Recent Posts

Pages

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Author: dib
08.02.2010

Consumer credit down in Nov. for record 11th month

Consumer credit falls in November for record 11th month, as Americans pay down credit cards

ap

  •  
    •         

, On Friday February 5, 2010, 5:47 pm EST

WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans borrowed less for an 11th consecutive month in December, paying off credit cards while increasing borrowing for cars and other products.

The mixed picture raises hopes that Americans may soon return to spending, a necessary condition for economic recovery.

But the record 11-month decrease in overall borrowing shows consumers are still holding back amid lingering economic uncertainty and 9.7 percent unemployment.

The Federal Reserve said Friday that total borrowing dropped by $1.8 billion — far less than the revised $21.8 billion decline in November. It also was well below the $9 billion expected by analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters.

While economists have worried for years about the low rate of U.S. savings, the concern now is that consumers could derail the recovery if they start saving too much of their incomes. Consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of total economic activity.

Borrowing on credit cards fell by $8.5 billion, while other types of loans increased by $6.8 billion.

That means consumers are more willing to take out loans for big-ticket items like cars, boats or education. But they may not be using credit cards to augment their income as freely as in the past.

The change also may reflect card issuers’ scrambling to raise rates and cut lines before tough consumer protection rules take effect next month.

Under a law Congress passed last year, card issuers will be limited in how quickly they can hike rates and must enact other consumer protections. They have responded with a flurry of rate hikes and other provisions that make it more costly — and less appealing — for consumers to carry balances on their cards.

Americans also are borrowing less because they remain fearful about their job prospects. The government reported Friday that employers cut an additional 20,000 jobs last month — worse than the 5,000 gain analysts expected — bringing total job losses to more than 8 million since the recession began in December 2007.

But overall unemployment fell slightly, to 9.7 percent, a sign that the job losses may finally be reversing.

Consumers who would like to borrow more are finding it hard to get credit at banks. Many banks, hit by the worst financial crisis since the 1930s, have been pushed by regulators to tighten their lending standards.

December’s revised $1.8 billion drop in total consumer credit was the smallest drop in percentage terms since the downward trend started 11 months ago. It represented an 0.8 percent decline in consumer credit from the month before.

By contrast, November’s revised $21.8 billion drop in total credit was the biggest amount in dollars terms since records began in 1943.

The Fed’s credit report excludes home loans and home equity mortgages, only covering borrowing that is not secured by real estate.

The drop in overall credit for 11 straight months was a record in terms of consecutive declines, surpassing the old mark of seven straight declines set in 1943 and again in 1991.

Borrowing in the category that includes credit cards has fallen for 15 straight months, also a record.

With the string of declines, overall consumer borrowing by the Fed measure has fallen to $2.46 trillion.


Author: dib
07.02.2010

Obama, GOP sparring over job creation proposals

Obama, GOP bicker over job creation plans; shows tough sledding toward bipartisan solutions

ap

  •  
    •         

, On Saturday February 6, 2010, 6:09 pm EST

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans sparred with President Barack Obama in their Saturday media addresses over proposals to create jobs, further evidence of the difficulty of bipartisan solutions to the nation’s pressing problems.

Obama pushed Congress to use $30 billion that had been set aside to bail out Wall Street to start a new program that provides loans to small businesses, which the White House calls the engine for job growth. Republicans, meanwhile, taunted Obama with a familiar refrain: Where are the jobs the president promised in exchange for the billions of dollars already spent?

The barb came a day after the government reported an unexpected decline in the unemployment rate, from 10 percent to 9.7 percent. It was the first drop in seven months but offered little consolation for the 8.4 million jobs that have vanished since the recession began.

“Even though our economy is growing again, these are still tough times for America,” Obama said. “Too many businesses are still shuttered. Too many families can’t make ends meet. And while yesterday, we learned that the unemployment rate has dropped below 10 percent for the first time since summer, it is still unacceptably high — and too many Americans still can’t find work.”

To help the recovery, Obama asked Congress to use leftover money from the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, to provide to small banks so they can make more loans to small businesses. Republicans have criticized the move, arguing any money leftover from the bailout should be used to reduce the budget deficit.

In the weekly GOP address, Rep. Jeb Hensarling of Texas chided Obama for proposing a 2011 budget last week that would increase spending, taxes and the national debt.

“Americans are still asking, ‘where are the jobs?’ but all they are getting from Washington is more spending, more taxes, more debt and more bailouts,” Hensarling said.

