History > 2011 > USA > Economy (I)
Debt
Limit Follies
January 31,
2011
The New York Times
At a recent
gathering of House Republicans, lawmakers made it clear that they intend to hold
an increase in the nation’s debt limit hostage to major spending cuts.
Clearly, the Republican aim is to demonstrate their fiscal prudence, as well as
their new political power in the Republican-controlled House. Don’t be fooled.
When it comes to debating the debt limit the facts matter little. It’s all about
posturing.
The debt limit is a cap set by Congress on the amount the nation can legally
borrow. The current limit, $14.3 trillion, will be hit sometime this spring.
Unless Congress raises it before then, the government will have to resort to
temporary tactics, like freeing up money to pay current bills by delaying
payments to federal retirement funds. The longer a standoff endures, the worse
the choices are. For instance, the government might defer other payments, like
tax refunds, as it husbands resources to avoid a default on the public debt.
All that would surely be disruptive and could be disastrous if the nation’s
creditors began to doubt America’s reliability.
The debt limit is a political tool, not a fiscal one. First enacted in 1917, it
was intended to make lawmakers think twice before voting for tax cuts and
spending increases that run up the debt. Unfortunately, it has never worked that
way. Federal debt is high despite the limit because lawmakers repeatedly enter
into expensive and recurring obligations without a plan to pay for them — in
recent years that includes two wars, the George W. Bush-era tax cuts and the
Medicare drug benefit.
As the costs pile up, the debt limit must be increased — not to make room for
new spending, but to raise money to pay for past commitments.
It is, of course, utterly disingenuous to vote for policies that drive up the
debt and then rail against raising the debt limit when the bills come due. It is
akin to piling up purchases on credit and then threatening to bounce the payment
check. But that is what Republicans are saying they will do unless they win deep
cuts in future spending in exchange for a debt-limit increase today. So much for
fiscal prudence.
A better approach would be to pay for legislation when it is enacted, generally
by raising taxes or cutting other spending. The new House leadership has
rejected that approach when it comes to their No. 1 priority: cutting taxes.
They have passed new budget rules that allow taxes to be cut without offsets to
replace the lost revenue. The new rules also forbid raising taxes to pay for
major new spending, like Medicare expansions, requiring instead that any such
spending be offset by cutting other programs. That is a recipe for fiscal
irresponsibility.
House Republican leaders have not said which spending cuts they will demand for
a debt-limit increase. They know that voters don’t want to hear about losing
college aid, environmental safeguards or investor protections. They may try to
call for overall spending caps that would let them take credit for spending
reductions without explaining or defending particular cuts.
What is known is that deep immediate spending cuts would be unwise at a time
when the economy and so many Americans are still struggling. President Obama and
Congressional Democrats need to push back by challenging House Republicans on
the hypocrisy of their new budget rules and by making it clear that playing
games with the debt limit is irresponsible.
Debt Limit Follies, NYT, 31.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/01/opinion/01tue1.html
Unrest in Egypt
Unsettles Global Markets
January 30, 2011
The New York Times
By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ
On Wall Street, it is what is known as an exogenous event — a sudden
political or economic jolt that cannot be predicted or modeled but sends
shockwaves rippling through global markets.
Investors have largely shrugged off several of these unexpected developments
recently, including the sovereign debt crisis in Europe, but the situation in
Egypt has the potential to cause more widespread uncertainty, especially if oil
and other commodities keep surging or the unrest spreads to more countries in
the Middle East.
While Egypt’s banks and stock market were closed because of the protests there,
other Middle Eastern markets declined in trading Sunday, with shares falling by
4.3 percent in Dubai, 3.7 percent in Abu Dhabi and 2.9 percent in Qatar.
By early Monday morning, Asian markets were also trending lower, with Japan’s
Nikkei index falling 1.5 percent, while in South Korea, the Kospi index slid 1.4
percent.
Last week, the Dow Jones industrial average nearly surpassed the closely watched
12,000 level, but fell 166 points in late trading Friday as the protests in
Egypt intensified and oil prices jumped 3.7 percent to $89.34.
With the United States economy seeming to gain a foothold only recently —
government data released Friday showed the economy grew by 3.2 percent in the
fourth quarter of 2010 — a sustained increase in oil prices could choke growth,
analysts said. It could also undermine the more general optimism that lifted the
Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index by 1.5 percent in January, after a 12.8
percent jump in 2010.
“A one-dollar, one-day increase in a barrel of oil takes $12 million out of the
U.S. economy,” said Jason S. Grumet, president of the Bipartisan Policy Center,
a Washington research group. “If tensions in the Mideast cause oil prices to
rise by $5 for even just three months, over $5 billion dollars will leave the
U.S. economy. Obviously, this is not a strategy for creating new jobs.”
In early electronic trading on the Nymex oil futures market Sunday night, prices
edged higher to $90.23 a barrel.
Until now, the stock market in the United States has defied several outside
threats, including the rising risk of food inflation, interest rate increases in
China, and sovereign debt troubles in Europe, said Sam Stovall, chief investment
strategist of Standard & Poor’s Equity Research.
“But as is usually the case, a boxer never gets knocked out by a punch he’s
looking for,” he said. “This could be what triggers the decline. Geopolitical
events are very, very hard to model.”
Egypt is not an oil exporter, nor is its stock market a regional heavyweight. As
the home of the Suez Canal and the nearby Sumed pipeline, however, it is one of
a handful of spots classified as World Oil Transit Chokepoints by the Energy
Department, and events there can have an outsize impact on global energy prices.
The 141-year-old canal is just 1,000 feet wide at its narrowest, and it cannot
handle supertankers, forcing shippers to rely on the pipeline or smaller vessels
to move the crude.
Roughly 2.9 millions barrels of oil a day, 2.6 percent of global production,
passed through the canal and the pipeline in 2009, the Energy Department said.
As a percentage of world oil demand, that may not sound like much, said William
H. Brown III, a former Wall Street energy analyst who consults for hedge funds
and financial institutions.
“But prices are determined at the margin and that’s a lot of oil in markets
these days,” said Mr. Brown, who estimates global spare production capacity at
2.5 million barrels, the bulk of it in Saudi Arabia.
While prices are set globally, the immediate impact of any interruption would be
felt primarily in Europe, which relies heavily on jet fuel, heating oil and
other distillates refined in the Middle East and shipped via the canal and
pipeline. Israel is also a major importer of Egyptian natural gas under a pact
that dates to the 1978 Camp David accords.
Egypt is a major player in the global grain market, importing more wheat than
any other country. Some analysts have speculated that Egypt and other Middle
Eastern countries might increase grain purchases to placate angry consumers,
which could eventually push wheat prices higher.
Given the confrontations with authorities in Cairo, Alexandria and other cities,
many analysts expect oil prices, and global markets, to remain volatile in the
coming days, even as the opposition in Egypt rallies around Mohamed ElBaradei.
“I would expect regional markets to remain very unsettled because we don’t look
any closer to a political resolution than we did on Friday,” said Ann Wyman,
head of emerging markets research in Europe for Nomura. “Instability in the
Middle East makes global markets uncomfortable. We’ve entered a new and
unpredictable phase of transitioning governments in the Middle East.”
Still, a few investors are looking for opportunities in the Middle East and
Egypt itself despite the declines there and the expected instability. Egyptian
stocks are inexpensive compared with shares in other markets, said David Marcus,
chief investment officer of Evermore Global Advisors. “This is one of the oldest
economies on earth.”
“We have to start doing our homework,” he added, noting that another troubled
Mediterranean bourse, in Athens, has rallied sharply this year, after Greece’s
near-default in 2010. “Egypt is pulling down the region because people panic and
don’t ask questions. That makes us much more interested.”
Unrest in Egypt
Unsettles Global Markets, NYT, 30.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/31/business/global/31markets.html
Teacher,
My Dad Lost His Job.
Do We Have to Move?
January 30,
2011
The New York Times
By MICHAEL WINERIP
WORTHINGTON, Ohio — Diane and Eric Kehler tried not to talk about it in front of
the children, but as Jen Hegerty, the guidance counselor at Wilson Hill
Elementary School, says, “Children have eagle ears.”
Mr. Kehler lost his $90,000-a-year job as an information technology manager. And
though he and his wife discussed their problems in whispers, eagle ears don’t
miss much. Their son Mathias, 12, a quiet, cerebral sixth grader at Wilson Hill,
got quieter. “Our house was sort of in a state of despair. We weren’t as happy
as usual,” Mathias said. “I stopped having good ideas to talk about with my
friends.”
Mrs. Kehler has a college degree but had chosen to be a stay-at-home mother.
That ended. She took a job at McDonald’s to cover the cost of groceries. At
school, Mathias and his sister, Leah, a fourth grader, qualified for
reduced-price lunches.
Keeping all that worry bottled up hurt. While Leah would not tell anyone her
worst fear, she told her speech teacher, Shelley Smith, the second worst: that
her family would have to move away and Leah would lose her friends. “I was
worried and scared and very worried,” recalled Leah, who’s 10.
She chose Mrs. Smith to tell because the two have the same, exact birthday and
every year they celebrate by eating Mrs. Smith’s homemade cupcakes. “She was
just the right person,” Leah said. “She’s very calm.”
