival. The next two years will witness seemingly incongruent policy pronouncements as the two opposing directions and their proponents battle over China’s economic and political landscape.

Hu’s rise to the presidency was all but assured long before he took office. From a somewhat simplified perspective, the PRC has had only four leaders: Mao Zedong, Deng Xiaoping, Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao. When Mao died, his appointed successor, Hua Guofeng (who was settled upon after several other candidates fell out of favor), lasted only a short time. Amid the political chaos of the post-Cultural Revolution era, Deng rose to the top. Both Mao and Deng were strong leaders who, although contending with rivals, could rule almost single-handedly when the need arose.

To avoid the confusion of the post-Mao transition, Deng created a long-term succession plan. He ultimately settled on Shanghai Mayor Jiang Zemin as his successor. But in an effort to preserve his vision and legacy, Deng also chose Jiang’s successor, Hu Jintao. Barring some terrible breach of office, Hu was more or less guaranteed the presidency a decade before he took office, and there was little Jiang could do to alter this outcome. Jiang, however, made sure that he left his mark by lining up Hu’s successor, Xi Jinping. Despite Jiang’s support, Xi has not risen through the ranks in the same manner as Hu did, raising speculation of internal disagreements on the succession plan.

Vice President Xi is considered one of the “princelings,” leaders whose parents were part of the revolutionary-era governments under Mao and Deng who mainly have cut their teeth through business ventures concentrated in the coastal regions. Hu, on the other hand, is considered among the “tuanpai” or “tuanxi,” leaders who come primarily from the ranks of the Communist Youth League and interior provinces. While these “groups” are not in and of themselves cohesive factions, and China’s political networks are complex, Hu’s and Xi’s backgrounds reflect their differing policy approaches. As such, the question of the next Chinese leader is shaped by opposing economic plans.

On one hand are those like Hu who support a more rapid and immediate refocusing on rural and interior economic growth, even at the cost of reduced coastal and urban power. On the other hand, those like Jiang and his protege Xi have an interest in maintaining the status quo of regionalized semi-independence in economic matters and continued strong coastal growth. They are proceeding on the assumption that a strong coastal-led economy will both provide more immediate rewards for themselves and strengthen China’s international position and its national defense.

It is important not to overstress the differences. Each has the same ultimate goal, namely, maintaining the CPC as the central authority and building a strong China; it is just their paths to these ends that differ. But the economic policy differences are now becoming key questions of Party survival and Chinese stability and strength. Factional struggles that in normal circumstances can be largely controlled, or at least would not get out of hand, are now shaping up in an environment where China’s three-decade economic growth spurt may be reaching its climax. Meanwhile, social pressures are rising amid uncertainties and instabilities in Chinese economic structures.

Beijing has emerged from the economic crisis bolder and more self-confident than ever. But this is driven more by a recognition of weakness than a false assessment of strength. China’s leadership is in crisis mode, and at this time of economic instability and uncertainty, the leadership must also manage a transition that is bringing competing economic policies into stark contrast. And this is the sort of pressure that can cause the gloves to come off and throw expectations of unity and smooth transitions out the window.

Everything may pass smoothly; two years is a long time, after all. But if there is one thing certain about the upcoming change of presidents, it is that nothing is certain

Reprinting or republication of this report on websites is authorized by prominently displaying the following sentence at the beginning or end of the report, including the hyperlink to STRATFOR:

“This report is republished with permission of STRATFOR

It’s Starting To Happin Every Day….Top Aide Says Toledo Likely To Face “Fiscal Emergency”

Posted By on March 9, 2010

It is happening everywhere. There is no way out that supports political expedience other than “QE to infinity.” If the Fed doesn’t play ball they are history.  The shot caller is political expediency.            Jim Sinclair

Top Bell aide says Toledo likely to face ‘fiscal emergency’
Potential strategy to secure labor concessions disputed.


By IGNAZIO MESSINA

Unless there is a fundamental change in the way Toledo’s government operates, the city will likely be unable to pay its employees before the year is through, a top official in the Bell administration warned.

That looming financial disaster leads people such as Mayor Mike Bell and Councilman D. Michael Collins to throw out words like “bankruptcy” or “receivership,” two feared terms but ones that are not likely to become reality.

The truth is that receivership or bankruptcy is probably not an option for the city anytime soon. But being slapped by the state as a “fiscal emergency” municipality is a real threat – a label some dislike but others advise Toledo to embrace given its $48 million deficit.

“If you cannot make payroll for 30 days, you are there. You are in fiscal emergency,” said Deputy Mayor of Operations Steve Herwat, Mr. Bell’s right-hand man.

“If we don’t get this budget balanced, and the imbalance is enough, and yes it is, we are at risk,” he said.

http://toledoblade.com/article/20100307/NEWS16/3070305/0/COLUMNIST39

See Ya Later Alligator………

Posted By on March 9, 2010

Beverly Hillbillies Moven Back Home

http://jsmineset.com/

Good Luck…..EU, Merkel Urge Swap Regulation As Greece Takes Plea To U.S.

Posted By on March 9, 2010

EU, Merkel Urge Swap Regulation as Greece Takes Plea to U.S.
By Rainer Buergin and Ben Moshinsky

March 9 (Bloomberg) — The European Union’s top regulatory official said the bloc will consider banning “purely speculative” credit-default swaps as German Chancellor Angela Merkel called for a crackdown on derivatives trading to prevent a rerun of the Greek financial crisis.

European Commission President Jose Barroso said today the 27-nation region will “examine closely the relevance of banning purely speculative naked sales on credit-default swaps.” Merkel, speaking before Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou meets PresidentBarack Obama in Washington today, said the EU must take the lead in curbing derivatives.

“We’re of the opinion that a quick implementation of actions in the area of CDS has to happen,” Merkel told reporters in Luxembourg. Citing “ongoing speculation against euro-region countries,” she called for the “fastest possible” implementation of new rules.

European leaders are ratcheting up the pressure for global regulation of derivatives amid the Greek fiscal crisis. The commission, the EU’s executive arm, will also propose creating a lender of last resort to aid cash-strapped members such as Greece, a proposal that has divided the region’s leaders.

Papandreou said in a speech in Washington yesterday that “unprincipled speculators” threatened a new global financial crisis and said he’d press Obama to support EU efforts to target speculation.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=agj7D9vZDDvE

SULTANS OF SWAP…..Fearing The Gearing!

Posted By on March 9, 2010

SULTANS OF SWAP:  Fearing the Gearing! 

Ever imagine getting your tie caught in a mechanical set of gears (sorry ladies – but I will spare you). The results are nasty! Now you know what the Sultans of Swap in the $695 Trillion global OTC derivatives market feel like. Every day the slow moving gears of the world economies relentlessly grind, making it harder and harder for the Sultans to wiggle loose or breath.

Financial Gearing is what we non-accountants often refer to as simply ‘Leverage’.  Whichever your preference, it has the Sultans of Swap tightly caught in a manner that has greatly restricted their options and is now slowly squeezing the liquidity life out of them.

As the economies of the world adjust to the comatose shock of the Financial Crisis, the general public is only now awakening to the fall-out and structural changes resulting from this historic tremor. Some impacts are obvious; the most important are not – yet!

We hear the word ‘de-leveraging’ almost daily as a tag line whenever the word ‘bank’ is used. We often hear it when people discuss the amount of debt the public took on during the housing bubble and are now trying to get out from under. So we think we know what there is to know about leverage. Whoa… are we considering all the users and forms of leverage?

The near collapse of the Shadow Banking mechanism and its exotic gearing instruments such as SIV, VIE, and SPE working in conjunction with operatives such as highly leveraged hedge & private equity funds, has left our highly credit reliant global economies beached. These economies are presently attempting to swim once again but with pre-crisis business models within a greatly diminished credit creation infrastructure. We sense something isn’t working like it did before, but it is much too simplistic to say it is because credit is more difficult to secure.

We have staggering numbers of enterprises that have come into existence or grown to unsustainable sizes, solely on the basis of the application of leverage. Like mortgage brokers, appraisers, developers, listing agents, PMI insurers and a raft of other occupations that exploded during the housing bubble, they have collapsed just as quickly with de-leveraging. Economists call it mal-investment. The lay person calls it ‘unemployment’.

We need to understand more fully the adjustments associated with de-leveraging or “Reverse Gearing”. As I mentioned, some might call it de-leveraging but that distracts from the magnitude and scale of what we are presently experiencing. I like the formal accounting terminology ‘reverse gearing’; because it makes it crystal clear the machinery is headed in a different direction.

FINANCIAL GEARING:  Systemic Growth of Leverage

Financial Gearing is about any entity increasing debt on its asset liability ledger relative to its earnings, equity or capital base. By increasing debt it potentially allows for greater profits or returns to be made. As in Housing, it is good to have a small down payment and a large mortgage when housing values are increasing. “Leverage” in this case is positive. However, when housing prices fall OR interest rates increase, debt leverage levels can be crippling. A virtuous rising cycle becomes a vicious death spiral.

When we use the terms interest and asset prices as we just did, you can be assured that the next sentence will have something to do with the Wall Street magicians plying their crafty trade. They are insidious in unlocking the strategies that live in the world of price, rate and time differentials. None are more shrewd nor pervasive than the Sultans of Swap.

Let’s have a quick ‘look see’ at how the post financial crisis looks to some key sectors and where the Sultans of Swap with their portly derrieres have their ties caught.

A)  NON FINANCIAL CORPORATIONS

The US is no longer primarily a manufacturing economy nor a service economy. The US has been operating as a Financial Economy since the Dot Com bubble. To survive and indeed prosper in this Financial Economy, corporate America was forced to use its balance sheet both as an engine of growth and as a corporate defense. Multi-national conglomerates have aggressively practiced this for the last decade. Exactly the same way the financial & banking industry is structured to “borrowing short and lend long”, American industry has steadily shortened its lending duration to shorter and shorter, less costly, short-term financing. The use of Commercial Paper, easily rolled over on monthly and quarterly periods, was substantially cheaper than issuing longer term corporate notes and bonds. Corporations like GM (GMAC), Ford (Ford Credit), GE (GE Capital) had long ago stopped being industrial corporations. They were financial corporation’s leveraging their highly competitive credit ratings to borrow extensively while ‘leveraging-up’ their balance sheets. Corporations were quick to realize it gave them an unfair competitive advantage in the new emerging world of financial engineering. The less sophisticated were forced to follow or be ‘gobbled up” by competitors with elevated stock valuations.