The Republican attack came even as key Democrats and Republicans in the Senate are working on a bipartisan jobs bill. The senators hope to unveil legislation as early as Monday that would provide tax breaks to businesses that hire unemployed workers, extend unemployment payments for those whose benefits have run out, and renew a program that offers the jobless a subsidy for health insurance premiums.

Senate passage of a bipartisan jobs bill would mark an important political victory for Obama. But Saturday’s radio and Internet addresses showed that bipartisanship won’t be easy.

The White House has repeatedly argued that the $787 billion economic stimulus package enacted in February helped save the economy from complete collapse. On Friday, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told ABC News there is a much lower risk of a double-dip recession “than at any time over the last 12 months or so.”

Hensarling, however, said the stimulus package and the growing government debt have added to the country’s economic problems.

“Democrats chose to go it alone and jam through their stimulus,” Hensarling said. “What did the American people get? A bill for $1.2 trillion and 3 million more jobs lost.”


Author: dib
05.02.2010

ALL BUSINESS: What weak IPOs say about bull market

ALL BUSINESS: Weak IPO market shows not everyone’s confident in bull stock run

ap

  •  
    •         
    •  

, On Friday February 5, 2010, 10:55 am EST

NEW YORK (AP) — You know it’s a weak IPO market when a hot technology company prefers Bono to the Nasdaq.

That’s what Yelp did when it raised $25 million in late January from a venture capital firm whose investment team includes the lead singer from U2. The online business-listing service, thought to be a prime candidate for an IPO, now won’t go public until late next year at the earliest.

“We will do an IPO when it makes strategic sense,” Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman said recently.

This was supposed to be the year when initial public offerings made sense again following the worst drought since the 1970s. After all, the Standard & Poor’s 500 is up more than 60 percent since March, and the economy is improving.

But so far, executives at would-be IPO candidates are playing it safe — another sign that this is a bull market that doesn’t feel like one.

That reluctance to go public comes with consequences that go beyond the stock market.

“Where this really hits: job growth,” said Mark Heesen, who heads the National Venture Capital Association, an Arlington, Va.-based trade group. “After companies go public, that’s where they add 90 percent of jobs.”

Companies issue common stock to the public as a way to raise capital, which they use to expand their operations or pay down debt. The payoff can be huge for the founders and early investors, like the venture funds. Billionaires born from past IPOs include Microsoft’s Bill Gates, Amazon.com’s Jeff Bezos and Oracle’s Larry Ellison, to name a few.

The market for stock offerings collapsed during the financial crisis in late 2008. Young companies — like their larger and more established rivals — faced plunging sales and profits, making them unattractive to investors.

There was one U.S. IPO in the fourth quarter of 2008 and two in the first quarter of 2009, the worst IPO volume in four decades, according to IPOHome.com, which tracks data on stock offerings.

By the end of last year, 63 IPOs got done, a dramatic rebound but still less than a quarter of the offerings done at the height of this decade’s market in 2007.

The gains in late 2009 came as stocks and the economy surged. Signs of life in the IPO market were welcome since bank lending is still tight and financing from venture capital firms has plunged to the lowest level in more than a decade.

Yet five weeks into the new year, so far 2010 is a disappointment.

Eight companies have gone public in that time, an improvement from the one offering done at this point last year, according to IPOHome.com.

But the newly issued shares have fallen by an average of 5 percent, and that’s happening even after half of those offerings were priced below what the companies had initially hoped to get for each share sold. One, Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, priced at $11.25 per share for its IPO on Wednesday, below the range of $14 to $16 its underwriters had hoped to get.

Three companies have postponed their IPOs and one withdrew.

“Are we open for business? Yes,” says Kathleen Smith, a principal at Renaissance Capital, which runs IPOHome.com. “But we’ve seen a week’s worth of bad trading and that certainly does make people nervous.

“Investors are being very selective and demanding discounts to buy,” Smith says.

Some companies are steering clear of an IPO for now, putting themselves up for sale or trying to get funds from other sources.

“I am seeing more managers managing like their companies are going to be acquired rather than have an IPO,” says Tom Kinnear, who leads the University of Michigan’s Zell Lurie Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies.

Yelp was talking with Google about an acquisition, but that fell apart late last year. It then secured $25 million from Elevation Partners, its fifth round of financing from the venture capital firm.

Yelp plans to use the money to expand the reach of its Web site, where people post and read reviews about restaurants and other local services and businesses. Its site drew more than 26 million visitors in December.