The Kehlers have lots of company. While Wall Street is pumping, Main Street
bleeds. This middle- to upper-middle-class suburban town of 14,000 bordering
Columbus has 22 percent of its students getting subsidized lunches. That’s up
from 6 percent in 2005, when the economy was booming.
Statewide, 43 percent of Ohio public school students are disadvantaged, as
measured by free and reduced lunches, compared with 33 percent in 2005,
according to a recent survey by KidsOhio, a nonprofit educational organization
based in Columbus. A sign of how deep this recession has reached into the middle
class: here in Franklin County, 44 percent of the disadvantaged attend suburban
schools, compared with 32 percent five years ago.
There may be other factors involved, including an increase of poorer families
moving out of Columbus to the suburbs. But many here — the KidsOhio researchers;
the superintendent of Worthington schools, Melissa Conrath; the principal of
Wilson Hill, Jamie Lusher — agree that the recession’s impact has played a large
part.
A few houses down from the Kehlers on Deer Creek Drive, Bill Cameron, who has
three children in high school, has been out of work for two years since losing
his $119,000-a-year job as a manager at American Electric Power.
Over on Eastland Court, Grace Koo and her now ex-husband, who have two children
at Wilson Hill, were both laid off and went from making about $160,000 a year to
zero. Ms. Koo, who had been a store design and construction director for Limited
Brands, attributed the divorce to many things gone wrong, including their
sinking economic status. “For months, both of us were home together,
unemployed,” she said. “We’d fight over money.”
On Buck Trail Lane, the Hymers went from $150,000 a year to zero. Their son,
Zachary, a second grader, and their daughter, Kennedy, who’s in fourth,
qualified for reduced-priced lunches. The Hislopes on Friend Street also
qualified for reduced-priced lunches, but as things worsened — the father, Mike,
a shop foreman, has been out of work two years — they qualified for free
lunches.
Recently Worthington got its first soup kitchen.
The emotional strain on children is plain from the names of the support groups
the guidance counselor, Ms. Hegerty, has created: the Chicken Little group; the
Volcano Management group; the Family Change group.
Even as the district’s budget gets cut and class sizes in the school’s fourth
and fifth grades creep up to 30, the staff at Wilson Hill works to make a
difference. While Washington measures a school’s worth by test scores, here, on
Northland Street, there’s more to it.
A few weeks before Christmas, a girl in Mrs. Smith’s class went to school with
broken eyeglasses patched together with tape. Each time the girl looked down to
read, the glasses fell off. This is a small town, and Mrs. Smith knew the girl’s
family was struggling. At 9 a.m., Mrs. Smith asked to borrow the glasses; during
her lunch period she drove to her eye doctor; by 12:30 the girl had new pink and
green frames.
Because the guidance counselor position is split between two schools, Ms.
Hegerty gets overloaded and has found two unpaid interns from nearby
universities to help with the caseload.
Most children this age can’t verbalize what’s wrong, and Ms. Hegerty watches
their worries seep out in the guise of other problems. “Separation anxiety,
nightmares, bed wetting,” she rattles them off, “Obsessive behavior, won’t stay
in own bed, acting out at school, acting out at home.”
Ms. Koo’s daughter, Trinity, a second grader, scratched her arms so much they
bled. Trinity’s brother, Eliot, was misbehaving in kindergarten.
Ms. Hegerty showed them how to make worry envelopes to store their fears. She
gave them a buckeye to carry in their pockets. “If you’re feeling bad, you hold
it,” said Trinity, who’s stopped scratching. “You think about stuff, and then
‘O.K., this is over now, I’m fine.’ ”
Every day, Eliot’s teacher, Regina Malley, starts off each kindergartner with
five cubes. If you’re bad, she takes away a cube. But if you hold on to all five
cubes for the day, you get one prize ticket. After 10 tickets, you get to turn
on the classroom computer and sit in the big chair (“It elevates them above
everybody,” Mrs. Malley said). Thirty tickets and you get the grand prize, lunch
alone with Mrs. Malley.
For a few days, Eliot was stuck on nine tickets. “Poor Eliot lost a cube today,”
Mrs. Malley reported. “He banged a kid on the back of the head.”
And then Eliot made a comeback, earning two tickets in two days. As Mrs. Malley
promised, he got to sit in the big chair and was loudly applauded.
Mrs. Malley has taught kindergarten in the same room for 31 years, and in that
time she’s learned a thing or two about little boys. She predicts good things
for Eliot. “Eliot’s very bright,” she said. “Even if he listens 50 percent of
the time, he’s getting 75 percent more than other kids.”
While several parents interviewed for this column eventually got jobs, no one
was making anything near their old salaries. The Hislopes, Hymers and Kehlers
are making half. Ms. Koo is making a third. Mrs. Hislope’s two daughters have
been able to continue playing sports because their schools waived participation
fees and the sports booster clubs helped. The Hislopes were one of 10 families
that the middle school picked to give $300 toward Christmas.
It was only during a visit from a reporter that Mrs. Kehler heard Leah tell her
worst fear. “I instantly thought we’d be homeless,” Leah said. Every fall the
school takes part in the Penny Harvest, collecting for the homeless, and Leah
feared that the next harvest would be for her family.
“Really?” Mrs. Kehler said. Like mother like daughter. This was Mrs. Kehler’s
worst fear, too.
“I didn’t know how we’d survive,” she said. “I was afraid we’d be homeless under
an underpass in Columbus and the kids would go into foster care.”
When, after many months, Mr. Kehler could not find work, they bought a print
cartridge recycling business. It’s off to a promising start. The first year, the
Kehlers outperformed the previous owner. “We’re up 18 percent,” Mrs. Kehler
said.
Eagle ears still hear almost everything, but thankfully, for the last several
months, what they hear has not sounded so dire. “When Dad and Mom talked, they
were getting calmer,” Mathias said. “We’re definitely higher than we were.”
Teacher, My Dad Lost His Job. Do We Have to Move?, NYT,
30.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/31/education/31winerip.html
Washington’s Financial Disaster
January 29,
2011
The New York Times
By FRANK PARTNOY
San Diego
THE long-awaited Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission report, finally published
on Thursday, was supposed to be the economic equivalent of the 9/11 commission
report. But instead of a lucid narrative explaining what happened when the
economy imploded in 2008, why, and who was to blame, the report is a confusing
and contradictory mess, part rehash, part mishmash, as impenetrable as the
collateralized debt obligations at the core of the crisis.
The main reason so much time, money and ink were wasted — politics — is apparent
just from eyeballing the report, or really the three reports. There is a
410-page volume signed by the commission’s six Democrats, a leaner 10-pronged
dissent from three of the four Republicans, and a nearly 100-page
dissent-from-the-dissent filed by Peter J. Wallison, a fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute. The primary volume contains familiar vignettes on topics
like deregulation, excess pay and poor risk management, and is infused with
populist rhetoric and an anti-Wall Street tone. The dissent, which explores such
root causes as the housing bubble and excess debt, is less lively. And then
there is Mr. Wallison’s screed against the government’s subsidizing of mortgage
loans.
These documents resemble not an investigative trilogy but a left-leaning essay
collection, a right-leaning PowerPoint presentation and a colorful far-right
magazine. And the confusion only continued during a press conference on Thursday
in which the commissioners had little to show and nothing to tell. There was
certainly no Richard Feynman dipping an O ring in ice water to show how the
space shuttle Challenger went down.
That we ended up with a political split is not entirely surprising, given the
structure and composition of the commission. Congress shackled it by requiring
bipartisan approval for subpoenas, yet also appointed strongly partisan figures.
It was only a matter of time before the group fractured. When Republicans
proposed removing the term “Wall Street” from the report, saying it was too
pejorative and imprecise, the peace ended. And the public is still without a
full factual account.
For example, most experts say credit ratings and derivatives were central to the
crisis. Yet on these issues, the reports are like three blind men feeling
different parts of an elephant. The Democrats focused on the credit rating
agencies’ conflicts of interest; the Republicans blamed investors for not
looking beyond ratings. The Democrats stressed the dangers of deregulated shadow
markets; the Republicans blamed contagion, the risk that the failure of one
derivatives counterparty could cause the other banks to topple. Mr. Wallison
played down both topics. None of these ideas is new. All are incomplete.
Another problem was the commission’s sprawling, ambiguous mission. Congress
required that it study 22 topics, but appropriated just $8 million for the job.
The pressure to cover this wide turf was intense and led to infighting and
resignations. The 19 hearings themselves were unfocused, more theater than
investigation.
In the end, the commission was the opposite of Ferdinand Pecora’s famous
Congressional investigation in 1933. Pecora’s 10-day inquisition of banking
leaders was supposed to be this commission’s exemplar. But Pecora, a former
assistant district attorney from New York, was backed by new evidence of
widespread fraud and insider dealings, shocking documents that the public had
never seen or imagined. His fierce cross-examination of Charles E. Mitchell, the
head of National City Bank, Citigroup’s predecessor, put a face on the crisis.
This commission’s investigation was spiritless and sometimes plain wrong.