Recent earnings results have showed us clearly that earnings are now being achieved by brutal cost cutting efforts to offset revenue shrinkage. Existing “Lines of Credit” have become more expensive and harder to obtain, especially with satisfactory terms. “Covenant Lite” loans are now due. Roll-Over of funding needs are more onerous.

Funding sources, terms and availability have changed adversely and for the foreseeable future. Corporate America is now strategizing, planning and reacting to this new reality. Pimco call it the ‘new normal’ of smaller growth rates. It is called ‘accelerated unwinding’ in corporate board rooms. Increasing corporate cash hoards are your first signs. (1) 

The reason this recession is different is that it is a de-leveraging recession. We borrowed too much (all over the developed world) and now are forced to repair our balance sheets as the assets we bought have fallen in value (housing, bonds, securities, etc.). A new and very interesting (if somewhat long) study by the McKinsey Global Institute found that periods of overleveraging are often followed by 6-7 years of slow growth as the deleveraging process plays out. No quick fixes.

Let’s look at some of their main conclusions (and they have a solid ten-page executive summary, worth reading.) This analysis adds new details to the picture of how leverage grew around the world before the crisis and how the process of reducing it could unfold. Here is what McKinsey has to say and is listened to by global board rooms:

  • Leverage levels are still very high in some sectors of several countries – and this is a global problem, not just a US one.
  • To assess the sustainability of leverage, one must take a granular view using multiple sector-specific metrics. The analysis has identified ten sectors within five economies that have a high likelihood of deleveraging.
  • Empirically, a long period of deleveraging nearly always follows a major financial crisis.
  • Deleveraging episodes are painful, lasting six to seven years on average and reducing the ratio of debt to GDP by 25 percent. GDP typically contracts during the first several years and then recovers.
  • If history is a guide, many years of debt reduction are expected in specific sectors of some of the world’s largest economies, and this process will exert a significant drag on GDP growth.
  • Coping with pockets of deleveraging is also a challenge for business executives. The process portends a prolonged period in which credit is less available and more costly, altering the viability of some  business models and changing the attractiveness of different types of investments. In historic episodes, private investment was often quite low for the duration of deleveraging. Today, the household sectors of several countries have a high likelihood of deleveraging. If this happens, consumption growth will likely be slower than the pre-crisis trend, and spending patterns will shift. Consumer-facing businesses have already seen a shift in spending toward value-oriented goods and away from luxury goods, and this new pattern may persist while households repair their balance sheets. Business leaders will need flexibility to respond to such shifts.

You can read the entire report at their web site, including the ten-page summary. http://www.mckinsey.com/mgi/publications/debt_and_deleveraging/index.asp

B)  PRIVATE EQUITY

Presently garnering little media coverage is the historic levels of leveraged buyouts that have taken place over the last decade using short term money, pre-financial crisis ‘covenant lite’ terms & extraordinarily geared balance sheets.

Private Equity firms “bought more than 3000 American corporations from 2000 to 2008, employing close to 10 million people – nearly 1 of every 10 workers in the private sector.

The formula was simple: buy a target company with a small down payment and lots of other people’s money. Leverage it with huge loans using the acquired company – not the Private Equity firm – as collateral. Cut short-term costs through radical layoffs. Resell at a profit within 5 years, before the cuts & debt have totally crippled the business.

In ten years Private Equity deals have generated more than $1 Trillion in new debt – which will come due just when these businesses are least likely to be able to pay it off. As a result it is forecasted that about half of all Private Equity owned companies will likely collapse between now and 2015, throwing 2 million people out of work” (2)

C)  BANKS & FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS

Bank Lending

The raison d’être of banks is the gearing or leverage of their balance sheets. The fractional reserve banking system allows the expansion of bank balance sheets but limits it with reserve requirements. However loans can be increased with more Capital infusions. The banks have over time, creatively found ways to utilize debt instruments as capital thereby fulfilling bank regulatory requirements. These debt instruments, which have been classified as Tier 1 Capital, are custom agreements typically not tradable that can only be valued by the use of extremely complex proprietary non-auditable bank models. The assumptions and variables used in these models make their ‘mark to market’ valuations much closer to ‘market to myth’. They are blatantly obscure and totally non transparent to investors. The problem is these ‘mystical assets’ have become such a large part of bank capital assets. This has fostered the recent explosion in bank lending, that current reclassification attempts by bank regulators and the implementation of the new  International Basel Banking definitions of Tier 1 Assets have led to significant conflicts and crippling potential problems for the banks. The solution to date has been to simply defer any changes until the credit crisis subsides. Since the investment  community is now aware of the problem but still cannot get enough information, investment professionals are skeptical of investing in banks, thereby allowing them to raise capital to allow for future ‘adjustments’.  

 If Tier 1 Capital problem is not enough, the banks have also been employing practices that simply kept alarming amounts of loans off their balance sheets completely. There are a broad range of practices used but the largest was the use of SIV’s or Structured Investment Vehicles.  Over the last decade SIV’s have been a major wheel in using low yielding public money market funds to foster the procurement of the toxic assets that have become so well covered by the media. Slowly the banks have had to pull these structures back on their balance sheets but at a very ‘measured’ and glacially slow rate.

 The government is presently keeping the yield curve at a historically steep rate, for a protracted period of time, to allow the banks time to attempt some sort of work-out. Unfortunately delinquencies and foreclosures on existing loans have reached such a level that the net result is barely any real resolution. Now collapsing Commercial Real Estate values are adding another truly massive problem to the mix. (3)

It is not only the major banks, or the regional banks (which are being taken over by the FDIC at approaching 3-5 per week – 140 since the crisis began) that have problems because of excessive gearing. Throughout the financial services industry the collapsing commercial real estate market is putting pressures on Insurance companies, Real Estate Developers, REITs, Property Management Corporations and a whole mix of financial services who are major holders of commercial real estate assets. Their balance sheet assets are collapsing, placing their solvency into question and minimally forcing a major contraction in any new activities.

 

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

TOTAL

COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE

552

560

537

480

459

2.7T

LEVERAGED BUY-OUT DEBT

71

113

203

294

406

 

HIGH YIELD DEBT

35

64

75

82

126

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TOTAL

657

737

815

856

992

4.2T

SOURCE: Morgan Stanley, Fixed Income Research & Economics (4)

The above chart from Morgan Stanley, Fixed Income Research & Economics (4) indicates we will require $4.2 TRILLION in new financing to accommodate loans of questionable viability, existing lending terms or Loan to collateral value coming due.

D)  SOVEREIGN COUNTRIE

I have been very concerned about all of the items mentioned above, but my biggest concern is the staggering amounts of debt being increased almost daily – Sovereign Country Debt. This is not just a USA problem but global, as countries have taken on debt loads to be used for stimulus fiscal spending. This debt must be paid!

My recent article: “Eight Financial Fault Lines Appear In The Euro Experiment!” lays out the undeniable fractures that are occurring. The balance sheet gearing problem or rather “game” in this instance is how this debt is presently being funded. In the PIIGS there is large concern with how debt has been accounted for going back to the inception of the EU and what sovereign governments did to qualify and gain entry under the Maastricht Treaty.

Additionally, Governments are using the “Duration” game to hide the loads. Specifically they are borrowing on short term duration where interest expenses are extremely low versus locking in the loan on longer term bonds. The latter is the traditional manner governments employ to protect taxpayers from increases in interest rates. New debt and roll-over debt is being funded on less than 12-18 months terms. This is leaving accelerating balances of debt which will need re-funding in a year’s time. What happens if interest rates move up from unprecedented historically low rates to even moderately higher rates? Why would governments even consider such a strategy?

Credit Rating agencies are so concerned about the current situation that they have already started warning about sovereign credit rating downgrades and in some instances have downgraded countries such as Greece.

Downgrades immediately make new debt issuances for a sovereign country more expensive. Poor credit ratings and rising rates will quickly bankrupt any sovereign nation.

E)  REVERSE GEARING (DELEVERAGING) & ITS GLOBAL RAMIFICATIONS

Yield Curve

The LEX column in the Financial Times this week observes, concerning the report:

“It may be economically and politically sensible for governments to spend money on making life more palatable at the height of the crisis. But the longer countries go on before paying down their debt, the more painful and drawn-out the process is likely to be. Unless, of course, government bond investors revolt and expedite the whole shebang.”

And that is the crux of the matter. We have to raise $1 trillion-plus in the US from domestic sources. Great Britain has the GDP-equivalent task. So does much of Europe. Japan is simply off the radar. Japan, as I have noted, is a bug in search of a windshield.

Sometime in the coming few years the bond markets of the world will be tested. Normally a deleveraging cycle would be deflationary and lower interest rates would be the outcome. But in the face of such large deficits, with no home-grown source to meet them? That worked for Japan for 20 years, as their domestic markets bought their debt. But that process is coming to an end.

James Carville once famously remarked that when he died he wanted to come back as the bond market, because that is where the real power is. And I think we will find out all too soon what the bond vigilantes have to say.

And so we have uncertainty all around us. What will our taxes look like in the US in just 12 months? Health care? Who will finance the bonds, without a credible plan to reduce the deficit? And any plan that has Nancy Pelosi as its guarantor is by definition not credible. 

The Fed is going to stop the music in March. There will be a scramble for the chairs. This is a huge experiment with no precedent. The entire developed world is the test subject. Risk assets will be subject to uncertainty. And markets hate uncertainty.

SULTANS OF SWAP

I know many of you are worried about our Sultans of Swap with their ties caught in the gears. What does this mean to them? More importantly you ask, what does it mean to us all?

Through the magic mix of Credit Default Swaps, Dynamic Hedging and Interest Rate Swaps the Sultans of Swaps have effectively been controlling interest rate spreads. Through Regulatory Arbitrage they extorted tremendous political sway globally. They have existed in the world of risk free spreads. To them low interest rates simply attract more volume for their concoctions. But this has changed. Individuals, Corporations, Financial Institutions and Sovereigns all have more debt than they can handle. Is the global savings growth rate sufficient to handle further debt growth plus debt associated with possible compounding interest payments with unpaid balances and roll-overs? We are very likely nearing a global supply & demand cusp with China’s reserve growth rate slowing, but without question we are seeing and will see accelerated defaults from Commercial Real Estate (2) to Sovereign Debt.  We don’t need to see defaults. How many Greek Sovereign credit downgrades would it take to begin cascading collateral calls?  