Stoppelman, the CEO, said the costs of being a public company and the pressures to constantly please investors influenced his decision. Now, he’ll wait until the company needs capital or stock to make acquisitions before considering an IPO.

A key test case for the IPO market could come with the much-hyped offering for electric-car maker Tesla Motors Inc., which announced in late January its intention to go public.

Tesla has notoriety. Its high-end Roadster, an all-electric sports car that retails for $109,000, has plenty of buzz and is popular with celebrities. Profits, however, have been more elusive. The company has accumulated $236.4 million in losses since being founded in 2003.

So far the Palo Alto, Calif., company hasn’t disclosed how much it plans to raise, how many shares it would sell or when it plans to offer them. If the IPO successful, it could be a turning point for public offerings, even the broader market.


Author: dib
04.02.2010

New York AG filing civil charges against BofA

New York AG filing civil charges saying Bank of America, former CEO Lewis misled investors

ap

  •  
    •         

Related Quotes

Symbol Price Change
BAC 14.95 -0.58
Chart for BK OF AMERICA CP

{”s” : “bac”,”k” : “c10,l10,p20,t10″,”o” : “”,”j” : “”}

, On Thursday February 4, 2010, 11:47 am

New York (AP) — The New York Attorney General’s office said Thursday it is filing civil charges against Bank of America and its former CEO Ken Lewis, saying the bank misled investors about Merrill Lynch when it acquired the Wall Street bank in late 2008.

Civil charges were also being filed against Joe Price, the bank’s former chief financial officer. Price is now head of the bank’s consumer banking division.

At the same time New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s office was filing its civil charges, the Securities and Exchange Commission also reached a settlement to resolve charges it brought against Bank of America over similar issues.

Lewis stepped down from Bank of America on Dec. 31 after almost a year of strife that followed the bank’s purchase of Merrill Lynch.

Bank of America has been accused of failing to properly disclose losses at Merrill and bonuses paid to investment bank employees before the deal closed.

Cuomo called Bank of America’s actions “egregious and reprehensible” in deceiving not only shareholders, but also the federal government.

The bank received an additional $20 billion in government bailout funds in January 2009 to help offset losses it absorbed as part of the Merrill Lynch acquisition. In December, Bank of America repaid the $20 billion, plus the initial $25 billion it received in government bailout money.

“We are disappointed and find it regrettable that the NYAG has chosen to file these charges, which we believe are totally without merit,” Bank of America spokesman Robert Stickler said.

“The evidence demonstrates that Bank of America and its executives, including Ken Lewis and Joe Price, at all times acted in good faith and consistent with their legal and fiduciary obligations,” Stickler said. “In fact, the SEC had access to the same evidence as the NYAG and concluded that there was no basis to enter either a charge of fraud or to charge individuals.”

Bank of America agreed to pay $150 million to shareholders to settle the SEC charges. The agreement still must be approved by Judge Jed S. Rakoff of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.

Stickler said the company, along with the executives will “vigorously” defend themselves.


Author: dib
03.02.2010

US mortgage sector braced for end of Fed help

By Michael Mackenzie in New York

Published: February 3 2010 22:46 | Last updated: February 3 2010 22:46

Cold turkey time is rapidly approaching for the US mortgage market as the Federal Reserve gets ready to end its mammoth $1,250bn buying programme at the end of March.

The prospect of such a large buyer moving to the sidelines means that the “artificial market” created by the Fed’s hefty purchases – part of a monetary policy strategy aimed at reducing mortgage borrowing costs – should result in more normal mortgage rates, likely to be at a higher level.

The question is, how much higher? There is a great deal of uncertainty among many investors on exactly how to position themselves for the withdrawal of the Fed from the mortgage market. Many want higher rates, as it makes the investments more attractive. Yet the Fed wants to keep mortgage rates low to help home-buyers.

In a survey of some of the 4,000 people attending a securitisation conference this week, 73 per cent of respondents expected spreads on mortgage-backed securities to go “much wider” when the Fed ceases buying mortgage bonds, backed by mortgage agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But the impact is hard to pin down.

When the Fed began buying mortgages last January, the average 30-year coupon on Fannie Mae mortgage paper tumbled to a low of 3.68 per cent, having surged above 6 per cent during the worst of the financial crisis in late 2008.

Since November, the mortgage coupon has eased from a high of 4.60 per cent to a low of 3.90 per cent and is currently about 4.40 per cent.