Richard Fuld, the former head of Lehman Brothers, was thrown softballs, like
“Can you talk a bit about the risk management practices at Lehman Brothers, and
why you didn’t see this coming?” Other bankers were scolded, as when Phil
Angelides, the commission’s chairman, admonished Lloyd Blankfein, the chief
executive of Goldman Sachs, for practices akin to “selling a car with faulty
brakes and then buying an insurance policy on the buyer of those cars.” But he
couldn’t back up this rebuke with new evidence.
The report then oversteps the facts in its demonization of Goldman, claiming
that Goldman “retained” $2.9 billion of the A.I.G. bailout money as “proprietary
trades.” Few dispute that Goldman, on behalf of its clients, took both sides of
trades and benefited from the A.I.G. bailout. But a Goldman spokesman told me
that the report’s assertion was false and that these trades were neither
proprietary nor a windfall. The commission’s staff apparently didn’t consider
Goldman’s losing trades with other clients, because they were focused only on
deals with A.I.G. If they wanted to tar Mr. Blankfein, they should have gotten
their facts right.
Lawmakers would have been wiser to listen to Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama,
who in early 2009 proposed a bipartisan investigation by the banking committee.
That way seasoned prosecutors could have issued subpoenas, cross-examined
witnesses and developed cases. Instead, a few months later, Congress opted for
this commission, the last act of which was to coyly recommend a few cases to
prosecutors, who already have been accumulating evidence the commissioners have
never seen.
There is still hope. Few people remember that the early investigations of the
1929 crash also failed due to political battles and ambiguous missions.
Ferdinand Pecora was Congress’s fourth chief counsel, not its first, and he did
not complete his work until five years after the crisis. Congress should try
again.
Frank Partnoy is a law professor at the University of San Diego and the
author of “The Match King: Ivar Kreuger, the Financial Genius Behind a Century
of Wall Street Scandals.”
Washington’s Financial Disaster, NYT, 29.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/30/opinion/30partnoy.html
Wall
Street Indexes Fall
on Concerns About Egypt
January 28,
2011
The New York Times
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Shares on
Wall Street fell sharply Friday, sent lower by some disappointing economic news
and concerns about the growing street protests in Egypt.
Investors have begun to worry about what could happen over the weekend in Egypt.
With President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt imposing a night curfew and the military
ordered out onto the streets, the tensions across the Arab world’s most populous
state remain high.
Following the upheavals that saw Tunisia’s longtime president flee the country
Jan. 14., nerves are frayed about how the uprising in Egypt will end and which
regional government could be next to face the wrath of its people.
At afternoon trading, the Dow Jones industrial average lost 158.94 points, or
1.3 percent. The broader Standard and Poor’s 500-stock index declined 20.55
points, or 1.6 percent. The technology heavy Nasdaq lost 66.71, or 2.42 percent.
In European trading, the DAX in Frankfurt dropped 0.74 percent, while the CAC 40
in Paris and the FTSE 100 in London lost 1.4 percent.
There is nothing like uncertainty to get investors fidgety especially as the
weekend approaches when trades are hanging for longer. Uncertainty can breed a
flight out of riskier assets into supposedly safer ones. For now the losers tend
to be stocks and the euro, the winners the dollar, the yen and gold.
Prices of the benchmark 10-year Treasury bond rose as the yields fell to 3.32
percent from 3.39 percent.
Simon Derrick, a senior analyst at Bank of New York Mellon, said investors are
aware that in a crisis, events can move faster than anticipated.
“This was true, for example, in September and October of 2008 in the aftermath
of the collapse of Lehman Brothers and it was true in April and May of last year
during the height of the Greek crisis,” Mr. Derrick said. “It therefore appears
sensible to note quite how swiftly the Tunisian revolt built and equally, how
rapidly street protests emerged in the cities of Egypt.”
Fitch Ratings lowered the outlook for the country’s credit rating to negative
and warned of a possible downgrade to the credit rating itself if the unrest
intensifies. Richard Fox, the head of the Middle East and Africa desk at Fitch
said the move to a negative outlook was the result of the “recent upsurge in
political protests and the uncertainty this adds to the political and economic
outlook ahead of September’s elections.”
Markets on Wall Street were already tentative after taking in some disappointing
earnings and a economic report that was slightly less than expectations.
The Commerce Department said that gross domestic product, the broadest measure
of the economy, grew at an annual rate of 3.2 percent in the fourth quarter.
That was up from the 2.6 percent growth in the previous quarter, but less than
the 3.5 percent that many economists had expected.
The Ford Motor Company reported fourth-quarter earnings that fell short of
analysts’ expectations. Ford, however, said that it earned $6.6 billion in 2010,
its largest profit in 11 years. Ford’s shares were down 14.5 percent.
Two giant technology companies reported earnings after the market closed
Thursday. Amazon.com missed Wall Street’s revenue forecast in its latest quarter
after the company said that higher costs cut down profit margins. Its shares
fell 9.3 percent. Microsoft shares dropped 4.7 percent after it said that the
profitability of its Windows division was falling.
The Sara Lee announced a plan to split into two companies. One company, a food
and retail business, will retain the Sara Lee name and will include brands Sara
Lee, Jimmy Dean and Hillshire Farms. The other has yet to be named and will
retain the current company’s beverages and baked goods lines. Sara Lee fell 2.3
percent.
Wall Street Indexes Fall on Concerns About Egypt, NYT,
28.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/29/business/29markets.html
Ford
Reports
Largest Profit in 11 Years
January 28,
2011
The New York Times
By NICK BUNKLEY
DEARBORN,
Mich. — The Ford Motor Company said on Friday that it earned $6.6 billion in
2010, its largest profit in 11 years, a result of surging global sales and cost
cuts made during a lengthy turnaround.
But the fourth quarter fell short of most Wall Street estimates, breaking from a
recent trend of positive earnings surprises from the company.
The performance for the year, a substantial reversal from several years ago when
Ford appeared to be the sickliest of Detroit’s automakers, means the company’s
40,600 hourly workers will receive profit-sharing checks averaging $5,000.
The checks, required under Ford’s contract with the United Automobile Workers
union, will total more than $200 million and are the biggest Ford has handed out
since 2001.
Ford ended 2010 with more cash than debt for the first time since before the
recession began. The company eliminated 43 percent of its debt in 2010, though
it still owed $19.1 billion.
“Our 2010 results exceeded our expectations, accelerating our transition from
fixing the business fundamentals to delivering profitable growth for all,”
Ford’s chief executive, Alan R. Mulally, said in a statement. “We are investing
in an unprecedented amount of products, technology and growth in all regions of
the world.”
From October through December, Ford earned $190 million, or 5 cents a share,
after taking a $960 million charge related to a debt-conversion offer. That
compared to earnings of $886 million, or 25 cents a share, in the period a year
ago. Its fourth-quarter revenue rose $1.6 billion to $32.5 billion.
Excluding the debt-conversion charge and other one-time items, Ford earned $1.3
billion for the quarter, its sixth consecutive operating profit, though analysts
had expected the company to do considerably better on an operating basis.
Excluding one-time items, the automaker had a profit of 30 cents a share in the
quarter; analysts had forecast 48 cents.
Lewis I. Booth, Ford’s chief financial officer, said that sales in Europe were
lower than expected and that the company spent considerable resources
introducing numerous new models around the world.
In addition, Ford’s debt level remains a concern for analysts. While General
Motors and Chrysler were able to eliminate tens of billions of dollars in
obligations during their 2009 bankruptcies, Ford now carries more debt relative
to its rivals. It had $20.5 billion in cash as of Dec. 31, $4.4 billion less
than a year earlier, though its total liquidity increased.
Mr. Booth said Ford would continue to pay down debt but did reveal any specific
plans. The company hopes to improve its balance sheet enough to regain an
investment-grade credit rating, which would reduce borrowing costs.
Ford said its debt-reduction efforts in 2010 cut annual interest costs by more
than $1 billion.
The full-year profit of $6.6 billion — Ford’s second consecutive annual profit —
was equal to $1.66 a share, and was more than twice as much as the $2.7 billion,
or 86 cents a share, that it earned in 2009 when industrywide sales were in a
historic slump. Revenue for the year rose $4.6 billion, to $120.9 billion.
Analysts have projected that Ford could perform significantly better in the year
ahead, on the strength of new models like the Focus sedan that arrives at
American dealerships shortly. The company said it expects “continued
improvement” in its pretax operating profit and cash flow.
In North America, Ford earned a pretax profit of $5.4 billion in 2010, compared
to a $639 million loss a year earlier. The U.A.W. profit-sharing checks are
based only on the company’s performance in the United States, which the company
does not report separately.
The checks, to be distributed in March, are the fourth-largest Ford has paid to
its workers since profit-sharing was added to the union contract in 1983. The
record was $8,000, given out in 2000 when the company had more than 100,000
hourly employees. A year ago, the checks averaged $450.
“It’s obviously a great pleasure that we’re a profitable company again,” Mr.
Booth told reporters at the company’s headquarters. “We’ve always said all our
stakeholders will benefit from the growth of the company.”
The checks precede the contract talks that Ford and the other Detroit automakers
will have with the union this fall. Union leaders have said their members
deserve to benefit from the industry’s upswing. Mr. Booth declined to discuss
the negotiations.