“If the US administration’s budgetary projections are correct, the national debt to GDP ratio will climb from 40% in 2008 to 77.3% in 2020. Even if we are able to curb future deficits, it is likely that this ratio will grow over the next decade. As a result, rates on treasuries and other debt obligations are likely to climb over the coming decade with profound implications for the debt and stock markets.” (5). It is not a matter of ‘if’ – it is a matter of ‘when’. With $3.7T in Gross Derivative Credit Exposure outstanding we are talking some potentially very serious problems.  

As I outlined in “Sultans of Swap – Explaining $605 Trillion in Derivatives” significant amounts of debt today is hidden in the murky depths of “special” purpose instruments – like SPE, SPV & SPC or “Structured” entities– like SIV. This is done to keep debt off the balance sheet. Why would you not want something on the balance sheet where investors and interested parties could see what is happening? Obviously so you can camouflage them from what is happening. The reason is fundamentally Credit Ratings. Keep your debts low, your credit ratings high and the cost of money is cheap. The cheaper money is, the more borrowing will occur. Everyone is happy except the unwitting lender.

To the right I illustrate the simplest of interest rate swaps. What you need to appreciate is that everything is normally tied to LIBOR on the floating leg. LIBOR goes up, one party gets hurt. If rates go up either party could suffer credit rating downgrades. A credit rating downgrade can and often does trigger collateral calls. One of the parties then gets hurt. So any significant moves in interest rates and credit ratings and we have problems. With $3.7T in Gross Derivative Credit Exposure outstanding we are talking some potentially serious ‘hurting’.

What we need to differentiate is who exactly the Sultans of Swap are: Are they the Counterparties A & B who hold the OTC contract? Are they the third party that administers the ongoing payment exchanges? Are they the issuers or holders of CDS’s to protect against counterparty failure? Are they the magicians that put this OTC contract together, took a quick fee and rapidly left the scene? Are they the banks making almost obscene trading charges ($35B in 2009 trading fees alone (6)) on brokering these swaps from parties desperate to re-align contract bets since the financial tsunami arrived? Or is it all of them as cumulative ‘cohorts in crime’?

There is an old saying in poker parlance: “when you look around the table and you can’t tell who the patsy is – it is you!” I will leave it to you, shrewd reader, to determine who the patsy is and who the card shark is at this table! There is only one person holding a risk free winning hand. They may all be Sultans of Swap but there is only one Emir or Merlin here!

What is especially evident to many of these Sultans is that they have their ties clearly caught. They now foresee a rising LIBOR, likely Credit Rating downgrades, and probable collateral calls as inevitable in the ongoing process of reverse gearing. The gears just keep on turning.

Let me close with a point of clarification. For those of you having troubles understanding any of the above, let me relate a story. I was explaining swaps to a New Yorker who appeared to have no financial background. When I finished my ‘swaps in 100 words or less’ dissertation he simply nodded his head without any questions. He then looked me straight in the eye with a knowing expression and explained. “In New York if I owe the Mob $100 dollars and I can’t pay, but my best friend Bob owes me $100 and hasn’t paid me yet, then Bob owes the mob $100. A swap, right? Well, when the mob collects the $100 from Bob, and Bob now has a broken leg and refuses to ever talk to me again, I still owe the mob $50 for collection fees plus the ‘vig’ on the original $100. The mob is now up $150 and I desperately need more friends. A swap, right – yeh I understand!”

SOURCES:

(1) 03-04-10 With Fistfuls of Cash, Firms on Hunt  Wall Street Journal

(2)               “The Buyout of America” Josh Kosman, Penguin Group, 2009. Quotation from front jacket flap.

(3) 03-02-10 Realpoint Research Monthly Delinquency Report  .pdf  Realpoint

(4)              Wall of debt a barrier to US recovery – 12-16-09 – The Sydney Morning Herald, Malcolm Maiden

(5) 03-02-10 Obama’s Wake Up Call and What It Suggests for Future Interest Rates   Stephen Shefler

(6) 03-01-10 Frank, Peterson Vow to Eliminate Provision Keeping Swaps Opaque  Bloomberg

Mcinsey Global Institute http://www.mckinsey.com/mgi/publications/debt_and_deleveraging/index.asp

Gordon T Long is not a registered advisor and does not give investment advice. His comments are an expression of opinion only and should not be construed in any manner whatsoever as recommendations to buy or sell a stock, option, future, bond, commodity or any other financial instrument at any time. While he believes his statements to be true, they always depend on the reliability of his own credible sources. Of course, he recommends that you consult with a qualified investment advisor, one licensed by appropriate regulatory agencies in your legal jurisdiction, before making any investment decisions, and barring that, we encourage you confirm the facts on your own before making important investment commitments.

 

© Copyright 2010 Gordon T Long. The information herein was obtained from sources which Mr. Long believes reliable, but he does not guarantee its accuracy. None of the information, advertisements, website links, or any opinions expressed constitutes a solicitation of the purchase or sale of any securities or commodities. Please note that Mr. Long may already have invested or may from time to time invest in securities that are recommended or otherwise covered on this website. Mr. Long does not intend to disclose the extent of any current holdings or future transactions with respect to any particular security. You should consider this possibility before investing in any security based upon statements and information contained in any report, post, comment or recommendation you receive from him.

http://home.comcast.net/~lcmgroupe/2010/Article-Sultans_of_Swap-Fearing_the_Gearing.htm

This Is Getting Serious, L.A. County Superior Court To Lay Off 329 Staffers April 1

Posted By on March 8, 2010

This will probably start to “spread like wildfire”  to courts around the State of California and the country for that matter in the next few months. 

L.A. County Superior Court to lay off 329 staffers April 1

March 8, 2010 | 11:38 am

In the first of a series of projected cuts, the Los Angeles County Superior Court will lay off 329 staff members on April 1, court officials have announced.

“Given the size of the budget cuts we have already experienced, we anticipate hundreds more layoffs to follow,” Superior Court Executive Officer John A. Clarke wrote Friday in a memo to staff.

Officials are planning to lay off an additional 500 employees in September and 530 in fall 2011, Clarke wrote. Court leaders have long warned of looming staff cuts and courtroom closures due to budget shortfalls.

Presiding Judge Charles “Tim” McCoy has said he is looking at plans to eliminate as many as 1,800 jobs and close up to 180 courtrooms to make ends meet. Court spokeswoman Vania Stuelp said the cuts will be “all across the board,” but it had not been determined whether courtrooms will be closed at the time of the layoffs.

Notices will be sent out March 16, she said.

“The most junior employees are going to be the first to go,” she said.

— Victoria Kim    

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2010/03/la-county-superior-court-to-lay-off-329-staffers-april-1.html

It Looks Like Education Really Does Matter

Posted By on March 8, 2010

Unemployment Bt Education

www.ingerletter.com

Fannie Mae Mortgage-Bond Spreads Fall To Record: Credit Markets

Posted By on March 8, 2010

Credit markets are showing (irrational) exuberance again……hard to believe, but that’s the direction we’re heading in!  Looks like the governments hand is in everything, quite literally.  You may ask how is this possible, well……before the fall of Rome, did anyone pay attention to the fingers of trouble, nope, greed overtook common sense.  I think that pretty much sums it up.

By Jody Shenn

March 8 (Bloomberg) — Yields on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage securities that guide U.S. home-loan rates are trading at the lowest relative to Treasuries on record, even as the scheduled end of Federal Reserve purchases approaches.

The difference between yields on Washington-based Fannie Mae’s current-coupon 30-year fixed-rate mortgage bonds and 10- year Treasuries narrowed 0.02 percentage point today to about 0.63 percentage point to match the smallest spread since at least 1984, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Spreads on agency mortgage bonds have held near lows while the unprecedented Fed program, in which the central bank is buying $1.25 trillion of the debt, nears its March 31 conclusion. Some investors consider the debt more attractive at tighter nominal spreads because of declines in expectations for interest-rate volatility, affecting how certain they can be about how long it will remain outstanding, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Spreads for the Fannie Mae securities on a so-called option-adjusted basis, which takes into account prepayment uncertainty, against interest-rate swaps have widened to negative 0.03 percentage point from as low as negative 0.22 percentage point on Dec. 21, according to Bloomberg data.

Elsewhere in credit markets, at least $12.3 billion of U.S. corporate bonds were marketed today, the busiest since Feb. 4 when volume reached $18.85 billion, Bloomberg data show. DirecTV, the El Segundo, California-based satellite-television provider, sold $3 billion of 5-, 10- and 30-year notes. Bank of America Corp., the largest U.S. bank by assets, sold $2.5 billion of five-year notes.

In Iran, Pars Oil & Gas Co. issued $1 billion of euro- denominated bonds to help boost the development of its giant South Pars gas field, Press TV reported. The National Iranian Oil Co., POGC’s parent, has guaranteed a return of as much as 8 percent on the debt, the state-run news channel said.

Harrah’s Entertainment Inc. debt rose in trading today after lenders agreed to extend $5.5 billion of maturities to 2015, giving the world’s biggest casino company five years to make any material repayments.

In the U.S., the cost of protecting against corporate defaults fell for a second day. The Markit CDX North America Investment-Grade Index, linked to credit-default swaps on 125 companies, declined 3 basis points to 82.5 basis points as of 2:22 p.m. in New York, according to CMA DataVision. That’s the lowest since Jan. 14. The index typically declines as investor confidence improves.

Credit-swaps pay the buyer face value if a borrower defaults in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent. A basis point equals $1,000 a year on a contract protecting against default on $10 million of debt for five years.

Full article at      http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aKXhj8HzX8Ao&pos=3

Cash-Strapped States Delay Paying Income-Tax Refunds

Posted By on March 7, 2010

From Jim Sinclair…..Credit default swap OTC derivatives are weapons of real warfare. (Credit-default swaps, where you insure your neighbor’s house just to destroy it and make money from it, that’s exactly what we have to curb, according to Paul Volcker)   They are already operating against US state debt.  Soon states will be falling like bowling pins. The US dollar will follow as it drops below .7200.   Bullish for Gold.
 

Cash-Strapped States Delay Paying Income-Tax Refunds


Postd March 7, 2010

This year, more Americans and businesses may be asking: Where’s my tax refund?