That places the 30-year coupon about 70 basis points above the 10-year Treasury yield.

Before the financial crisis, 30-year mortgage paper tended to trade 100bps to 125bps above the 10-year note, suggesting that the market needs to sell off between 30bps and 50bps once the Fed halts its buying. Roger Lehman, a mortgage securities analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch expects mortgage spreads will widen modestly by some 20-30bps, and not excessively, say beyond 75bps.

“Once spreads widen by 20-30bps, there will be demand mainly from banks and money managers,” he says.

Certainly the Fed’s buying has been met with grateful selling by mortgage investors over the past year, resulting in many portfolios being extremely underweight the sector.

For example, Pimco’s flagship Total Return Fund of $202bn, managed by Bill Gross, currently has 17 per cent of its assets in mortgages after being about 83 per cent a year ago.

Kent Wosepka, money manager at Standish Mellon, says they remain “pretty underweight mortgages in our portfolios” and are watching to see how the market copes once the Fed steps away.

Gerald Lucas, senior investment adviser at Deutsche Bank, said he expected current coupon mortgage spreads would slowly widen by between 20-30bps, but that buyers should step up. “Investors are so underweight mortgages, that a widening in spreads will be contained by pent-up demand to own the paper,” he said.

Reinforcing the scenario of a modest widening in spreads is the targeted nature of the Fed’s buying.

Mr Lucas says that the Fed and Treasury between them hold about 80 per cent of the current 30-year mortgage paper with coupons of 4 per cent and 4.5 per cent.

The current Fannie Mae 30-year coupon trades about 4.40 per cent and when money managers start to buy mortgages, they will want the current paper, not older issues at higher yields.

Given the fact that the Fed and Treasury own so much of the current coupon sector, that should help limit a rise in mortgage spreads, says Mr Lucas.

Not all investors are so sure that less supply will help limit spread widening.

With the Fed and Treasury owning so much of the current mortgage coupons, there is far less available for investors and much less liquidity, which could exacerbate changes in rates.

That is particularly the case should rates rise. Under such a scenario, holders of mortgages usually sell some of their portfolio in order to maintain a balance between their overall holding and the level of rates.

This type of technical selling has in the past been violent and amid poorer liquidity conditions could easily compound an unruly sell-off.

“It seems unlikely we will have a gradual widening in mortgage spreads,” says Mr Wosepka. “That’s not normally the case in markets.”

Indeed, some analysts see the Fed’s purchases as having removed volatility from the market. Once it stops, more volatility will return, by definition. The spectre of instability and a sudden jump in rates is high on the Fed’s watch list.

Policymakers said after their meeting last week: “The Committee will continue to evaluate its purchases of securities in light of the evolving economic outlook and conditions in financial markets.”

That language is considered a code for further Fed buying should rates rise sharply, say analysts and investors.

Mr Lehman says that sharply wider mortgage spreads are likely to result in the government using Fannie and Freddie to step in and stabilise the market with buying. On Christmas eve the government announced that it would provide unlimited support for the mortgage giants over the next three years rather than cap their federal credit line at $400bn.

“If that doesn’t work we would not rule out the possibility that they may step in a bigger way,” says Mr Lehman.


Author: dib
03.02.2010

No Help in Sight, More Homeowners Walk Away

by David Streitfeld
Monday, February 1, 2010

provided by
The New York Times

In 2006, Benjamin Koellmann bought a condominium in Miami Beach. By his calculation, it will be about the year 2025 before he can sell his modest home for what he paid. Or maybe 2040.

“People like me are beginning to feel like suckers,” Mr. Koellmann said. “Why not let it go in default and rent a better place for less?”

More from NYTimes.com:

When Legal Bills Become a Cause for Dispute

Curveball Alters Talks on Wall Street Reform

Huge Deficits May Alter U.S. Politics and Global Power

After three years of plunging real estate values, after the bailouts of the bankers and the revival of their million-dollar bonuses, after the Obama administration’s loan modificationplan raised the expectations of many but satisfied only a few, a large group of distressed homeowners is wondering the same thing.

New research suggests that when a home’s value falls below 75 percent of the amount owed on the mortgage, the owner starts to think hard about walking away, even if he or she has the money to keep paying.

In a situation without precedent in the modern era, millions of Americans are in this bleak position. Whether, or how, to help them is one of the biggest questions the Obama administration confronts as it seeks a housing policy that would contribute to the economic recovery.

