Important News - Oct. 25
By Daniel at 25 October, 2009, 6:39 pm
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1) Breaking:
TEL AVIV (MarketWatch) — A pair of bomb blasts in downtown Baghdad near two government buildings killed more than 130 people and wounded hundreds, according to media reports on Sunday.
The bombings hit at midmorning on the first day of Iraq’s workweek.
Attacked were an intersection near the Justice Ministry and the Ministry of Municipalities and Public Works; and then, shortly thereafter, the Baghdad provincial headquarters.
2) TARP chief: Banks possibly ‘in more danger now’ (Vinny A.)
The banking system today may be in a more precarious position than it was a year ago, the man charged with overseeing a $700 billion bailout program said Wednesday. Neil Barofsky, the special inspector general managing the Troubled Asset Relief Program, told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Wednesday that the government’s decision to support bank mergers over the past year may have put the U.S. economy more at risk.
3) Even the Fed Doesn’t Want to Hold U.S. Dollars (Vinny A.)
Americans just got 15% poorer on the world stage thanks to Ben Bernanke A currency crisis is in the works (and perhaps already starting) Regarding #1: When the financial crisis hit, the Fed realized it would need to keep interest rates low while it attempted to bail out the banks (80% of the $200+ trillion in derivatives sitting on commercial banks’ balance sheets are related to interest rates).
4) The Number of Job Hunters 65 or Older Skyrockets (M.W.)
Nearly half a million people 65 and older want to work but cannot find a job, this group’s highest unemployment level since the Great Depression.
5) Capmark To File For Bankruptcy, More FDIC Headaches (zerohedge)
“It’s game over for Capmark, which is expected to file for bankruptcy within 24 hours. The firm which was formerly GMAC’s commercial real estate business (Or GMAC Commercial Holding Ccapital Markets Corp in short), and had originated over $10 billion in CRE loans (by the way, did we say that CRE REITs are undervalued? if you didn’t buy at least 5 shares of some multi-apartment or hotel REIT yesterday with every share of Amazon you were covering you are a bubble uninflating traitor and have to be shot for not believing in a 100x P/E), was LBOed by KKR and Goldman in 2006. Needless to say, that particular investment won’t be making the next Calpers pitch book.”
6) Soros: China Must Be Part Of The New World Order.
A recent 10-min interview with Soros:
7) The Real Reason That - For the First Time Ever - More Women are Working Than Men
For the first time ever, at least half of all American workers are women. In addition, mothers are the primary breadwinners or co-breadwinners in nearly two-thirds of families.
Where are all the bad loans hiding?
Pee-Yew! Something sure smells rottenly ripe around the banking industry…
To piggyback on the previous article, let’s review how the securitization process IGNORED risk and thus created over leverage…
- 9) ICN Informed Citizen News 10/18/09
- 10) Cities get a break on pensions but critics aren’t so sure it’s a good idea
(saxplayer)
“Steep declines on Wall Street and the sluggish national economy pummeled the pension funds of the Lehigh Valley’s three cities last year, resulting in a combined loss of more than $85 million.
The massive dip — familiar to those with 401(k) retirement funds — threatened to dramatically increase the annual contributions the cities must pay to pension plans, and possibly, increase taxes.
But state lawmakers, prompted by warnings of a financial collapse in Philadelphia, bailed out municipalities across the state with a pension bill passed last month that establishes new financial standards and provides short-term budgetary relief for municipalities facing declining revenues.
The bill, known as Act 44, allows municipalities to pay less annually to account for investment losses and spreads the payments needed to cover those losses over a longer period.
In addition, municipalities may artificially increase the value of their pension funds by 30 percent — up from 20 percent — to account for the volatility of the market and to reduce the impact of the 2008 losses.
Critics of the bill say it bails out politicians, not the state’s taxpayers, and does nothing to address the underlying financial problems of a pension system they describe as unsustainable.”
“It’s happening. The long-awaited bankruptcy of big-time commercial real estate lender Capmark is just about here.
WSJ: In 2006, a group led by KKR & Co., Goldman Sachs Capital Partners and Five Mile Capital Partners acquired the lender GMAC LLC’s commercial-real estate business and renamed it Capmark. As of March 31, the investor group owned about 75% of the company, with GMAC and its employees owning the balance.”
“ Forget a jobless recovery. The economy may be entering a recovery with job losses.”
“Employment mystery
Economists are puzzled as to why job growth has slowed, citing everything from higher health care costs, to higher productivity, to Chinese currency manipulation.
“The answer is, we don’t know,” said Tim Bartik, a liberal economist with the Upjohn Institute for Employment Research in Michigan who is proposing a tax credit for employers who hire new workers.”
“Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) — The Philippines, which sold dollar- denominated debt three times this year, may turn to the domestic market to raise funds to help temper currency gains, Finance Secretary Gary Teves said.”
“The Philippines sold $1 billion of dollar-denominated bonds on Oct. 17, bringing total overseas sales this year to $3.25 billion to cover a record budget deficit.”
- 14) Balli Steel reports China dominating global steel market
“Balli Steel, one of the world’s largest privately owned independent commodity traders, reports that China is expanding into the iron ore market and increasing its steel production capacity, against a backdrop of declining worldwide production.
Figures from the World Steel Association demonstrate that global steel production declined by 18.1% year-on-year in August 2009 to 758 million tonnes. In contrast, crude steel production in China increased by 5.4% over the same period. China now accounts for almost 49% of world steel production as well as approximately 50% of global consumption which equates to 1.5 million tonnes per day.”
“The director of the Western Hemisphere Department at the IMF, Nicolas Eyzaguirre told reporters, in a press conference in São Paulo, southeastern Brazil, that the growth of Brazil in 2010 should be higher than previously forecasted by the institution, 3.5%.
Eyzaguirre also pointed out that one of the ways to avoid a new recession would be the establishment of a global insurance to avoid the world economy remaining dependant on the production of dollars by the United States.
“If everyone accumulates reserves in dollars, the United States have an enormous subsidy and we do not use this money for other things, like education and infrastructure. We need a multilateral organization that is not the Federal Reserve (Fed) to do this regulation.”"
- 16) From the Tehran Times (quoted from Mohammad-Ali Khatibi)
(saxplayer)
“Iran replaced the dollar with other currencies such as euro and yen in oil trading about three years ago, Khatibi said.
“We took the decision in a bid to diversify the oil income currency basket. Since the dollar is becoming weaker this move has led to greater benefit for our country,” he explained.
“Some other countries have also replaced dollar with a currency basket but due to the political issues they are not willing to publicize their move,” he added”
…….Interesting statistic on some bad news on homelessness is in the 4th paragraph
……Hundreds more employees of Pennsylvania’s state government are expected to get pink slips,
(but look at the other news items under the first story. What have they added to the water in Pennsylvania?)
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