That’s because cash-strapped states such as North Carolina, Alabama and Hawaii have been forced to slow down issuing income tax refunds to individuals and businesses because of a lack of funds in their budget.

Kansas has hinted that a delay might be possible, and processing paper refunds in Iowa has slowed because the state doesn’t haven’t enough employees to get them processed faster.

Another state, New York, is still considering whether they’ll follow the likes of Hawaii and delay refund payments.

“States typically do this when they are tight and they don’t have a budget in place,” said Karla Dennis, CEO of Cohesive, a nationwide tax preparation firm. Things are dire at many states: forty-one states are expected to have mid-year budget gaps totaling $37.7 billion, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

Delaying the refund, Dennis says, “gives the state funds to work with in the interim to fill a gap in their revenues.”

The Last Drop Of Productivity From The American Working Class

Posted By on March 7, 2010

Squeezing the Last Drop of Productivity from the American Working Class – 18 Percent National Underemployment and why Wall Street and the Government are Cheering Your Financial Failure.

Posted: Sun, 07 Mar 2010 06:04:47 +0000

The American financial press cheered on Friday when “only” 36,000 jobs were lost in February.  This if you haven’t noticed now passes for good economic news.  The unemployment rate remained unchanged because the actual workforce continued to show a decline yet Wall Street somehow viewed this as positive developments.  And why not?  The middle class is under assault from every angle.  Things are so twisted with propaganda that many Americans now believe that the banking elite are actually looking out for the well being of American workers.  As news of the job losses somehow echoed as positive developments, more and more Americans are continually being kicked out of their homes from banks they helped to bail out.  Irony has no meaning to Wall Street.

And if we look at the details of the jobs report, it turns out that 17.9 percent of Americans are either unemployed or underemployed or flat out have stopped looking for work:

Source:  BLS

This wasn’t the only spin going on in the media.  Before the jobs report came out there was a preemptive flow of information trying to justify the job cuts by blaming it on the weather.  Yes, now instead of blaming the financial catastrophe on the actual perpetrators in Wall Street who systematically looted the American system and turned our economy into a giant casino that they leeched onto, we are now to believe people are losing their jobs because of the weather:

“(CNSnews) Ahead of Friday’s announcement, Goldman Sachs predicted that the storm might skew the job loss number by as much as 100,000 – a prediction that was embraced by officials in the Obama administration.

“The blizzards that affected much of the country during the last month are likely to distort the statistics,” Larry Summers, director of the White House’s National Economic Council, said in an interview with CNBC. “So it’s going to be very important … to look past whatever the next figures are to gauge the underlying trends.”

If the storm caused a skewing of job loss numbers I wonder how many job losses can be linked to Goldman Sachs and their casino style gambling in the derivatives markets and mortgage backed securities?  Then again, people should be happy that the unemployment rate remained steady at 9.7 percent even though more Americans are working part-time with no benefits and many others have simply fallen off the payrolls.  This is supposedly the new American dream for the middle class through the eyes of Wall Street who are selling capitalism but living in a world of corporate handout socialism.

There is a new show called Undercover Boss where a CEO goes undercover to work in the trenches with the proletariat.  As it turns out, the middle class is being worked to death and as we all know, the CEO can’t even do the job most workers do on a daily basis.  Even Henry Ford understood the interworking of the cars he was putting out.  In the end the CEO reveals his identity and gives a nice little handout to the worker and all is well in TV land.  The check is a token of what CEOs actually make.  This is the ultimate reflection of our trickle down economy where those at the top act like sociopaths and rulers of the universe but when it comes to doing the daily tasks of their company, they have no clue.  This is the de facto rule running on Wall Street.  In fact, CEO pay has grown outrageously over the past few decades as the middle class has gotten poorer:

Source:  American Progress

In reality, part-time employment has spread even to poor CEOs making 300 to 400 times the average American worker salary.  Poor CEOs and Wall Street executives need time off to enjoy their tax payer funded yachts and all expense hedonism trips to the Caribbean.  They would like to convince each other that the money they have is all through their will power and market prowess but in reality it is nothing more than being part of a corporatocracy and buying out the government with an army of lobbyist and insiders.  You have to be a self indulgent narcissist to take the economy to the brink of financial destruction in the case of many Wall Street firms and still reward yourself with outrageous bailouts.  The fact that average Americans are still not protesting in mass about this tells me that many actually believe what Wall Street is saying.  You see this when many would rather blame the working class for the ills of today than focus their energy where it really needs to go.

Wall Street loves this economic crisis.  They receive trillions in bailouts yet convince the public that what is occurring today is merely the “market” correcting itself.  So as most Americans have more and more troubles keeping up with their daily bills, companies are squeezing every little excess from those currently working.  Those that have jobs out of fear will work harder and probably demand less merit increases in the current economy.  After all, the head guy is only making 300 times what you make even though he can’t even understand the main function of the organization.  So what if the low level guy is selling toxic crap to some homeless person with no income and giving him access to a $500,000 loan.  These Wall Street tycoons are big picture thinkers and can’t be worried with the day to day operations of the proletariat unless it means turning it into a caricature for mass viewing and quick TIVO access.

You don’t think productivity actually increased?  Take a look at this:

Source:  BLS

This recession has been fantastic for productivity.  Just look at the above chart.  American workers have been doing their part during this recession.  After all, now you can hire a cadre of “contract” workers and not have to pay them one cent in healthcare support or even contribute to their pension.  Once the job is done you can kick them to the curb.  After all, this is capitalism so long as those at the top have managed to setup sweetheart deals and golden parachutes.  This is how the top 1 percent makes sure their hold on 40 percent of the nation’s wealth isn’t damaged.  And if you think financial institutions deserve this bailout money and their outrageous bonuses then companies like Circuit City or Mervyns would still be around today if that model applied across the board.  But this doesn’t apply to the general economy.  This applies to Wall Street and somehow the absurdity of it all still goes on.  The worst financial crisis since the Great Depression and not one solid reform has been enacted.  26 months of job losses and nothing.  Who is running the show?

The rise of the part-time work force is nothing new as we become more and more like Japan.  Japan bailed out their financial institutions after their failed stock market and real estate bubbles popped and today, their working class is made up of one-third part-time workers:

“(LA Times) In the world’s second-largest economy, the global financial crisis has forced part-time workers such as Kudo to face a harsh new reality.

Over the last few years, temporary employees have gone from being a rarity in Japan to accounting for one-third of the workforce of 67 million. They enjoy far fewer protections than full-time workers — placing their necks squarely on the layoff chopping block.

By March, the government predicts, 85,000 part-timers will fall prey to haken-giri, or temporary-worker cutbacks — a relatively small number compared with U.S. layoffs but high for a nation where job security has long been a staple.

On Wednesday, embattled Prime Minister Taro Aso made the plight of part-timers a major piece of a proposed stimulus package. Aso pledged to create 1.6 million jobs, partly by turning part-time jobs into full-time ones.”

Japan’s headline unemployment rate is 4.9 percent.  Just like our headline unemployment rate, the devil is really in the details.  If we continue on this path part-time work may be all that is left.

This was the fine work of     www.mybudget360.com

Volcker Says Euro To Survive As Greek Budget Crisis Manageable

Posted By on March 7, 2010

Paul Volcker……..Volcker used his speech to lay out the reasoning behind the so-called Volcker Rule that underpins the legislation sent by President Barack Obama to Congress this past week. He also pointed to the “abuse” of derivatives to massage Greece’s budget deficit as a reason to tighten regulation of the securities.“Surely the recent revelations about the use (and abuse) of complex derivatives in obscuring the extent of Greek financial obligations reinforces the need for greater transparency and less complexity,” Volcker said in his speech yesterday.
 
Volcker Says Euro to Survive as Greek Budget Crisis Manageable

By Rainer Buergin and Philipp Encz

March 7 (Bloomberg) — Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker said European officials are lucky that the euro region’s first major crisis was sparked by one of its smaller members and he’s confident the currency will survive.

“I’m still a believer in the euro,” Volcker said in an interview in Berlin yesterday. The lack of a unified government to back up the European Central Bank is a “structural crack” and “maybe fortunately it’s tested with a country as small as Greece, which doesn’t present an insuperable financing problem.”

The euro’s founding treaty sets out no rules on how a struggling member nation could be rescued and didn’t establish a single finance ministry, prompting billionaire investor George Soros to say on Feb. 28 that the currency “may not survive” the crisis.

Greece, which announced a further round of deficit cutting measures last week, managed to sell 5 billion euros ($6.8 billion) of new 10-year bonds on March 4, which Volcker called “a good sign.” At 12.7 percent of gross domestic product, Greece’s deficit was the highest in the 27-nation European Union last year.

A “combination of very strong measures and availability of money” may help solve the Greek problem and stop contagion spreading to other euro nations, said Volcker, who was in the German capital to give a speech to the American Academy in Berlin, a transatlantic research institute.

Harvard University Professor Martin Feldstein, who warned in 1997 that European monetary union would spark greater political conflict, said Feb. 12 that the euro “isn’t working.” Soros said 10 days later that if EU members don’t take the next step toward political union, the common currency may disintegrate.

While EU leaders on Feb. 11 pledged to safeguard financial stability in the euro area as a whole, no mechanism has been set up for doing that, Soros said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who met with him the same day, said the question of a bailout “absolutely doesn’t arise” and the steps taken in Greece to cut the deficit make her optimistic that a rescue won’t be needed.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who meets Papandreou in Paris today, said yesterday the EU must support Greece or risk destroying the euro.

Volcker used his speech to lay out the reasoning behind the so-called Volcker Rule that underpins the legislation sent by President Barack Obama to Congress this past week. He also pointed to the “abuse” of derivatives to massage Greece’s budget deficit as a reason to tighten regulation of the securities.

“Surely the recent revelations about the use (and abuse) of complex derivatives in obscuring the extent of Greek financial obligations reinforces the need for greater transparency and less complexity,” Volcker said in his speech yesterday.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aGUcqkSNUJwY&pos=4

China To Nullify Financing Guarantees By Local Governments

Posted By on March 7, 2010

Does that make them (you know the old saying)…. indian traders?   This doesn’t sound good, to say the least!   It will also likely effect aspects of world markets in commodities, real estate and stock markets because they’ve been a large part of world growth.     China plans to nullify all guarantees local governments have provided for loans taken by their financing vehicles as concerns about credit risks on such debt surges. A crackdown on local- government borrowing, estimated at about 24 trillion yuan ($3.5 trillion) by Northwestern University Professor Victor Shih, could trigger a gigantic wave of bad loans as projects are left without funding, Shih said this month. Beijing’s fiscal situation probably isn’t as good as it looks at first glance, said Brian Jackson, an emerging markets strategist at Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong. Perhaps at some stage the central government is going to have to bail out the banks or the regional governments and take it on its own balance sheet
 
  
China to Nullify Financing Guarantees by Local Governments

By Bloomberg News

 

March 8 (Bloomberg) — China plans to nullify all guarantees local governments have provided for loans taken by their financing vehicles as concerns about credit risks on such debt surges.