“We haven’t yet found a way of dealing with this that would, we think, be practical on a large scale,” the assistant Treasury secretary for financial stability, Herbert M. Allison Jr., said in a recent briefing.

More from Yahoo! Finance:

Same Old Banks, New High-Risk Lending Tricks?

How Much House Can You Afford Now?

Mortgage Rates: Not at a Floor Yet


Visit the Loans Center

The number of Americans who owed more than their homes were worth was virtually nil when the real estate collapse began in mid-2006, but by the third quarter of 2009, an estimated 4.5 million homeowners had reached the critical threshold, with their home’s value dropping below 75 percent of the mortgage balance.

They are stretched, aggrieved and restless. With figures released last week showing that the real estate market was stalling again, their numbers are now projected to climb to a peak of 5.1 million by June — about 10 percent of all Americans with mortgages.

“We’re now at the point of maximum vulnerability,” said Sam Khater, a senior economist with First American CoreLogic, the firm that conducted the recent research. “People’s emotional attachment to their property is melting into the air.”

Suggestions that people would be wise to renege on their home loans are at least a couple of years old, but they are turning into a full-throated barrage. Bloggers were quick to note recently that landlords of an 11,000-unit residential complex in Manhattan showed no hesitation, or shame, in walking away from their deeply underwater investment.

“Since the beginning of December, I’ve advised 60 people to walk away,” said Steve Walsh, a mortgage broker in Scottsdale, Ariz. “Everyone has lost hope. They don’t qualify for modifications, and being on the hamster wheel of paying for a property that is not worth it gets so old.”

Mr. Walsh is taking his own advice, recently defaulting on a rental property he owns. “The sun will come up tomorrow,” he said.

The difference between letting your house go to foreclosure because you are out of money and purposefully defaulting on a mortgage to save money can be murky. But a growing body of research indicates that significant numbers of borrowers are declining to live under what some waggishly call “house arrest.”

Using credit bureau data, consultants at Oliver Wyman calculated how many borrowers went straight from being current on their mortgage to default, rather than making spotty payments. They also weeded out owners having trouble paying other bills. Their estimate was that about 17 percent of owners defaulting in 2008, or 588,000 people, chose that option as a strategic calculation.

Some experts argue that walking away from mortgages is more discussed than done. People hate moving; their children attend the neighborhood school; they do not want to think of themselves as skipping out on a debt. Doubters cite a Federal Reserve study using historical data from Massachusetts that concludes there were relatively few walk-aways during the 1991 bust.

The United States Treasury falls into the skeptical camp.

“The overwhelming bulk of people who have negative equity stay in their homes and keep paying,” said Michael S. Barr, assistant Treasury secretary for financial institutions.

It would cost about $745 billion, slightly more than the size of the original 2008 bank bailout, to restore all underwater borrowers to the point where they were breaking even, according to First American.

Using government money to do that would be seen as unfair by many taxpayers, Mr. Barr said. On the other hand, doing nothing about underwater mortgages could encourage more walk-aways, dealing another blow to a fragile economy.

“It’s not an easy area,” he said.

Walking away — also called “jingle mail,” because of the notion that homeowners just mail their keys to the bank, setting off foreclosure proceedings — began in the Southwest during the 1980s oil collapse, though it has never been clear how widespread it was.

In the current bust, lenders first noticed something strange after real estate prices had fallen about 10 percent.

An executive with Wachovia, one of the country’s biggest and most aggressive lenders, said during a conference call in January 2008 that the bank was bewildered by customers who had “the capacity to pay, but have basically just decided not to.” (Wachovia failed nine months later and was bought by Wells Fargo.)

With prices now down by about 30 percent, underwater borrowers fall into two groups. Some have owned their homes for many years and got in trouble because they used the house as a cash machine. Others, like Mr. Koellmann in Miami Beach, made only one mistake: they bought as the boom was cresting.

It was April 2006, a moment when the perpetual rise of real estate was considered practically a law of physics. Mr. Koellmann was 23, a management consultant new to Miami.

Financially cautious by nature, he bought a small, plain one-bedroom apartment for $215,000, much less than his agent told him he could afford. He put down 20 percent and received a fixed-rate loan from Countrywide Financial.

Not quite four years later, apartments in the building are selling in foreclosure for $90,000.

“There is no financial sense in staying,” Mr. Koellmann said. With the $1,500 he is paying each month for his mortgage, taxes and insurance, he could rent a nicer place on the beach, one with a gym, security and valet parking.