Ford increased its market share in the United States for a second consecutive
year, the first time it has achieved that since 1993. It surpassed Toyota, which
struggled with quality issues related to numerous recalls, to become the
nation’s second-largest seller of cars and trucks.
Shares of Ford have doubled in the last year and increased nearly tenfold in two
years. They closed at $18.79 Thursday.
This
article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: January 28, 2011
An earlier version of this article misstated Ford’s 2010 pretax profit for North
America as $5.4 million.
Ford Reports Largest Profit in 11 Years, NYT, 28.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/29/business/29ford.html
U.S.
Economy Grew
at 3.2% Rate in the 4th Quarter
January 28,
2011
The New York Times
By CATHERINE RAMPELL
The United
States economy sped up its growth rate in the fourth quarter, chiefly on the
backs of revitalized consumers and a narrowed trade deficit.
Gross domestic product, a broad measure of all the goods and services produced
by the economy, grew at an annual rate of 3.2 percent in the fourth quarter, up
from 2.6 percent in the previous period, according to the Commerce Department.
While an improvement, the latest output number was slightly below analysts’
expectations of 3.5 percent.
Consumer spending grew at an annual rate of 4.4 percent, its fastest pace in
nearly five years and nearly double the rate from the previous quarter. As
income rose and the stock market climbed, Americans felt comfortable spending
again, and in some cases by dipping into their savings.
“Consumers have been on a recovering trend,” John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ
Economics, said, citing stronger consumer confidence numbers released earlier
this week. “Consumers came into the holiday season after probably having a
couple of years of being fairly frugal, and with a bit more cash in their
pockets, and a bit more willingness to spend that cash.”
The payroll tax cut and the extension of the Bush tax cuts that were passed in
December are expected to further buoy consumer spending in 2011, with many
economists expecting consumer spending to continue growing at about a 3 or 3.5
percent pace.
The economy slowed in the middle of 2010, in what had been perhaps prematurely
dubbed as the Recovery Summer by the Obama administration. The slowdown was
largely the result of rocketing growth in imports, which are subtracted from the
government’s calculations of gross domestic product. In the fourth quarter,
however, a combination of rising exports and shrinking imports contributed to
the faster output growth rate.
“In the middle of last year, imports showed the biggest drag on G.D.P. growth in
more than 60 years ,” said Dean Maki, chief United States economist at Barclays
Capital. “That kind of rise in imports just wasn’t sustainable,” he said, and
the return to more normal levels of imports later in the year helped the
American economy regain some momentum.
Earlier this week, the Congressional Budget Office forecast that the economy
would grow 3.1 percent in 2011, a figure echoed by many Wall Street economists.
While that rate would be faster than last year’s, it is still probably not
robust enough to make a significant dent in the unemployment rate, which stood
at 9.4 percent in December. In the couple of years before the Great Recession,
which began in December 2007, the American jobless rate was less than half that.
“We’re still very much below the output growth rate needed to absorb the slack
in labor market,” said Prajakta Bhide, a research analyst for the United States
economy at Roubini Global Economics. “We’re expecting to end the year with an
unemployment rate of 9 percent.”
U.S. Economy Grew at 3.2% Rate in the 4th Quarter, NYT,
28.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/29/business/economy/29econ.html
Obama
and Corporate America
January 27,
2011
The New York Times
President
Obama is smart to extend an olive branch to American businesses. Our economic
success depends on businesses investing, growing and creating new jobs. From
expanding exports to improving infrastructure, government and businesses share
important goals.
From a purely pragmatic political standpoint, reaching an entente with corporate
leaders will make it easer to defuse the hostility he has faced. Some of it has
been purely partisan and ideological, from groups like the United States Chamber
of Commerce, which deployed millions to unseat Democrats in the Congressional
elections last year.
Still, Mr. Obama must take care not to let his agenda be taken over entirely by
corporate interests. They do not belong to the only constituency he serves.
Appointing William Daley to be a business-friendly White House chief of staff
seems a good idea; so does drafting Jeffrey Immelt of General Electric to lead
his Council on Jobs and Competitiveness. It’s fine to promise to weed out stupid
business regulations, though past administrations that have done the same have
found that most of the regulations aren’t stupid.
But Mr. Obama should keep in mind that the interests of corporations and their
bosses are not necessarily always aligned with those of the country. All he
needs to do is look at the pile of uninvested cash on which nonfinancial
businesses are sitting — nearly $2 trillion — while the national unemployment
rate remains above 9 percent.
Satisfying business interests can be tricky. Mr. Obama wants, for example, to
reduce the 35 percent top corporate tax rate. That might sound like music to
corporate ears, but it could easily run into powerful opposition. That’s because
the president has rightly linked the reduction in the marginal tax rate to
closing the loopholes in the tax code that allow many corporations to pay much
less in taxes than they should.
Despite the high corporate tax rate, taxes on corporate income only raise an
amount equal to 2.1 percent of the gross domestic product. That is way below the
3.5 percent of G.D.P. raised, on average, across the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development. It puts the United States near the bottom of
industrial nations. Even the most promising areas for cooperation — like
increasing exports — are tricky. Business groups are right to urge the
administration to obtain Congressional approval for the trade agreements with
Colombia and Panama that were signed during the administration of George W.
Bush. But Mr. Obama has been unwilling to face down trade unions and has placed
the deals on the back burner.
President Obama should bring his party on board and pass the trade agreements.
He should consult closely with business on his plans to invest in public
infrastructure. But this is a two-way street. Some business lobbying groups have
fought Mr. Obama on ideological, not policy grounds, opposing major initiatives
tooth and nail, including health care reform. As Mr. Obama reaches out to them,
corporate interest groups must abandon the politics of division and gridlock and
reach back out to him.
Obama and Corporate America, NYT, 27.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/28/opinion/28fri1.html
A
Reservist in a New War,
Against Foreclosure
January 26,
2011
The New York Times
By DIANA B. HENRIQUES
While Sgt.
James B. Hurley was away at war, he lost a heartbreaking battle at home.
In violation of a law intended to protect active military personnel from
creditors, agents of Deutsche Bank foreclosed on his small Michigan house,
forcing Sergeant Hurley’s wife, Brandie, and her two young children to move out
and find shelter elsewhere.
When the sergeant returned in December 2005, he drove past the densely wooded
riverfront property outside Hartford, Mich. The peaceful little home was still
there — winter birds still darted over the gazebo he had built near the water’s
edge — but it almost certainly would never be his again. Less than two months
before his return from the war, the bank’s agents sold the property to a buyer
in Chicago for $76,000.
Since then, Sergeant Hurley has been on an odyssey through the legal system,
with little hope of a happy ending — indeed, the foreclosure that cost him his
home may also cost him his marriage. “Brandie took this very badly,” said
Sergeant Hurley, 45, a plainspoken man who was disabled in Iraq and is now
unemployed. “We’re trying to piece it together.”
In March 2009, a federal judge ruled that the bank’s foreclosure in 2004
violated federal law but the battle did not end there for Sergeant Hurley.
Typically, banks respond quickly to public reports of errors affecting military
families. But today, more than six years after the illegal foreclosure, Deutsche
Bank Trust Company and its primary co-defendant, a Morgan Stanley subsidiary
called Saxon Mortgage Services, are still in court disputing whether Sergeant
Hurley is owed significant damages. Exhibits show that at least 100 other
military mortgages are being serviced for Deutsche Bank, but it is not clear
whether other service members have been affected by the policy that resulted in
the Hurley foreclosure.
A spokesman for Deutsche Bank declined to comment, noting that Saxon had handled
the litigation on its behalf. A spokesman for Morgan Stanley, which bought Saxon
in 2006, said that Saxon had revised its policy to ensure that it complied with
the law and was willing to make “reasonable accommodations” to settle disputes,
“especially for our servicemen and women.” But the Hurley litigation has
continued, he said, because of a “fundamental disagreement between the parties
over damages.”
In court papers, lawyers for Saxon and the bank assert the sergeant is entitled
to recover no more than the fair market value of his lost home. His lawyers
argue that the defendants should pay much more than that — including an award of
punitive damages to deter big lenders from future violations of the law. The law
is called the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, and it protects service members
on active duty from many of the legal consequences of their forced absence.
Even though some of the nation’s military families have been sending their
breadwinners into war zones for almost a decade, some of the nation’s biggest
lenders are still fumbling one the basic elements of this law — its foreclosure
protections.
Under the law, only a judge can authorize a foreclosure on a protected service
member’s home, even in states where court orders are not required for civilian
foreclosures, and the judge can act only after a hearing where the military
homeowner is represented. The law also caps a protected service member’s
mortgage rate at 6 percent.
By 2005, violations of the civil relief act were being reported all across the
country, some involving prominent banks like Wells Fargo and Citigroup.
Publicity about the violations spared some military families from foreclosure,
prompted both banks to promise better compliance and put lenders on notice that
service members were entitled to special relief.
But the message apparently did not get through. By 2006, a Marine captain in
South Carolina was doing battle with JPMorgan Chase to get the mortgage interest
rate reductions the act requires. Chase eventually reviewed its policies and,
earlier this month, acknowledged it had overcharged thousands of military
families on their mortgages and improperly foreclosed on 14 of them. After a
public apology, Chase began mailing out about $2 million in refunds and working
to reverse the foreclosures.