The Ministry of Financewill also ban all future guarantees by local governments and legislatures in rules that may be issued as soon as this month, Yan Qingmin, head of the banking regulator’s Shanghai branch, said in an interview. The ministry held meetings on the rules on Feb. 25 with regulators including the China Banking Regulatory Commission and the People?s Bank of China, Yan said March 5.

China’s local governments are raising funds through investment vehicles to circumvent regulations that prevent them from borrowing directly. A crackdown on local- government borrowing, estimated at about 24 trillion yuan ($3.5 trillion) by Northwestern University Professor Victor Shih, could trigger a gigantic wave of bad loans as projects are left without funding, Shih said this month.

“Beijing’s fiscal situationprobably isn’t as good as it looks at first glance, said Brian Jackson, an emerging markets strategist at Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong. Perhaps at some stage the central government is going to have to bail out the banks or the regional governments and take it on its own balance sheet.

Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan said March 6 during the National People’s Congress that while many local financing vehicles have the ability to repay, two types cause concern. One uses land as collateral, while the other can’t fully repay borrowing, meaning that the local governments may be liable, leading to fiscal risks.

Premier Wen Jiabao, at the opening of the annual parliamentary meetings last week, said the central government would sell 200 billion yuan of bonds for a second year to help local governments fund infrastructure projects. Wen also warned of latent risks in China’s banking system as he pledged to continue a moderately loose monetary policy and a proactive fiscal stance.

The parliamentary meetings will end March 14 with Premier Wen’s annual press conference in Beijing.

A few cities and counties may face very large repayment pressure in coming years because of debt ratios already exceeding 400 percent, a person with knowledge of the matter said in January. The ratio is of year-end outstanding debt to annual disposable fiscal income.

The financing vehicles of large coastal cities are well-funded as most have publicly traded subsidiaries that can raise capital from the marketsand rely less on bank loans. Entities in northern and western China are of particular concern, the banking regulator’s Yan said while attending the parliamentary meetings.

The 1998 collapse of Guangdong International Trust & Investment Corp., which borrowed domestically and overseas on behalf of southern China’s Guangdong province, left creditors including Dresdner Bank AG of Germany and Bank One Corp. in the U.S. with $3 billion of unpaid bonds. It marked the first time that Chinese authorities failed to bail out one of the nation’s state-owned trusts.

Commercial bankshave already been told to assess their exposure to such lending and stop providing further credit if problems are found, Yan said.

China’s banks doled out a combined 9.59 trillion yuan in new loans last year, helping the government engineer a turnaround in the world’s third-largest economy. The credit binge sparked concern about more bad loans and asset bubbles.

Northwestern’s Shih estimated that borrowing by China’s 8,000 local-government entities may have totaled 11.429 trillion yuan in outstanding debt by the end of last year and they had credit lines with banks for an additional 12.767 trillion yuan. That may result in bad loans of up to 3 trillion yuan.

China’s banks had 497 billion yuan of non-performing loans as of Dec. 31, accounting for 1.58 percent the nation’s total advances, according to the banking regulator.

Luo Jun, Kevin Hamlin. With assistance from Zhang Dingmin in Beijing. Editors: John Liu, Richard Dobson.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aIcTfdm5rWdY&pos=2

Nonfarm Payroll Data Breakdown

Posted By on March 6, 2010

  Labor Stats

www.ingerletter.com

 

Raiders Targeting “Losing” British Pound As Next Currency Prey

Posted By on March 5, 2010

Anybody notice how hard it is to slow down deficit spending habits.  it causes riots and all kinds of mischief!   Debt has to come down.  How do we explain this to the average person who’s been taught to borrow and spend?

Speculators Eye Next Prey
How Safe Is Britain’s Proud Pound?


By Carsten Volkery in London

First the euro, now the pound. Britain’s currency is coming under massive pressure as speculators bet that the UK’s national debt will soon get out of hand. Like Athens, London has its share of problems — and the Brits don’t have any euro zone partners to back them up.

Schadenfreude may be a German word, but it has never been a foreign concept in Great Britain — particularly in recent months as the British watch the trials and tribulations of the European common currency, the euro. The budgetary and debt problems facing Greece, Portugal, Italy, Ireland and Spain have merely reinforced their conviction that staying out of the euro zone was the right decision. Unlike Berlin, London is not under pressure to come to the aid of Athens.

But speculators have not just taken aim at the euro in recent days. The British pound, too, has become a favored target — showing Brits how vulnerable their own currency may actually be. At the beginning of the week, the pound slid to a 10-month low of just $1.4781. Since then, the pound has staged a mini-recovery, moving back above $1.50 on Wednesday. But market pressure on the British currency is not likely to disappear overnight.

The most immediate trigger for the recent currency swoon came in the form of political surveys which indicated that a Conservative victory in general elections (which will likely be held in early May) may not be a foregone conclusion. Markets were alarmed out of fear that a close election could make it difficult for parliament to pass a strict package of savings measures.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,681597,00.html

Fannie, Freddie Ask Banks To Eat Soured Mortgages

Posted By on March 5, 2010

Oh, the poor poor banks, they never thought it would come to this!   First they are asked, then they will be told to do these “push-backs”.

Fannie, Freddie Ask Banks To Eat Soured Mortgages
By Bradley Keoun

March 5 (Bloomberg) — Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may force lenders including Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co.and Citigroup Inc. to buy back $21 billion of home loans this year as part of a crackdown on faulty mortgages.

That’s the estimate of Oppenheimer & Co. analyst Chris Kotowski, who says U.S. banks could suffer losses of $7 billion this year when those loans are returned and get marked down to their true value. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, both controlled by the U.S. government, stuck the four biggest U.S. banks with losses of about $5 billion on buybacks in 2009, according to company filings made in the past two weeks.

The surge shows lenders are still paying the price for lax standards three years after mortgage markets collapsed under record defaults. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are looking for more faulty loans to return after suffering $202 billion of losses since 2007, and banks may have to go along, since the two U.S.- owned firms now buy at least 70 percent of new mortgages.

“If you want to originate mortgages and keep that pipeline running, you have to deal with the push-backs,” said Paul Miller, an analyst at FBR Capital Markets in Arlington, Virginia, and former examiner for the Federal Reserve. “It doesn’t matter how much you hate Fannie and Freddie.”

Freddie Mac forced lenders to buy back $4.1 billion of mortgages last year, almost triple the amount in 2008, according to a Feb. 26 filing. As of Dec. 31, Freddie Mac had another $4 billion outstanding loan-purchase demands that lenders had not met, according to the filing. Fannie Mae didn’t disclose the amount of its loan-repurchase demands. Both firms were seized by the government in 2008 to stave off their collapse.   More at……………..

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=email_en&sid=ax.OUty1SiG4

Consumer Credit In U.S. Increases For First Time In A Year……

Posted By on March 5, 2010

Consumer Credit in U.S. Increases for First Time in a Year

By Vincent Del Giudice

March 5 (Bloomberg) — Borrowing by U.S. consumers unexpectedly rose in January for the first time in a year, led by auto loans and indicating Americans are gaining confidence in the economy.

Consumer credit increased $5 billion, or 2.4 percent at an annual rate, the Federal Reserve said today in Washington. Borrowing dropped $4.6 billion in December, more than first estimated. The figures track credit card debt and non-revolving loans, including those for automobile purchases.

The worst recession since World War II probably ended last year as factories boosted production and government spending programs took hold. The recovery may get a bigger lift from consumer purchases that account for about 70 percent of the economy when companies begin to hire.

“Consumers are relying more on credit and this is a sign that the economy may well have hit bottom and that they are starting to spend again, Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York, said before the report. An uptick in credit bodes well for the economic outlook this year.

The economy lost 36,000 jobs in February, less than anticipated, after a decline of 26,000 a month earlier even as snowstorms in parts of the nation forced some employers to temporarily close, Labor Department figures showed earlier today. The unemployment rate held at 9.7 percent.

Economists had forecast consumer credit would drop by $4.5 billion in January after a previously reported $1.7 billion decrease in December, according to the median of 33 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Projections ranged from a decrease of $12.3 billion to an increase of $2.4 billion.

The January gain in credit was the biggest since July 2008.

Revolving debt, such as credit cards, fell by $1.7 billion in January, according to the Fed’s statistics. Revolving credit has fallen 16 straight months, the longest series of declines since the Fed began keeping those records in 1968. The January drop was the smallest since July.

Non-revolving debt, including automobile and mobile-home loans, rose by $6.6 billion after a $4.9 billion gain. The Fed’s report doesn’t cover borrowing secured by real estate.

Auto sales in the U.S. cooled in January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 10.8 million, according to industry statistics. The pace slowed in February to 10.36 million.

Consumer spending during the final three months of last year rose at a 1.7 percent annual rate following an increase of 2.8 percent in the third quarter, Commerce Department figures showed on Feb. 26. Spending contributed to economic growth of 5.9 percent at annual rate, the best performance in more than six years.

Last Updated: March 5, 2010 15:00 EST

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aOKCjAUb7a5Y&pos=1

U.S. Treasury’s Krueger Says Job Market Still Faces Stresses But Look’in Better

Posted By on March 5, 2010

U.S. Treasury’s Krueger Says Job Market Still Faces Stresses

By Rebecca Christie

 

March 5 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. economy remains under strain even though the labor market is showing signs of improvement, said Alan Krueger, assistant Treasury secretary for economic policy.

The Labor Department report that U.S. employers cut 36,000 jobs last month was better than expected given the snowstorms that kept a million workers at home in mid-February, Krueger said today in a briefing with reporters in Washington.

“The labor market is still facing stresses, though these stresses are easing, Krueger said.

The unemployment rate held steady at 9.7 percent in February. The drop in payrolls was smaller than the 68,000-job fall expected by a Bloomberg survey of 82 economists.