Walking away, he knows, is not without peril. At minimum, it would ruin his credit score. Mr. Koellmann would like to attend graduate school. If an admission dean sees a dismal credit record, would that count against him? How about a new employer?

Most of all, though, he struggles with the ethical question.

“I took a loan on an asset that I didn’t see was overvalued,” he said. “As much as I would like my bank to pay for that mistake, why should it?”

That is an attitude Wall Street would like to encourage. David Rosenberg, the chief economist of the investment firm Gluskin Sheff, wrote recently that borrowers were not victims. They “signed contracts, and as adults should also be held accountable,” he wrote.

Of course, this is not necessarily how Wall Street itself behaves, as demonstrated by the case of Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village. An investment group led by the real estate giant Tishman Speyer recently defaulted on $4.4 billion in debt that it had used to buy the two apartment developments in Manhattan, handing the properties back to the lenders.

Moreover, during the boom, it was the banks that helped drive prices to unrealistic levels by lowering credit standards and unleashing a wave of speculative housing demand.

Mr. Koellmann applied last fall to Bank of America for a modification, noting that his income had slipped. But the lender came back a few weeks ago with a plan that added more restrictive terms while keeping the payments about the same.

“That may have been the last straw,” Mr. Koellmann said.

Guy D. Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance magazine, says he does not hear much sympathy from lenders for their underwater customers.

“The banks tell me that a lot of people who are complaining were the ones who refinanced and took all the equity out any time there was any appreciation,” he said. “The banks are damned if they will help.”

Joe Figliola has heard that message. He bought his house in Elgin, Ill., in 2004, then refinanced twice to get better terms. He pulled out a little money both times to cover the closing costs and other expenses. Now his place is underwater while his salary as circulation manager for the local newspaper has been cut.

“It doesn’t seem right that I can rent a place somewhere for half of what I’m paying,” he said. “I told my bank, ‘Just take a little bite out of what I owe. That would ease me up. Isn’t that why the president gave you all this money?’ ”

Bank of America did not agree, so Mr. Figliola, who is 48, sees no recourse other than walking away. “I don’t believe this is the right thing to do,” he said, “but I’ve got to survive.”


Author: dib
02.02.2010

Deficit Balloons Into National-Security Threat

by Gerald F. Seib
Tuesday, February 2, 2010

provided by
wsjlogo.gif

The federal budget deficit has long since graduated from nuisance to headache to pressing national concern. Now, however, it has become so large and persistent that it is time to start thinking of it as something else entirely: a national-security threat.

More from WSJ.com:

Wealthy Face Tax Increase

Obama to Roll Out Small-Business Lending Program

States Restart Health-Care Push

The budget plan released Monday illustrates why this escalation is warranted. The numbers are mind-numbing: a $1.6 trillion deficit this year, $1.3 trillion next year, $8.5 trillion for the next 10 years combined—and that assumes Congress enacts President Barack Obama’s proposals to start bringing it down, and that the proposals work.

These numbers are often discussed as an economic and domestic problem. But it’s time to start thinking of the ramifications for America’s ability to continue playing its traditional global role.

The U.S. government this year will borrow one of every three dollars it spends, with many of those funds coming from foreign countries. That weakens America’s standing and its freedom to act; strengthens China and other world powers; puts long-term defense spending at risk; undermines the power of the American system as a model for developing countries; and reduces the aura of power that has been a great intangible asset for presidents for more than a century.

“We’ve reached a point now where there’s an intimate link between our solvency and our national security,” says Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations and a senior national-security adviser in both the first and second Bush presidencies. “What’s so discouraging is that our domestic politics don’t seem to be up to the challenge.”

More from Yahoo! Finance:

The Spend-Every-Penny Retirement Plan

13 Careers for the Next Decade

When a Spending Freeze Leads to Record Deficits


Visit the Banking & Budgeting Center

Consider just four of the ways that budget deficits also threaten American’s national security:

• They make America vulnerable to foreign pressures.

The U.S. has about $7.5 trillion in accumulated debt held by the public, about half of that in the hands of investors abroad.

That means America’s government is dependent on the largesse of foreign creditors and subject to the whims of international financial markets. A foreign government, through the actions of its central bank, could put pressure on the U.S. in a way its military never could. Even under a more benign scenario, a debt-ridden U.S. is vulnerable to a run on the American dollar that begins abroad.