For armed forces in a war zone, a foreclosure back home is both a family crisis
and a potentially deadly distraction from the military mission, military
consumer advocates say.
“It can be devastating,” said Holly Petraeus, the wife of Gen. David Petraeus
and the leader of a team that is creating an office to serve military families
within a new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
“It is a terrible situation for the family at home and for the service member
abroad, who feels helpless,” Mrs. Petraeus said. “I would hope that the recent
problems will be a wake-up call for all banks to review their policies and be
sure they comply with the act.”
Chase’s response, however belated, is in sharp contrast to the approach taken by
Deutsche Bank and Saxon in the Hurley case.
Sergeant Hurley bought the land in 1994 and “was developing this property into
something special,” he said in a court affidavit. He put a double-wide
manufactured home on the site and added a deck, hunting blinds, floating docks
and storage buildings.
According to his lawyers, his financial troubles began in the summer of 2004,
when his National Guard unit sent him to California to be trained to work as a
power-generator mechanic in Iraq. Veterans of that duty advised him to buy
certain tools not readily available in the war zone, he said in his affidavit.
With that expense and his reduced income, he said, he fell behind on his
mortgage — a difficulty many part-time soldiers faced when reserve and National
Guard units were mobilized.
Believing he was protected by the civil relief act — as, indeed, he was, as of
Sept. 11, 2004 — his family repeatedly informed Saxon that Sergeant Hurley had
been sent to Iraq. But Saxon refused to grant relief without copies of his
individual military orders, which he did not yet have.
Although Saxon’s demand would have been legitimate if Sergeant Hurley had been
seeking a lower interest rate, the law did not require him to provide those
orders to invoke his foreclosure protections.
Nevertheless, Saxon referred the case to its law firm, Orlans Associates in
Troy, Mich., which completed the foreclosure without the court hearing required
by law. The law firm filed an affidavit with the local sheriff saying there was
no evidence Sergeant Hurley was on military duty. At a sheriff’s sale in October
2004, the bank bought the property for $70,000, less than the $100,000 the
sergeant owed on the mortgage.
Orlans acknowledged in a court filing that one of its lawyers learned in April
2005 that Sergeant Hurley had been on active duty since the previous October.
Nevertheless, neither Saxon nor the law firm backtracked to ensure the
foreclosure had been legal or took steps to prevent the seized property from
being sold, according to the court record. Lawyers for Orlans Associates did not
respond to a request for comment.
When Sergeant Hurley sued in May 2007, the defendants initially argued that he
was not allowed to file a private lawsuit to enforce his rights under the civil
relief act. Federal District Judge Gordon J. Quist agreed and threw the case out
in the fall of 2008.
That drew a fierce reaction from Col. John S. Odom, Jr., a retired Air Force
lawyer in Shreveport, La., who is working with Sergeant Hurley’s local lawyer,
Matthew R. Cooper, of Paw Paw, Mich.
Colonel Odom, recognized by Congress and the courts as an expert on the
Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, knew Judge Quist had missed a decision that
overturned the one he had cited in his ruling. In December 2008, Colonel Odom
appealed the ruling.
In March 2009, Judge Quist reversed himself, reinstated the Hurley case, ruled
that the foreclosure had violated the civil relief act and found that punitive
damages would be permitted, if warranted.
Despite that legal setback, the defendants soldiered on. As the court docket
grew, they argued against allowing Sergeant Hurley to seek compensatory or
punitive damages in the case. Judge Quist ruled last month that punitive damages
were not warranted — a ruling Colonel Odom has said he has challenged in court
and, if necessary, will appeal.
“Nothing says you screwed up as clearly as a big punitive damages award,” he
said. “They are a deterrence that warns others not to do the same thing.”
When the trial on damages begins in early March, Sergeant Hurley will have been
fighting for almost four years over the illegal foreclosure, a fight he could
not have waged without a legal team that will probably only be paid if the court
orders the defendants to cover the legal bills.
Regardless of the trial outcome, Sergeant Hurley’s dream home is likely to
remain as far beyond his reach as it was when he was in Iraq. Its new owner has
refused to entertain any offers for it and recently bought an adjoining lot.
Sergeant Hurley said he still loved the wooded refuge he drives past almost
every day. “I was hoping I could get the property back,” he said. “But they tell
me there’s just no way.”
A Reservist in a New War, Against Foreclosure, NYT,
26.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/27/business/27foreclose.html
Budget
Deficit to Reach $1.5 Trillion
January 26,
2011
The New York Times
Filed at 11:58 p.m. EST
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON
(AP) — Far from slowing, the government's deficit spending will surge to a
record $1.5 trillion flood of red ink this year, congressional budget experts
estimated Wednesday, blaming the slow economic recovery and last month's tax-cut
law.
The report was sobering new evidence that it will take more than President
Barack Obama's proposed freeze on some agencies to stem the nation's
extraordinary budget woes. Republicans say they want big budget cuts but so far
are light on specifics.
Wednesday's Congressional Budget Office estimates indicate the government will
have to borrow 40 cents for every dollar it spends this fiscal year, which ends
Sept. 30. Tax revenues are projected to drop to their lowest levels since 1950,
when measured against the size of the economy.
The report, full of nasty news, also says that after decades of Social Security
surpluses, the vast program's costs are no longer covered by payroll taxes.
The budget estimates will add fuel to the already-raging debate over spending
and looming legislation that would allow the government to borrow more money as
the national debt nears the $14.3 trillion cap set by law. Republicans
controlling the House say there's no way they'll raise the limit without
significant budget cuts, starting with a government funding bill that will
advance next month.
Democrats and Republicans agree that stern anti-deficit steps are needed, but
neither Obama nor his resurgent GOP rivals on Capitol Hill are — so far —
willing to put on the table cuts to popular benefit programs such as Medicare,
farm subsidies and Social Security. The need to pass legislation to fund the
government and prevent a first-ever default on U.S. debt obligations seems sure
to drive the two sides into negotiations.
Though the analysis predicts the economy will grow by 3.1 percent this year, it
foresees unemployment remaining above 9 percent.
Dauntingly for Obama, the nonpartisan agency estimates a nationwide jobless rate
of 8.2 percent on Election Day in 2012. That's higher that the rates that
contributed to losses by Presidents Jimmy Carter (7.5 percent) and George H.W.
Bush (7.4 percent). The nation isn't projected to be at full employment —
considered to be a jobless rate of about 5 percent — until 2016.
The latest deficit figures are up from previous estimates because of bipartisan
legislation passed in December that extended George W. Bush-era tax cuts and
unemployment benefits for the long-term jobless and provided a 2 percentage
point Social Security payroll tax cut this year.
That measure added almost $400 billion to this year's deficit, CBO says.
The deficit is on track to beat the record of $1.4 trillion set in 2009. The
budget experts predict the deficit will drop to $1.1 trillion next year, still
very high by historical standards.
Republicans focus on Obama's contributions to the deficit: his $821 billion
economic stimulus plan, boosts for domestic programs and his signature health
care overhaul. Obama points out that he inherited deficits that would have
exceeded $1 trillion a year anyway.
The chilling figures came the day after Obama called for a five-year freeze on
optional spending in domestic agency budgets passed by Congress each year.
Republicans were quick to blame Obama for the rising red ink. Rep. Jeb
Hensarllng of Texas, chairman of the House Republican Conference, said the
report "paints a picture that is more dangerous than most Americans could
anticipate."
"What is our leader in the White House doing about it? Asking Congress to raise
the debt ceiling, proposing new spending and sticking future generations with a
multi-trillion dollar tab," Hensarling said.
Democrat Kent Conrad, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, pointed to a
problem lawmakers are sure to keep facing:
"When the American people are asked what they want done and to prioritize what
they want, they want the deficits and debt dealt with. But when they are asked
very specifically, will they support changes in Social Security, the polls say
no. Changes in Medicare? The polls say no. Changes in defense spending? The
polls say no."
"I would've liked very much if the president would have spent a bit more time
helping the American people understand how really big this problem is," added
Conrad, D-N.D.
Republicans are calling for deeper cuts for education, housing and the FBI —
among many programs — to return them to the 2008 levels in place before Obama
took office.
But those nondefense programs make up just 12 or so percent of the $3.7 trillion
budget, which means any upcoming deficit reduction package — at least one that
begins to significantly slow the gush of red ink — will require politically
dangerous curbs to popular benefit programs. That includes Social Security,
Medicare, the Medicaid health care program for the poor and disabled, and food
stamps.
Neither Obama nor his GOP rivals on Capitol Hill have yet come forward with
specific proposals for cutting such benefit programs. Successful efforts to curb
the deficit always require active, engaged presidential leadership, but Obama's
unwillingness to thus far take chances has deficit hawks discouraged. Obama will
release his 2012 budget proposal next month.
"The proposals we've seen so far from the president and congressional
Republicans amount to little more than tinkering around the edges," said Concord
Coalition Executive Director Bob Bixby.
"Somebody is going to have to bite the bullet and get this process going," said
Maya MacGuineas of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a bipartisan
group that advocates fiscal responsibility. "And that somebody has to be the
president."