Krueger said it’s plausible that the employment data could have shown job growth if it had not been for the snow. The weather effects on the numbers should be transitory, he said, and the data so far support the administration’s forecast that gross domestic product will expand 2.7 percent this year.

Krueger said that recoveries do not move in a straight line, and he urged Congress to pass the Obama administration’s proposals to add jobs. We’re in a situation where we need to accelerate hiring, he said.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a6vjfBpWoNo8&pos=3

Op-Ed From Thomas L. Friedman Of The New York Times…..A Word From the Wise

Posted By on March 5, 2010

Op-Ed Columnist

A Word From The Wise

By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

Published: March 5, 2010

I was traveling via Los Angeles International Airport — LAX — last week. Walking through its faded, cramped domestic terminal, I got the feeling of a place that once thought of itself as modern but has had one too many face-lifts and simply can’t hide the wrinkles anymore. In some ways, LAX is us. We are the United States of Deferred Maintenance. China is the People’s Republic of Deferred Gratification. They save, invest and build. We spend, borrow and patch.

And this contrast is playing out in the worst way — just slowly enough so the crisis never seems acute enough to take urgent action. But, eventually, infrastructure, education and innovation policies matter. Businesses prefer to invest with the Jetsons more than the Flintstones, which brings me to the subject of this column.

I had a chance last week to listen to Paul Otellini, the chief executive of Intel, the microchip maker and one of America’s crown jewel companies. Otellini was in Washington to talk about competitiveness at Brookings and the Aspen Institute. At a time when so much of our public policy discussion is dominated by health care and bailouts, my public service for the week is to share Mr. Otellini’s views on start-ups.

While America still has the quality work force, political stability and natural resources a company like Intel needs, said Otellini, the U.S. is badly lagging in developing the next generation of scientific talent and incentives to induce big multinationals to create lots more jobs here.

“The things that are not conducive to investments here are [corporate] taxes and capital equipment credits,” he said. “A new semiconductor factory at world scale built from scratch is about $4.5 billion — in the United States. If I build that factory in almost any other country in the world, where they have significant incentive programs, I could save $1 billion,” because of all the tax breaks these governments throw in. Not surprisingly, the last factory Intel built from scratch was in China. “That comes online in October,” he said. “And it wasn’t because the labor costs are lower. Yeah, the construction costs were a little bit lower, but the cost of operating when you look at it after tax was substantially lower and you have local market access.”

These local incentives matter because smart, skilled labor is everywhere now. Intel can thrive today — not just survive, but thrive — and never hire another American. Asked if his company was being held back by weak science and math education in America’s K-12 schools, Otellini explained:

“As a citizen, I hate it. As a global employer, I have the luxury of hiring the best engineers anywhere on earth. If I can’t get them out of M.I.T., I’ll get them out of Tsing Hua” — Beijing’s M.I.T.

It gets worse. Otellini noted that a 2009 study done by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation and cited recently in Democracy Journal “ranked the U.S. sixth among the top 40 industrialized nations in innovative competitiveness — not great, but not bad. Yet that same study also measured what they call ‘the rate of change in innovation capacity’ over the last decade — in effect, how much countries were doing to make themselves more innovative for the future. The study relied on 16 different metrics of human capital — I.T. infrastructure, economic performance and so on. On this scale, the U.S. ranked dead last out of the same 40 nations. … When you take a hard look at the things that make any country competitive. … we are slipping.”

If the government just boosted the research and development tax credit by 5 percent and lowered corporate taxes, argued Otellini, and we “started one or two more projects in companies around the country that made them more productive and more competitive, the government’s tax revenues are going to grow.” With the generous research and development tax credits and lower corporate taxes they receive, Intel’s chief competitors in South Korea basically have “zero cost of money,” said Otellini. Intel can compete against that with superior technology, but many other U.S. firms can’t.

Does the Obama team get it? Otellini compared the Obama administration to a “diode” — an electronic device that conducts electric current in only one direction. They are very good at listening to Silicon Valley, he said, but not so good at responding.

“I’d like to see competitiveness and education take a higher role than they are today,” he said. “Right now, they’re going to try to push this health care thing over the line, and, after that, deal with the next thing. God, I’d just like this [our competitiveness] to be the next thing. Something has to pay for” everything government is doing today.

We had to do the bailouts, the buy-ups and the jobs bills to stop the bleeding. But now we need to focus on the policies that spawn new firms and keep our best at the top. “Having run a company through a major transition, it’s a lot easier to change when you can than when you have to,” said Otellini. “The cost is less. You have more time. I am a little worried that by the time we wake up to the crisis we will be in the abyss.”

 http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/thomaslfriedman/index.html

Housing Data “Unexpected Negative Surprise”….Hmm, To Whom We Might Ask

Posted By on March 4, 2010

Not “unexpected surprise” except to the government maybe……………last week showed unexpected declines in purchases of new and existing homes. 
 
Foreclosures pose another threat. Foreclosure filings rose 15 percent in January compared with a year earlier and exceeded 300,000 for the 11th straight month, RealtyTrac Inc. said Feb. 11.Toll Brothers Inc. Chief Executive Officer Robert Toll said in a statement Feb. 24 the housing market will follow a similar pattern to recovery as it did in the late 1980s and early 1990s, which both took several years, The only problem is that this is not the 1980’s or 1990’s in the economy nor in the world of debt, both persoal and government debt levels make the 1980 to 2000 period look pale in comparison.
 

By Courtney Schlisserman

 

March 4 (Bloomberg) — Fewer Americans than expected signed contracts to purchase previously owned homes in January, indicating the extension of a tax credit is doing little to lure buyers.

The index of purchase agreements, or pending home sales, dropped 7.6 percent after a revised 0.8 percent increase in December, the National Association of Realtors announced in Washington. Other reports today showed factory orders increased and first-time jobless claims declined.

The drop in contract signings adds to evidence the housing market at the center of the worst recession since the 1930s is struggling to rebound after reports last week showed unexpected declines in purchases of new and existing homes. The market may get another blow this month when the Federal Reserve ends planned purchases of mortgage-backed securities.

“When you take away all the support from the housing market, the underlying demand for housing is a lot weaker than we thought, said Mark Vitner, a senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina. We clearly pushed some demand forward, and there wasn’t that much demand to pull forward anyway. The housing recovery is going to be very, very slow.

Reports from the Labor Department today showed initial jobless claims fell from a three-month high, while productivity rose in the fourth quarter. Claims dropped 29,000 last week to 469,000.

Productivity, a measure of employee output per hour, rose at a 6.9 percent annual rate in the final three months of last year. Labor costs dropped 5.9 percent, more than anticipated.

Economists forecast a 1 percent gain in January pending home sales after a previously reported 1 percent rise a month earlier, according to the median of 40 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from a drop of 4.2 percent to an increase of 4 percent.

In November, the number of signed contracts dropped a record 14 percent. The Realtors group said February figures may be depressed as well following snowstorms in the Northeast and South.

The Realtors’ report showed declines in January pending sales in all four regions, led by a 13 percent slump in the West. Contract signings fell 8.9 percent in the Midwest, 8.7 percent in the Northeast and 2.1 percent in the South.

Pending home sales are considered a leading indicator because they track contract signings. The Realtors’ existing- home sales report tallies closings, which typically occur a month or two later. The pending sales data go back to January 2001, and the group began publishing the index in March 2005.

Reports last week showed the housing market may be faltering. Sales of previously owned homes unexpectedly dropped 7.2 percent in January after a record decline a month earlier, according to Realtors group’s report Feb. 26. New-home sales slumped to an all-time low, the Commerce Department said Feb. 24.

President Barack Obama and Congress extended the first-time buyer credit in early November to cover deals signed by April 30 and closed by June 30, and expanded it to include some current homeowners.

Among other concerns for the housing outlook, the Fed said it plans to end a program later this month to purchase mortgage- backed securities, which helped contain borrowing costs.

The rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage dropped to 4.71 percent in early December, the lowest level since Freddie Mac started keeping weekly records in 1972. The rate has hovered around 5 percent since then.

Foreclosures pose another threat. Foreclosure filings rose 15 percent in January compared with a year earlier and exceeded 300,000 for the 11th straight month, RealtyTrac Inc. said Feb. 11.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aHYW5nkJTGyQ&pos=2

When Ever We See The Government Working Hard On Something, We Like To Drag Out Of The Closet The Good Old Governmental Flow Chart

Posted By on March 3, 2010

Government Flow Chart

The Middle Class Financial Compact Being Washed Away – Income Dilution and the Saving Disparity- 57 Million Households Live On $52,000 Per Year Or Less.

Posted By on March 3, 2010

  • The middle class is finding itself struggling to keep what was once seen as staples of a burgeoning working class in our country.  Part of this battle has come from a system that has rewarded easy finance on the backs of the working class.  Take for example residential real estate.  For decades, this was probably one of the most boring and dull sectors of the economy.  Residential real estate, if you were lucky, only tracked the overall inflation rate.  That was the case until the banking system figured out a way to securitize bread and butter mortgages and turn them into securities for global consumption.  Yet that game is now coming to a quick end.  The middle class are literally being squeezed out of their homes.  Healthcare costs are also cutting deeper into the wallets of most American families and many are finding that they have no coverage as unemployment is still at record levels.  This decade will be a struggle for the middle class to save and prosper.

    What constitutes “middle class” in the United States?  If we go by the median household income the figure is roughly $52,000 per year.  Some 57 million households live on $52,000 or less per year.  This is based on 2008 Census data so it is very likely that figure is down to $50,000.  In fact, 38 million households are receiving food assistance so some are below the poverty line.

    Let us look at how much income is used up by breaking down a few hypothetical budgets:

    Source:  U.S. Department of Commerce

    The biggest line item for most American families is housing.  When housing prices expanded into a massive bubble, more Americans to keep up with the middle class ideal took on more and more mortgage debt.  But without growing incomes they were seeing more of their money being funneled into servicing the mortgage debt.  With the advent of interest only and negative amortization loans, the process of building equity never took place and in some cases actually grew the initial mortgage balance.  Instead of saving, many middle class families saw their net worth retreat backwards.  This was one really new facet in this current economic crisis.  Traditional mortgages were once seen as a forced savings account because every month a portion of the principal was paid off.  Once you reached the later years of the mortgage, more and more went to paying off the mortgage.  That was not the case with some of the debt we saw in the last decade.