Either way, Mr. Haass says, “it reduces our independence.”

• Chinese power is growing as a result.

A lot of the deficit is being financed by China, which is selling the U.S. many billions of dollars of manufactured goods, then lending the accumulated dollars back to the U.S. The IOUs are stacking up in Beijing.

So far this has been a mutually beneficial arrangement, but it is slowly increasing Chinese leverage over American consumers and the American government. At some point, the U.S. may have to bend its policies before either an implicit or explicit Chinese threat to stop the merry-go-round.

Just this weekend, for example, the U.S. angered China by agreeing to sell Taiwan $6.4 billion in arms. At some point, will the U.S. face economic servitude to China that would make such a policy decision impossible?

• Long-term national-security budgets are put at risk.

This year, thanks in some measure to continuing high costs from wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. will spend a once-unthinkable $688 billion on defense. (Before the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, by contrast, the figure was closer to $300 billion.)

Staggering as the defense outlays are, the deficit is twice as large. The much smaller budgets for the rest of America’s international operations—diplomacy, assistance for friendly nations—are dwarfed even more dramatically by the deficit.

These national-security budgets have been largely sacrosanct in the era of terrorism. But unless the deficit arc changes, they will come under pressure for cuts.

• The American model is being undermined before the rest of the world.

This is the great intangible impact of yawning budget deficits. The image of an invincible America had two large effects over the last century or so. First, it made other countries listen when Washington talked. And second, it often—not always, of course, but often—made other peoples and leaders yearn to be like America.

Sometimes that produced jealousy and resentment among leaders, but often it drew to the top of foreign lands leaders who admired the U.S. and wanted their countries to emulate it. Such leaders are good allies.

The Obama administration has pledged to create a bipartisan commission charged with balancing the budget, except for interest payments, by 2015. The damage deficits can do to America’s world standing is a good reason to hope the commission works.


Author: dib
01.02.2010

Obama says budget built on smart investments

Obama announces budget plan focused on economy; says big deficits were largely inherited

ap

  •  
    •         

On Monday February 1, 2010, 10:58 am

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says his new $3.83 trillion budget is filled with “investments we must make” to boost employment and solidify the economy.

The plan would boost this year’s federal deficit to a record-breaking $1.56 trillion — a level of debt that Obama blamed on the decisions of President George W. Bush, previous Congresses and his administration’s steps to prevent an economic collapse.

Obama said in normal circumstances he would have worked to pay down the yearly deficit immediately, but costly steps were need to help an economy in free fall. He asked lawmakers to follow his lead on reducing waste and avoid “grandstanding.” His budget plan aims to attack 10 percent joblessness with increased spending in areas such as education.


Author: dib
31.01.2010

Foreclosures new hot spots

The new foreclosure plague is tied more to the economy than bad mortgages. Here are 10 cities where defaults grew the fastest in 2009.

1 of 10

BACKNEXT

Boise, Idaho

Foreclosure rate: One in every 21 homes
Percent increase from 2008: 103%
National rank: 24th
Unemployment rate: 10.1%

Boise’s population has more than doubled since 1980, and its economy has diversified over the past half century. Tech industries have come into the mix, and Micron Technology is now the city’s largest employer.

As in many Western cities, the real estate market here was quite volatile during the boom. The median home price jumped from about $150,000 during 2003 to $260,000 at its peak in 2006, according to the Wells Fargo-National Association of Home Builders housing opportunity index. Since then prices have dropped more than 32%.

Christine Loucks, an economics professor for Boise State University, attributes the foreclosure runup in town to two main causes: A small speculative bubble that has burst and the economic slowdown.

“With the rapid population increase, there was strong demand for housing,” she said, “and that led to buying for speculation.”

When prices started to slow down, the speculators pulled out, driving prices down further and trapping some buyers underwater. Many flippers were caught in the downswing and lost their homes.

Job losses also began to mount. Micron laid off 1,500 to 2,000 workers, HP slowed some of its operations, and the financial and construction industry employers also cut jobs.

“Residential construction just stopped,” said Loucks.

Add it all up and Boise went through a similar — though less severe — cycle as frothier markets in California, Nevada, Florida and Arizona.