Obama has steered clear of the recommendations of his deficit commission, which
in December called for difficult moves such as increasing the Social Security
retirement age and reducing future increases in benefits. It also proposed a
15-cents-a-gallon increase in the gasoline tax and eliminating or scaling back
tax breaks — including the child tax credit, mortgage interest deduction and
deduction claimed by employers who provide health insurance — in exchange for
rate cuts on corporate and income taxes.
CBO predicts that the deficit will fall to $551 billion by 2015 — a sustainable
3 percent of the economy — but only if the Bush tax cuts are wiped off the
books. Under its rules, CBO assumes the recently extended cuts in taxes on
income, investment and people inheriting large estates will expire in two years.
If those tax cuts, and numerous others, are extended, the deficit for that year
would be almost three times as large.
Tax revenues, which dropped significantly in 2009 because of the recession, have
stabilized. But revenue growth will continue to be constrained. CBO projects
revenues to be 6 percent higher in 2011 than they were two years ago, which will
not keep pace with the growth in spending.
Budget Deficit to Reach $1.5 Trillion, NYT, 6.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2011/01/26/us/AP-US-Budget-Deficit.html
Dissenters Fault
Report on Crisis in Finance
January 26,
2011
The New York Times
By SEWELL CHAN
WASHINGTON
— The government commission’s account of what caused the 2008 financial crisis
offers a broad indictment of regulatory weakness, Wall Street avarice and
corporate incompetence. But that narrative is competing with alternative views
by the Republicans on the panel, who released their dissenting reports on
Wednesday.
One dissent points to broad economic forces that contributed to the credit and
housing bubbles that built up during the last decade, including a glut of
savings in developing Asian countries that began accumulating in the late 1990s
and provided the fuel for mortgage-backed investments in the United States and
Europe. It does not focus on the culpability of government and business leaders,
as the main report does.
The other dissent argues that decades of government policies to promote
homeownership are to blame for the creation of tens of millions of shoddy
mortgages before the housing bubble burst in 2006-7. Though not the mainstream
view, it could affect the looming debate over the future of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, the mortgage finance giants that have been in government
conservatorship since 2008.
The disagreements threaten to blunt the impact of the main report. Those who had
hoped for an authoritative account that would sear the public consciousness now
seem pessimistic.
“I’m sad about it,” said Kenneth T. Rosen, a business school economist at the
University of California, Berkeley, who testified before the commission last
year. “This is a history, not a policy prescription. The fact that people read
history so differently is a surprise to me. But I guess I shouldn’t be surprised
at anything going on in Washington right now.”
Steve Fraser, a Wall Street historian, said he did not think that the report
would do much to stop the financial sector’s return to business as usual.
“I am surprised — more than surprised, shocked even — that all that’s transpired
since 2007-8 has produced as little as it has, in terms of reckoning with how
out of control this financial system was and the damage it’s done,” he said.
Mr. Fraser said the Dodd-Frank regulatory overhaul law signed last July was
helpful, but did not represent a far-reaching reassessment of the proper role of
finance in American life.
“For a historian, it’s a baffling moment,” he said. “All the stars seemed
aligned to produce real, fundamental change in the direction of public policy,
and yet here we are with an administration itself bending over backwards to make
friends with the financial industry.”
The main report, a 576-page paperback due in bookstores Thursday and titled “The
Financial Crisis Inquiry Report,” offers ample ammunition for critics of Wall
Street.
It cites “pervasive permissiveness” by regulators, “dramatic failures of
corporate governance and risk management,” and “a systemic breakdown in
accountability and ethics.”
It compares the financial system before the crisis with “a highway where there
were neither speed limits nor neatly painted lines.” And it finds fault with the
deregulatory orthodoxies of the last 30 years, saying of regulators, “The
sentries were not at their posts, in no small part due to the widely accepted
faith in the self-correcting nature of the markets and the ability of financial
institutions to effectively police themselves.”
But that analysis is “too broad,” according to three Republican commission
members: Bill Thomas, a former congressman from California and the vice chairman
of the commission; Keith Hennessey, who was an economic adviser to President
George W. Bush; and Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional
Budget Office.
In a 25-page dissent, the three Republicans say the Democratic report “is more
an account of bad events than a focused explanation of what happened and why.
When everything is important, nothing is.”
The three men say that some of the majority report’s culprits — excessive
political influence of Wall Street, a deregulatory ideology and a flawed
regulatory structure — fail to account for the failure of financial institutions
in Europe.
“By focusing too narrowly on U.S. regulatory policy and supervision, ignoring
international parallels, emphasizing only arguments for greater regulation,
failing to prioritize the causes and failing to distinguish sufficiently between
causes and effects, the majority’s report is unbalanced and leads to incorrect
conclusions,” they write.
The dissent also suggests that the Democrats were too quick to blame exotic
financial instruments, like over-the-counter derivatives and collateralized debt
obligations. The problem was not the instruments themselves, but a failure to
use them appropriately, they write.
The dissenters also take a more charitable view of the pivotal decision in
September 2008 by the Bush administration and the Federal Reserve to let Lehman
Brothers fail. They say that three officials behind the decision — Henry M.
Paulson Jr., then the Treasury secretary; Ben S. Bernanke, the Fed chairman; and
Timothy F. Geithner, then the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
— “would have saved Lehman if they thought they had a legal and viable option to
do so” and add, “In hindsight, we also think they were right at the time.”
The fourth Republican, Peter J. Wallison, who was the chief lawyer for the
Treasury Department and then the White House during the Reagan administration,
is offering his own, 99-page dissent, which argues that government housing
policies fostered the housing bubble and the creation of 27 million subprime and
so-called alt-A loans.
It was the losses associated with these weak and risky loans that brought down
financial institutions, not deregulation or predatory lending, Mr. Wallison, now
at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, writes. He argues that the
Dodd-Frank law “seriously overreached” and will “have a major adverse effect on
economic growth and job creation.”
Dissenters Fault Report on Crisis in Finance, NYT,
26.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/27/business/economy/27inquiry.html
So Was
It a Good Year?
January 26,
2011
The New York Times
With the
exception of Bank of America, the big banks were profitable in 2010, according
to year-end reports filed earlier this month. But even standout results — like
JPMorgan Chase’s profit surge or Citigroup’s first full-year profit since the
financial crisis — were underwhelming on closer inspection.
One reason, as Eric Dash recently explained in The Times, is that profits
reported at many banks, including Chase, were boosted by large withdrawals of
money from reserves set aside to cover losses. To get a truer picture of a
bank’s condition, you would need to look at the banks’ actual revenue,
unaffected by loss reserves.
Industrywide, those revenues are off 17 percent from their peak before the
financial crisis in 2007, according to Foresight Analytics, a research firm. The
latest figures for the biggest banks — Bank of America, Chase, Citigroup, Wells
Fargo and Goldman Sachs — all show declining revenue from the prior year, from a
3 percent drop at Chase for 2010 to a 13 percent slide at Goldman.
The declines are worrisome to the extent that they reflect the weak economy,
with businesses unable to expand and borrowers sidelined by unemployment and
damaged credit histories. Looked at more broadly, however, reduced revenues
should be the norm even after the economy has recovered because a system that is
truly safer and more fair will inevitably produce slower revenue growth. That
may be disappointing to bankers and some investors, but it would be a sign of
progress.
In the run-up to the financial crisis, bank revenues and profits were driven by
reckless trading and dubious lending. Curbing those abuses through the
Dodd-Frank reform law and other new rules — in effect, reducing risk in the
system — will cut into revenue.
For now, regulations governing capital levels, derivatives, credit cards and
other products and activities, are in the early stages of development and
implementation and have only begun to hit revenue. But if the reforms, taken
together, do indeed reduce riskiness to the point that another crisis is
unlikely, the banks will make less money, especially in the near term, as
they’re forced to alter their approaches. As that happens, the banks and their
investors will undoubtedly clamor for relief from “overly burdensome”
regulation. House Republicans are already vowing to dismantle financial reform.
Unless lawmakers and regulators stand firm, financial reform will fail. We were
encouraged to hear President Obama push back in the State of the Union address,
saying that he would not hesitate to enforce consumer protections and other
rules in the reform law.
Dodd-Frank recognized that outsize bank profits depended on outsize risks and
attempts to diminish that threat. If it works, the banks will still be big and
multitasking, but not the money makers they once were. That would be a small
price to pay for a more stable system.
So Was It a Good Year?, NYT, 26.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/27/opinion/27thu1.html
William
Schreyer, 83,
Merrill Chief, Dies
January 24,
2011
The New York Times
By MARY WILLIAMS WALSH
William A.
Schreyer, a former chief of Merrill Lynch who led the big brokerage house into
the age of global financial markets, died on Saturday at his home in Princeton,
N.J. He was 83.
A family spokesman, Jim Wiggins, said the death was of natural causes.
Mr. Schreyer’s career at Merrill spanned 45 years, starting in his teenage
years, when he was hired by a local branch to write the day’s stock prices on a
chalkboard after school. He became president in 1982, then chairman and chief
executive in 1985, when Merrill was the nation’s largest brokerage but
struggling to remain profitable.