    Part of the two income trap is hidden in more troubling ways.  Take for example automobile costs.  Most Americans with a two income household have two cars.  Let us assume that both cars were bought for $20,000 each and carry a $300 monthly payment.  So $600 a month right?  Wrong.  What about fuel?  Add $100 to $200 per month depending on how much you drive.  Car insurance?  This will be roughly $100 per month.  Car service?  Try another $50 to $100 per month.  So in total, many families are spending $600 to $900 per month on car costs.  And people aren’t taking much home after taxes:

    So the take home pay for the middle class family is $3,400 if they live in California.  Subtract that $900 in auto costs and you are now down to $2,500.  In places like California where the median home price went up to $500,000 any middle class family stood no chance at buying a home.  Well, they were able to buy but holding on to the home was another story.  Yet people bought at these peak levels and that is why we are seeing such large number of foreclosures in the state but also in other states.  Even last month the number of foreclosure filings in California was near record levels.  The middle class is finding it tougher and tougher to keep their head above water.

    Let us run the numbers if someone were to buy a home:

    The latest home price for existing home sales in the U.S. is $164,700 for the median.  It is interesting to note that we are now back to January of 2009 levels and for 2009, prices did go up but went full circle back.  Let us assume this family uses a FHA backed loan and is only required to put 3.5% down:

    Down payment:                               $5,764

    Mortgage payment (PITI):           $1,098

    So take that $2,500 left over and now subtract this amount.  $1,402 is what is left over.  This is the amount of money left over for food, healthcare (one illness and that is it with no insurance), and other daily good costs.  What about retirement savings?  That has to come from here as well.  The money can go quickly.  What about cells phones?  Utility bills?  Quickly that number dwindles.  And keep in mind this is household income.  As we now know many families are seeing one of their incomes disappearing and people are having a hard time finding work:

    Source:  Itulip

    When I look at the above chart it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that many people are still in the throngs of the recession.  The talk of recovery is muted by the reality of the numbers and all the average American will see is a recovery on Wall Street but in terms of their pocket book, little is funneling to them.  I’ve heard from people across the country looking for work and being unable to find anyone hiring.  And if they do find something, the wages are much less than what they once earned.  This isn’t reflected in the data.  How many people that are now marked as fully employed are in jobs that now pay less than what they once had?  That is why problems even in credit cards are filtering all the way to the bottom of the bank balance sheet.  People are relying on credit cards as their last lifeline and many banks are now shutting these off.

    What was once thought of as middle class security is now heavily at risk:

    -Secure job   [no longer]

    -Steady home values [no longer]

    -Access to affordable education [costs are outpacing inflation]

    -Healthcare costs are skyrocketing with an aging population [just look at your insurance premiums]

    The middle class is really coming under an onslaught of issues.  What we do in terms of financial reform and also, how we view our compact with our nation are going to be really important going forward.  But if the only sure thing is protecting banks from failure, then we are seeing the fruits of that decision playing out. 

  • Commercial Real Estate Problems in Financial Purgatory – $3.4 Trillion Debt Market and Expansion of Interest Only Loans to Finance CRE Deals. CRE Debt Found its way into Pension Funds.

    Posted: Mon, 01 Mar 2010 22:44:20 +0000

    The Congressional Oversight Panel put out a daunting report regarding the commercial real estate market.  Commercial real estate is an enormous market with $3.4 trillion in debt secured by office space, malls, and apartment complexes to name a few examples.  Commercial real estate does a fairly good job as being a barometer for the actual recovery on the ground that most average Americans will feel.  If middle class Americans feel ready to spend again and are expanding their consumption, then more and more office space will be occupied.  But looking at current vacancy rates we get a diverging picture of the recovery we keep hearing about but seem to escape the grasp of 95 percent of the population.

    One of the troubling findings in the report is the lax lending found in residential real estate was mirrored in the commercial real estate market:

    In fact, the amount of interest only or partial-interest only loans was even bigger in CRE than in the residential market which in itself is a rather stunning accomplishment.  In 2007 at the height of the CRE bubble, nearly 90 percent of all loans were interest only or partial-interest only loans.  This number is astounding.  But what is even more disturbing is the recent ramping up of interest only loans.  In other words, banks are rolling over loans with the absolute minimum payment possible to keep borrowers above water.  Why does the bank want millions of square feet in empty office space?  They don’t so the shift here probably has something to do with that.  The commercial real estate market is in a giant form of financial purgatory.

    The lax lending standards that came into the CRE market also show that during the boom due diligence was an afterthought on most loans.  Keep in mind many of these deals were multi-million dollar deals and in some cases, billions of dollars were at hand.  This wasn’t a $90,000 subprime loan, which is bad in itself with weak underwriting, but here you had millions being thrown around as if somehow banks forgot the actual value of a dollar.  The standards in CRE deteriorated rather quickly:

    As more and more money bounced around the system lending standards became more and more generous.  Of course this led to the massive expansion in CRE space even when demand did not warrant it but has now led us to this current precipice where the market is flooded with too much inventory.  As is the case in most bubbles prices have corrected heavily in the CRE market:

    CRE values across the board are down by 40 percent from their peak values, a steeper decline than even the residential housing market.  Yet banks holding onto these loans have been spared the stock market drubbing many banks took in 2008 and early 2009.  The loans are equally as bad so why then is the market responding so favorably to what seems to be disastrous data?  In March of 2009 it seemed the entire financial system was going to implode and finding a bid on any asset at one point seemed to be an act of futility.  Now this might have been extreme given how quickly we were approaching zero.  But today, the opposite is the case.  Many are overvaluing the actual damage that is going to hit the system in the next few years courtesy of the CRE market.  This is an enormous market where most of the loans are held by already weak banks:

    The large amount of this debt is held in commercial banks.  These are the same commercial banks that are backed by the insolvent FDIC fund.  The FDIC now lists over 700 banks as “troubled” but it is very likely that when this crisis is over (which can be years away) we will have at least 1,000 bank failures.  Most of these banks now have CRE loans that are not being serviced or are being serviced at lower levels that don’t even cover principal and interest.  To paraphrase, if you owe the bank $1 on credit card debt that is your problem, but if you owe the bank $10 million in CRE debt it is the bank’s problem.  Many banks are in a position where they are now realizing that the borrower is calling the bluff of the bank.  You want your CRE back?  Go ahead and take it!  So banks would rather let the borrower hold onto the CRE even if it is bleeding on a monthly basis instead of forcing actual write-downs on their books.

    And what is troubling is that many so-called conservative investment funds ate up this toxic waste:

    So you might be thinking, “I don’t own any CRE so why should I care?”  You might not own any of this CRE debt but your pension might.  Now when things get this systemic, it is bound to roil the system just like subprime was the fuse that lit off the economic crisis.  Today, no one thinks that subprime was the cause of this entire crisis but was merely the most obvious first domino to fall.  CRE is equally as toxic but it seems that the market has chosen to ignore the problems inherent in the system.  Eventually the system will have to realize what is going on either through a market correction or by funneling more bailout funds to inefficient components of the economy.

    The market is probably mispricing the actual problems in the system because it assumes that the bailouts of the banking industry will protect the problems with this mess.  Yet someone will be paying for this.  Wall Street is simply assuming it will be the middle class yet again.  Take a look at the concentration of CRE debt with the too big to fail:

    At the core of this problem was the shifting of debt to the global markets by securitization.  To repeat an often misused quote, real estate is local.  So how can an investor in Norway really have a good sense of CRE in Houston Texas?  They don’t and clearly this is the same inefficient spreading of risk (and gambling) that led us into this crisis:

    For 40 years securitizing debt was only a Wall Street trader pipe dream.  Suddenly in 2000, this was the way to make mounds of money on what used to be boring real estate debt.  CRE was only another asset class that was once relatively stable and suddenly became another slot machine in the Wall Street casino.  It is no mistake that over the past decade the middle class in America have lost ground seeing wages stagnant while a smaller portion of our economy goes to those in the government sanctioned casino knows as Wall Street.

    Expect bigger problems to hit in the CRE market.  From the report:

    “(COP) Between 2010 and 2014, about $1.4 trillion in commercial real estate loans will reach the end of their terms. Nearly half are at present “underwater” – that is, the borrower owes more than the underlying property is currently worth. Commercial property values have fallen more than 40 percent since the beginning of 2007. Increased vacancy rates, which now range from eight percent for multifamily housing to 18 percent for office buildings, and falling rents, which have declined 40 percent for office space and 33 percent for retail space, have exerted a powerful downward pressure on the value of commercial properties.”

    In other words, get ready for more bailouts or dollar devaluation.

  • Jim Sinclair Says….New York State’s Reduction Of Their Revenue Estimate Is A Fairy Tale. It Is Going Much Lower Than This Figure Would Indicate.

    Posted By on March 3, 2010

    NY State Cuts Revenue Estimate By $850 Million

    Posted March 3, 2010

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – New York Governor David Paterson and the state legislature have agreed to reduce their revenue forecast by $850 million for the next 13 months, a state report said on Tuesday.

    The Democratic governor in February cut $750 million from his revenue forecast for his proposed $136 billion budget for fiscal 2011, which starts on April 1.

    “The national economy, and to a greater extent, the New York economy, will experience a weak recovery which will translate into slow receipts growth,” said the report on the state economic and revenue consensus estimate.

    Paterson, whose ability to lead has been called into question by a probe into whether he and state troopers tried to quash a domestic violence complaint against an aide, met on Tuesday with legislative leaders to discuss the budget.

    On Monday, Paterson forecast that the deficit in the new fiscal year would grow to around $9 billion from his previous estimate of $8.2 billion because a number of payments will not arrive on time, including $300 million from a slot machine vendor for the Aqueduct Racetrack.

    More…

    We As Well As The Entire Western World Are Falling Off A Cliff And The CDS Market Is Already Decimating State Debt!.

    Posted By on March 3, 2010

    Indiana Puts 17th Notch In Revenue Shortfall Belt

    By Eric Bradner
    Posted March 2, 2010 at 11:45 p.m.

    INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana now has had 17 consecutive months of bad fiscal news.

    The latest revenue report on Tuesday showed the state took in $85.5 million less in taxes in February than was predicted less than three months ago.

    That puts the state $869 million below what lawmakers expected when they passed the budget for the fiscal period beginning in July.