Author: dib
30.01.2010

In Davos, regulators tell bankers new rules coming

Regulators get tough in Davos, give bankers an idea of financial reforms they vow are coming

ap

  •  
    •         

Related Quotes

Symbol Price Change
BAC 15.18 -0.19
Chart for BK OF AMERICA CP
DMH 8.05 +0.07
Chart for BANK OF AMERICA CORP
JPM 38.94 -0.54
Chart for JP MORGAN CHASE CO
NYX 23.41 -0.06
Chart for NYSE EURONEXT

{”s” : “bac,dmh,jpm,nyx”,”k” : “c10,l10,p20,t10″,”o” : “”,”j” : “”}

, On Saturday January 30, 2010, 8:42 am EST

DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) — Government regulators from the United States and Europe laid out their financial reform plans Saturday before a skeptical banking industry, asking financiers for input but adamant that change was coming with or without their support.

Emerging from the two-hour meeting as its unofficial spokesman, U.S. Representative Barney Frank made it clear that governments were now calling the shots after spending billions to bail out the industry.

Top bankers, by contrast, who came into this week’s World Economic Forum buoyed by signs of economic recovery, left somewhat subdued even as they called the closed-door meeting constructive.

“No one got up and said, ‘Don’t regulate us,’” said Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat who heads the U.S. House Financial Services Committee. “It would have been a waste of their time if they did.”

The meeting comes after days of tension at this Swiss Alpine resort over government plans for stricter controls on the financial industry to limit speculation and avoid a repeat of the 2008 meltdown that plunged the world into recession. Bankers have protested the new proposals, saying the U.S. and other countries risk choking off a gradual economic recovery with regulation they see as heavy-handed.

The event was not on the forum’s official agenda, but quickly became the most significant development of the day. It also brought to mind some of Davos’ previous high-profile conflict resolution efforts, including a Greek-Turkey accord to avoid war in 1988, as well as meetings between South African President F. W. de Klerk and the recently freed Nelson Mandela, and between Israel’s then-Foreign Minister Shimon Peres and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat.

“We are determined to do strong, sensible regulation,” Frank said, rejecting any notion that President Barack Obama’s administration could sink the economy again with too many new controls on the banking industry.

“That’s nonsense,” Frank told reporters. “What we’re trying globally to recover from is a total lack of regulation.”

On the government side, in addition to Frank, those at the meeting included Lawrence H. Summers, Obama’s top economic adviser, British treasury chief Alistair Darling and French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde.

Bankers attending the private talks included Josef Ackermann, chief executive of Deutsche Bank AG, Bank of America Corp. CEO Brian Moynihan, JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chairman Jacob Frenkel and Jean-Claude Trichet, president of the European Central Bank, which oversees the 16-nation euro zone.

“It was the most constructive dialogue I’ve seen between policymakers and industry officials and hopefully that’s a base people can build from,” said Duncan Niederauer, CEO of stock exchange operator NYSE Euronext Inc. “It was the first time I’ve seen both sides go beyond the rhetoric. There were practical suggestions being discussed.”

The banks were asked for their input, Frank said, adding that he believed they got the message that tighter controls were coming.

“Frankly it doesn’t matter if they did or didn’t,” Frank said. “They aren’t in charge of this.”

Frank said the most important element of the meeting was coordinating and better understanding the various approaches that governments are taking to stabilize and prevent excessive risks in their financial industries.

The aim was not to push for a global financial governing system, Frank said, saying each country could deal with the crisis on its own terms.

“A large part of the discussion was on the regulators, to talk about how we can coordinate so we don’t create opportunities for (banks) to move from one place to another to escape regulation,” he said, adding that some of the strongest concerns over U.S. developments have come from international regulators.

Frank earlier told The Associated Press that some countries “got used to the U.S. being the least regulated and they almost resent the fact we are going ahead with regulations, that we are taking the lead.” He declined to say which national regulators he was referring to.

No one at the meeting elaborated on any concrete proposals or agreements that were discussed, and the head of Britain’s Financial Services Authority said the banks didn’t ask for anything at the talks. “It was not a negotiation or a debate,” Adair Turner said.

Frank and Turner later held one-on-one discussions.

Ackermann of Deutsche Bank called it an “excellent, useful” meeting, while Joaquin Almunia, the European Union’s commissioner for economic and monetary affairs, said it “was not the place to make decisions.”

“It was constructive. Not conclusive, but constructive,” Almunia said.

Moynihan of Bank of America and Frenkel of JPMorgan Chase declined to comment.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the International Monetary Fund chief, said financial sector reforms should be bold but handled in close cooperation so that no countries suffer as a result.

“My fear is that we may … forget one of the key lessons of the crisis, which is coordination,” he said later on a separate panel