As chief executive, Mr. Schreyer reshaped the company and improved its
profitability by slimming down some of its retail operations and building up its
investment banking business.
He rose to the top job in a management shake-up that followed a $42 million
quarterly loss at the end of 1983. Mr. Schreyer led a high-level team that
sought to identify what was wrong at the company. The team discovered that
Merrill’s business model at the time, the so-called financial supermarket, was
bringing in more and more revenue each year, but that the company’s costs were
rising at the same time, leaving the bottom line stagnant.
There were unexpected expenses in the company’s new corporate headquarters, at
the World Financial Center in Manhattan, and the company had a $377 million loss
on the trading of mortgage-backed securities in 1987. That was also the year of
the stock crash known as Black Monday and of a brewing savings-and-loan crisis.
Mr. Schreyer set out to cut costs and realign the company, pulling back from the
financial supermarket concept, the legacy of a previous chief executive, Donald
T. Regan, who left Merrill to join the Reagan administration as Treasury
secretary.
One of Mr. Schreyer’s first major steps was to sell Merrill’s large real estate
services division, which included a sprawling network of brokerage offices, a
corporate relocation service and a mortgage finance unit.
The real estate business was entirely in the United States, and Mr. Schreyer
believed Merrill’s future lay in the international securities business, with
large presences in London and Tokyo, as well as in New York and around the
United States.
“This is a statement about where we’re going in the 1990s,” he said of the
divestiture in an interview with The New York Times in 1986. “It boils down to
long-term fit; real estate is not where we should be now.”
In the years after, Merrill was among the first foreign firms admitted to
membership in the Tokyo Stock Exchange and the first American investment bank to
open a representative office in China. It also expanded its operations in
London, Hong Kong and Singapore.
Mr. Schreyer retired from the company in 1993. A 1948 graduate of Penn State
University, he remained active as a trustee of Penn State, including two terms
as president of its board of trustees. In 1997 and 2006, he and his wife, Joan,
provided a total of $55 million to endow a new honors college at Penn State, the
Schreyer Honors College.
He also served on the boards of Schering-Plough, Deere & Company, Callaway Golf
and Willis-Corroon, and as a trustee of the George H. W. Bush Presidential
Library Foundation and the Center for Strategic and International Studies, where
he worked on integrating financial analysis into its research activities.
The Merrill Lynch that Mr. Schreyer once led no longer exists as an independent
entity. It agreed to be taken over by Bank of America in 2008, after huge losses
on mortgage-backed securities. Lawsuits, fines and investigations followed,
after it emerged that Merrill had paid $3.6 billion in bonuses just before it
disappeared.
Mr. Schreyer published a memoir in 2009, “Still Bullish on America,” in which he
said he continued to be an optimist, despite what had happened. “The pessimists
are correct at any given points in history, but never over the long term,” he
wrote.
Mr. Schreyer was born in Williamsport, Pa., where his father managed a local
brokerage office that was eventually acquired by Merrill. After graduating from
Penn State, he joined Merrill in its Buffalo office. In Buffalo, he met his
wife, the former Joan Legg, who survives him.
His family said in a statement that his interest in international financial
markets began to take shape in the early 1950s, when he spent two years on
active duty as a lieutenant in the Air Force, stationed in Germany.
In addition to his wife, Mr. Schreyer is survived by his daughter, DrueAnne
Schreyer, and two grandchildren.
William Schreyer, 83, Merrill Chief, Dies, NYT, 24.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/25/business/25schreyer.html
U.S.
Home Prices Slump Again,
Hitting New Lows
January 25,
2011
The New York Times
By DAVID STREITFELD
The
long-predicted double-dip in housing has begun, with cities across the country
falling to their lowest point in many years, data released Tuesday showed.
Prices in 20 major metropolitan areas fell 1 percent in November from October,
according to the Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller Home Price Index. The index is
only 3.3 percent above the low it reached in April 2009 and has fallen fell 1.6
percent from a year ago.
“A double-dip could be confirmed before spring,” the chairman of S.&P.’s index
committee, David M. Blitzer, said.
Eight of the 20 cities in the index fell to new lows for this cycle, including
Atlanta; Charlotte, N.C.; Portland, Ore.; Miami, Seattle; and Tampa, Fla. Only a
handful of places — essentially California and Washington — saw prices rise.
Analysts said the declines would continue even if they would be nowhere near as
intense as in 2007 and 2008.
“The enormous supply overhang of existing homes (particularly factoring in all
those in foreclosure or soon to be) promises to keep pressure on prices for some
time,” Joshua Shapiro, the chief United States economist of MFR Inc., said.
The housing market, which usually leads the economy out of a recession, is
holding it back this time. New home sales are in the doldrums and mortgages are
hard to come by. Government programs have stanched the bleeding but do not
provide permanent relief.
In some cities, the decline over the last year was quite sharp.
Prices in Atlanta and Chicago fell more than 7 percent, exceeding even the drops
in the perennially troubled Detroit and Las Vegas.
The Case-Shiller Index is a three-month average of prices. One hopeful sign is
that on both a seasonally adjusted and an unadjusted basis, the declines
measured in November were less than in October.
The 20 cities fell 0.5 percent on seasonally adjusted basis in November after a
1 percent drop in October.
U.S. Home Prices Slump Again, Hitting New Lows, NYT,
25.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/26/business/economy/26econ.html
Mortgage
Giants
Leave Legal Bills
to the Taxpayers
January 24,
2011
The New York Times
By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
Since the
government took over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, taxpayers have spent more than
$160 million defending the mortgage finance companies and their former top
executives in civil lawsuits accusing them of fraud. The cost was a closely
guarded secret until last week, when the companies and their regulator produced
an accounting at the request of Congress.
The bulk of those expenditures — $132 million — went to defend Fannie Mae and
its officials in various securities suits and government investigations into
accounting irregularities that occurred years before the subprime lending crisis
erupted. The legal payments show no sign of abating.
Documents reviewed by The New York Times indicate that taxpayers have paid $24.2
million to law firms defending three of Fannie’s former top executives: Franklin
D. Raines, its former chief executive; Timothy Howard, its former chief
financial officer; and Leanne Spencer, the former controller.
Late last year, Randy Neugebauer, Republican of Texas and now chairman of the
oversight subcommittee of the House Financial Services Committee, requested the
figures from the Federal Housing Finance Agency. It is the regulator charged
with overseeing the mortgage finance companies and acts as their conservator,
trying to preserve the company’s assets on behalf of taxpayers.
“One of the things I feel very strongly about is we need to be doing everything
we can to minimize any further exposure to the taxpayers associated with these
companies,” Mr. Neugebauer said in an interview last week.
It is typical for corporations to cover such fees unless an executive is found
to be at fault. In this case, if the former executives are found liable, the
government can try to recoup the costs, but that could prove challenging.
Since Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were taken over by the government in September
2008, their losses stemming from bad loans have mounted, totaling about $150
billion in a recent reckoning. Because the financial regulatory overhaul passed
last summer did not address how to resolve Fannie and Freddie, Congress is
expected to take up that complex matter this year.
In the coming weeks, the Treasury Department is expected to publish a report
outlining the administration’s recommendations regarding the future of the
companies.
Well before the credit crisis compelled the government to rescue Fannie and
Freddie, accounting irregularities had engulfed both companies. Shareholders of
Fannie and Freddie sued to recover stock losses incurred after the improprieties
came to light.
Freddie’s problems arose in 2003 when it disclosed that it had understated its
income from 2000 to 2002; the company revised its results by an additional $5
billion. In 2004, Fannie was found to have overstated its results for the
preceding six years; conceding that its accounting was improper, it reduced its
past earnings by $6.3 billion.
Mr. Raines retired in December 2004 and Mr. Howard resigned at the same time.
Ms. Spencer left her position as controller in early 2005. The following year,
the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, then the company’s
regulator, published an in-depth report on the company’s accounting practices,
accusing Fannie’s top executives of taking actions to manipulate profits and
generate $115 million in improper bonuses.
The office sued Mr. Raines, Mr. Howard and Ms. Spencer in 2006, seeking $100
million in fines and $115 million in restitution. In 2008, the three former
executives settled with the regulator, returning $31.4 million in compensation.
Without admitting or denying the regulator’s allegations, Mr. Raines paid $24.7
million and Mr. Howard paid $6.4 million; Ms. Spencer returned $275,000.
Fannie Mae also settled a fraud suit brought by the Securities and Exchange
Commission without admitting or denying the allegations; the company paid $400
million in penalties.
Lawyers for the three former Fannie executives did not respond to requests for
comment. A company spokeswoman did not return a phone call or e-mail seeking
comment.
In addition to the $160 million in taxpayer money, Fannie and Freddie themselves
spent millions of dollars to defend former executives and directors before the
government takeover. Freddie Mac had spent a total of $27.8 million. The
expenses are significantly larger at Fannie Mae.
Legal costs incurred by Mr. Raines, Mr. Howard and Ms. Spencer in the roughly
four and a half years prior to the government takeover totaled almost $63
million. The total incurred before the bailout by other high-level executives
and board members was around $12 million, while an additional $18 million
covered fees for lawyers for Fannie Mae officials below the level of executive
vice president. Many of these individuals are provided lawyers because they are
witnesses in the matters.