    Gov. Mitch Daniels did not immediately order any budget cuts, but since it’s been 17 months since actual revenues met projections, he said further spending reductions might be necessary if revenues continue to sag.

    “We’ll just have to keep looking at it. There’s not a state in the union that’s done as much as we have, and we’re not out of tricks yet,” Daniels said.

    Daniels in December ordered a 3.5 percent cut in K-12 education funding. The move came after he slashed state agencies’ budgets, reduced or eliminated funding for a series of programs and cut $150 million in higher education spending.

    Up To 5,200 Los Angeles Schools Workers Could Face Layoffs!

    Posted By on March 3, 2010

    The Los Angeles Unified School District’s board voted Tuesday to send notices of possible layoffs to nearly 5,200 teachers and other workers while urging union leaders to negotiate concessions that could make some of the cuts unnecessary.  Members on Tuesday discussed cutting the pay of its nearly 40,000 full-time workers and shortening the school year to help address a projected $640 million deficit for the 2010-11 school year.

     

    A Noval Plan…..15,000 S.F. Workers Face Layoffs And Shorter Weeks But May Get Rehired Part Time

    Posted By on March 3, 2010

    Heather Knight, Chronicle Staff Writer
    Wednesday, March 3, 2010

    More than 15,000 San Francisco city workers across all departments will receive layoff notices Friday, and most of them will have the option of being rehired to work a shorter week, Mayor Gavin Newsom said Tuesday.

    Newsom’s controversial plan to help reduce the city’s $522 million budget deficit for the 2010-11 fiscal year would shift the majority of the city’s 26,000 workers from a 40-hour week to 37 1/2 hours, cutting their paychecks by 6.25 percent.

    The plan is expected to save $100 million – half in the city’s general operating fund and half in money-generating departments including the port and airport – but is being decried by unions and some supervisors as a slap at the rank and file.

    They also pointed to the mayor’s inability to promise that the move would spare future layoffs. Newsom said not all workers who receive layoff notices Friday will be rehired but refused to specify how many that may be.

    The mayor insisted, though, that it’s a smart way to spare several thousand layoffs and ensure that workers retain jobs as the city faces its biggest budget deficit. The move to a shortened workweek would not affect employees’ health benefits, vacation or sick time.

    More…

    Strator…..More On The Iran Quandary

    Posted By on March 3, 2010

    Wednesday, March 3, 2010

    From……Cashin’s Comments on the floor of The New York Stock Exchange

    More On The Iran Quandary – In Tuesday’s Comments, we alluded to an evaluation of the U.S./Iran standoff by Stratfor.  We thought their essay good enough to revisit.  Here’s a bit of the assessment:

    Iraq, not nuclear weapons, is the fundamental issue between Iran and the United States. Iran wants to see a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq so Iran can assume its place as the dominant military power in the Persian Gulf. The United States wants to withdraw from Iraq because it faces challenges in Afghanistan — where it will also need Iranian cooperation — and elsewhere. Committing forces to Iraq for an extended period of time while fighting in Afghanistan leaves the United States exposed globally. Events involving China or Russia — such as the 2008 war in Georgia — would see the United States without a counter. The alternative would be a withdrawal from Afghanistan or a massive increase in U.S. armed forces. The former is not going to happen any time soon, and the latter is an economic impossibility.

    Therefore, the United States must find a way to counterbalance Iran without an open-ended deployment in Iraq and without expecting the re-emergence of Iraqi power, because Iran is not going to allow the latter to happen. The nuclear issue is simply an element of this broader geopolitical problem, as it adds another element to the Iranian tool kit. It is not a stand-alone issue.

    Stratfor then goes on to compare the interests and goals of both sides.

    Consider the American interest. First, it must maintain the flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz. The United States cannot tolerate interruptions, and that limits the risks it can take. Second, it must try to keep any one power from controlling all of the oil in the Persian Gulf, as that would give such a country too much long-term power within the global system. Third, while the United States is involved in a war with elements of the Sunni Muslim world, it must reduce the forces devoted to that war. Fourth, it must deal with the Iranian problem directly. Europe will go as far as sanctions but no further, while the Russians and Chinese won’t even go that far yet. Fifth, it must prevent an Israeli strike on Iran for the same reasons it must avoid a strike itself, as the day after any Israeli strike will be left to the United States to manage.

    Now consider the Iranian interest. First, it must guarantee regime survival. It sees the United States as dangerous and unpredictable. In less than 10 years, it has found itself with American troops on both its eastern and western borders. Second, it must guarantee that Iraq will never again be a threat to Iran. Third, it must increase its authority within the Muslim world against Sunni Muslims, whom it regards as rivals and sometimes as threats.

    From……Cashin’s Comments

    Despite Low Rates, Homeowners Hesitate To Refinance…..From The Wall Street Journal

    Posted By on March 2, 2010

    America’s Hidden Debt

    Posted By on March 2, 2010

    chart_deficit.03.gif

    When anyone talks about U.S. debt, they typically refer to two numbers.

    The first is the debt held by the public. That’s money owed to those who have bought U.S. Treasurys, most notably big bond mutual funds and foreign governments. Debt held by the public today is roughly $8 trillion and rising.

    The second number is the money the federal government owes to government trust funds, such as those for Medicare and Social Security. The government has used revenue collected for those

    FHFA Extends Refinance Program By One Year

    Posted By on March 2, 2010

    This program has been a total failure at a radical cost to us the tax payers.  FHFA has reviewed the current market situation and the state of mortgage insurance availability and has determined that the market conditions that necessitated the actions taken last year have not materially changed.  Fannie, Freddie and FHA are broke.  FHA is a part of HUD since 1965.  FHA’s loses alone are expected to reach 100 billion if not already there.  Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are now government controlled entities GCE’s.  What ever happened to the free market policy of letting the market rise or sink to its own levels?  All the government is doing is prolonging the day of reckoning.  Our future is “highl risk” until markets of all types reach levels that bring in buyers on free market merits not by government support.  Things in the economy are likely to be tough and getting tougher until after the long term cycles bottom, most likely towards the end of the 2012 to 2014 time period…..just an opinion.    In the mean time, ebb and flow bounces are just that……bounces but not the bottom.  We can only hope that our government gets some sanity and learns 6’th grade arithmatic concerning the debt issues!
     
                        The Stated Truth
     

    Tuesday, March 02, 2010

    FHFA Extends Refinance Program

              by CalculatedRisk on 3/02/2010 08:41:00 AM

    Press Release: FHFA Extends Refinance Program By One Year

    Federal Housing Finance Agency Acting Director Ed DeMarco today announced the extension of the Home Affordable Refinance Program, (HARP), a refinancing program administered by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to June 30, 2011. … The HARP program expands access to refinancing for qualified individuals and families whose homes have lost value. The program was set to expire on June 10 of this year.
    “FHFA has reviewed the current market situation and the state of mortgage insurance availability and has determined that the market conditions that necessitated the actions taken last year have not materially changed, said DeMarco. Accordingly, to support and promote market stability, and to encourage lenders and other mortgage market participants to fully adopt the HARP program, including the implementation of the October 2009 expansion of loan-to-value ratios (LTVs) to 125 percent, FHFA is authorizing the extension of HARP until June 30, 2011.
    In 2009, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac purchased or guaranteed more than 4 million refinanced mortgages. Of this total, 190,180 were HARP refinances with LTVs between 80 percent and 125 percent.
     

    Pimco’s El-Erian: We’re Half-way Through A ‘Multiyear Resetting Of The Global Economy’

    Posted By on March 2, 2010

     
    Pimco’s El-Erian: We’re half-way through a ‘multiyear resetting of the global economy’
      
    By Drew Carter
    March 2, 2010
     
    The world is in the middle of a multiyear resetting of the global economy, Mohamed El-Erian, PIMCO CEO and co-chief investment officer, said at a news conference in London today.He said it will take some time for investors to recognize and adjust to the new normal once it arrives. To adapt, PIMCO is focusing on how interest-rate risk is becoming more like credit risk, and how investors’ focus on asset classes will change into a focus on risk factors, he said.

    For its part, PIMCO added nearly $280 billion in assets in 2009, a 40% increase over 2008, to bring its total assets under management to $985 billion, parent Allianz Global Investors said today.

    The bond manager reported $153 billion in net inflows for the year ended Dec. 31, with an added $125 billion coming from market returns. In 2008, inflows of $42 billion were more than offset by $43 billion in investment losses.

    PIMCO has grown its assets by 17% on average each year since 2002, according to AGI.

      www.pimco.com

    So you may ask, just who is El-Erian…….He is CEO of PIMCO and along with Bill Gross who is one of the original founders,  they are the co managers of the Pimco Funds and run the worlds largest bond funds. Pimco currently has under management nearly a trillion dollars.  The government hired Pimco on a consulting basis to help save the  financial world in late 2008 early 2009.  The Pimco management team is located in Newport Beach, California.  They are highly qualified and know what’s going on better then probably anybody…..
                                            ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Big Meeting In Damascus Last Friday……Says The Times

    Posted By on March 2, 2010

    In The Times – The Abu Dhabi media website “The National” ran the following report under the headline “That was a war council in Damascus”:

    The three-party meeting that took place in Damascus on Friday gathering the Syrian president Bashar al Assad, the Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the Hizbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah was a war council to devise counterattack plans and assign tasks in the event of an Israeli offensive on one or all parties, wrote Abdelbari Atwan, the editor-in-chief of the pan-Arab newspaper Al Quds al Arabi.   “The timing of the meeting, the way it was undertaken and the ensuing press conference that was held at its conclusion, all point to a strategic coalition being reinforced. This is the build-up of a new front that will spearhead the confrontation with the US-Israeli alliance and whichever Arab countries that may, expressly or implicitly, be affiliated with it.”

    The Iranian president said he expects war to break out somewhere between spring and summer of this year. Meanwhile, the Hizbollah chief vowed to strike the Israeli capital, its airports and power stations if Israel dared to attack Beirut’s critical infrastructure.

    “Indeed, we are being exposed to a new discourse here, an unprecedented sense of self-confidence and an unheard-of preparedness for retaliation.”

    Separately, Stratfor suggests the U.S. is close to an untenable position relative to Iran.  We seem unable to impose effective sanctions and military resolution may be unworkable.  Stratfor suggests the U.S. may have to completely rethink its posture and, perhaps, negotiate some resolution with Iran.

    And we all thought Greece was the problem.

    From Art Cashin on the floor of  The New York Stock Exchange

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