Employment contracts and company by-laws usually protect, or indemnify,
executives and directors against liabilities, including legal fees associated
with defending against such suits.
After the government moved to back Fannie and Freddie, the Federal Housing
Finance Agency agreed to continue paying to defend the executives, with the
taxpayers covering the costs.
But indemnification does not apply across the board. As is the case with many
companies, Fannie Mae’s by-laws detail actions that bar indemnification for
officers and directors. They include a person’s breach of the duty of loyalty to
the company or its stockholders, actions taken that are not in good faith or
intentional misconduct.
Richard S. Carnell, an associate professor at Fordham University Law School who
was an assistant secretary of the Treasury for financial institutions during the
1990s, questions why Mr. Raines, Mr. Howard and others, given their conduct
detailed in the Housing Enterprise Oversight report, are being held harmless by
the government and receiving payment of legal bills as a result.
“Their duty of loyalty required them to put shareholders’ interests ahead of
their own personal interests,” Mr. Carnell said. “Had they cared about the
shareholders, they would not have staked Fannie’s reputation on dubious
accounting. They defied their duty of loyalty and served themselves. At a moral
level, they don’t deserve indemnification, much less payment of such princely
sums.”
Asked why it has not cut off funding for these mounting legal bills, Edward J.
DeMarco, the acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, said: “I
understand the frustration regarding the advancement of certain legal fees
associated with ongoing litigation involving Fannie Mae and certain former
employees. It is my responsibility to follow applicable federal and state law.
Consequently, on the advice of counsel, I have concluded that the advancement of
such fees is in the best interest of the conservatorship.”
If the former executives are found liable, they would be obligated to repay the
government. But lawyers familiar with such disputes said it would be difficult
to get individuals to repay sums as large as these. Lawyers for Mr. Raines, for
example, have received almost $38 million so far, while Ms. Spencer’s bills
exceed $31 million.
These individuals could bring further litigation to avoid repaying this money,
legal specialists said.
Although the figures are not broken down by case, the largest costs are being
generated by a lawsuit centering on accounting improprieties that erupted at
Fannie Mae in 2004. This suit, a shareholder class action brought by the Ohio
Public Employees Retirement System and the State Teachers Retirement System of
Ohio, is being heard in federal court in Washington. Although it has been going
on for six years, the judge has not yet set a trial date. Depositions are still
being taken in the case, suggesting that it has much further to go with many
more fees to be paid.
Mortgage Giants Leave Legal Bills to the Taxpayers, NYT,
24.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/24/business/24fees.html
Obama
Sends
Pro-Business Signal
With Adviser Choice
January 21,
2011
The New York Times
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
and ANAHAD O’CONNOR
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. — President Obama, sending another strong signal that he
intends to make the White House more business-friendly, named a high-profile
corporate executive on Friday as his chief outside economic adviser, continuing
his efforts to show more focus on job creation and reclaim the political center.
Here in the birthplace of General Electric, Mr. Obama introduced the new
appointee, Jeffrey R. Immelt, the company’s chairman and chief executive
officer, who will serve as chairman of his outside panel of economic advisers.
Mr. Immelt succeeds Paul A. Volcker, the former Federal Reserve chairman, who is
stepping down.
The selection of Mr. Immelt, who was at Mr. Obama’s side during his trip to
India last year, and again this week during the visit of President Hu Jintao of
China, is the latest in a string of pro-business steps taken by the president.
He has installed William M. Daley, a former JPMorgan Chase executive, as his
chief of staff; is planning a major speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce next
month; and just this week ordered federal agencies to review regulations with an
eye toward eliminating some.
Together, the moves amount to a carefully choreographed shift in strategy for
the White House, both substantively and on the public relations front. Mr. Obama
has started making the case that the United States has moved past economic
crisis mode and is entering “a new phase of our recovery,” which demands an
emphasis on job creation.
And with corporate profits healthy again, the president has begun engaging
business leaders more on what it will take for them to start investing again in
new plants and equipment and stepping up hiring.
As he moves into the second half of his term and lays the foundation for his
2012 re-election campaign, Mr. Obama is trying to frame the national
conversation on the economy around this crisis-to-job-creation narrative.
Republicans, who have spent their first weeks of the new Congress talking about
repealing Mr. Obama’s health care bill and cutting federal spending, have given
the president an opening to do so.
The themes the president struck here, on competitiveness and the turning point
in the economy, are expected to be at the heart of the State of the Union
address he will deliver Tuesday.
“The past two years were about pulling our economy back from the brink,” Mr.
Obama said, standing against the backdrop of a huge generator in a well-lighted
plant, with a giant American flag hanging from the ceiling.
“The next two years, our job now is putting our economy into overdrive.”
He went on, “Our job is to do everything we can to ensure that businesses can
take root and folks can find good jobs and America is leading the global
competition that will determine our success in the 21st century.”
It is not clear how much substantive influence Mr. Immelt’s new role will give
him. Under Mr. Volcker, the panel met relatively infrequently, and Mr. Volcker
at times appeared frustrated by a lack of access to the inner circles of White
House decision-making.
The appointment of Mr. Immelt, who will retain his posts at G.E., is not without
complications for Mr. Obama. G.E., one of the nation’s largest companies,
routinely has a wide variety of regulatory, trade, contracting and other issues
before the federal government, on matters as varied as television mergers,
military hardware and environmental cleanup.
During the 2008 financial crisis, the Federal Reserve provided $16.1 billion to
General Electric by buying short-term corporate i.o.u.’s from the company at a
time when the public market for such debt had nearly frozen. Having the chief
executive of such a company advising the White House on job creation at a time
when Mr. Obama is assuming a more deregulatory posture could further alienate
liberals and be seen as undermining the White House’s commitment to reducing the
influence of lobbyists and special interests.
Another complicating factor is union uneasiness about outsourcing by G.E.
Officials at the United Electrical Workers Union say the company has closed 29
plants in the United States and one in Canada in the past two years, eliminating
more than 3,000 jobs.
“We understand the logic of asking someone like that to step up and play a
leading role,” said Damon Silvers, the policy director for the AFL-CIO. “But
there’s a real tension there in making a G.E. executive a central figure
thinking about U.S. jobs.”
But Gary Sheffer, a General Electric spokesman, said the company has also been
shifting operations back to the United States, and has added 6,000 jobs in this
country, for a net increase. For example, Mr. Sheffer said, G.E. is moving all
of its refrigerator manufacturing business back to the United States. He said 60
percent of G.E.’s revenues come from outside the country.
At the same time, G.E.’s exports have roughly doubled in the past five years,
which makes the company a good showcase for a president who is trying to promote
trade and exports as a way to repair the battered economy. Exports were a major
theme of the president’s India trip and the state visit by President Hu; Mr.
Immelt was among the business leaders who attended a high-level meeting with Mr.
Hu, as well as the state dinner at the White House on Wednesday.
General Electric is benefiting from Mr. Obama’s emphasis on exports. When the
president was in Mumbai, he announced a string of deals involving American
companies, including a $750 million order from Reliance Power Ltd., in Samalkot,
India, for steam turbines manufactured by G.E. Those turbines will be made here
in Schenectady, a point Mr. Obama drove home in his remarks.
“This plant is what that trip was all about,” Mr. Obama said. “That new business
halfway around the world is going to help support more than 1,200 manufacturing
jobs and more than 400 engineering jobs right here in this community, because of
that sale.”
Mr. Immelt’s White House job will be as chairman of the Council on Jobs and
Competitiveness, a newly named panel that Mr. Obama is creating by executive
order; the president said Friday that he intends to name additional members,
including business and labor leaders and economists, “in the coming days.”
The change in the council’s name is intended to signify a shift in White House
focus. It will be a reconfigured version of the board that Mr. Volcker led, the
President’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board, of which Mr. Immelt was a member.
That body, created by Mr. Obama when he took office in the thick of the worst
economic crisis since the Great Depression, is set to expire Feb. 6.
Christine Hauser contributed reporting from New York.
Obama Sends Pro-Business Signal With Adviser Choice, NYT,
21.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/22/business/economy/22obama.html
Pay
Doubles for Bosses at Viacom
January 21,
2011
The New York Times
By GRAHAM BOWLEY
Viacom
presents: Big Payday II — the sequel.
Viacom awarded its chief executive, Philippe P. Dauman, total compensation for
2010 valued at about $84.5 million, more than double the 2009 figure, including
salary, bonus and stock options, the company disclosed on Friday.
It awarded its chief operating officer, Thomas E. Dooley, total compensation
valued at about $64.7 million, also more than double the 2009 compensation.
Viacom disclosed the compensation in documents filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission after the market closed on Friday.
The company said, however, that the compensation was inflated by one-time stock
awards linked to long-term contracts the executives signed last year. These
contracts, for six and a half years, were unusually long for the industry, a
spokesman, Carl Folta, said, and reflected Viacom’s recent better performance.
Without those one-time awards, Mr. Folta said, Mr. Dauman’s compensation was
valued at about $30 million, including both cash and stock, and Mr. Dooley’s at
about $23 million, both below their 2009 compensation.
However, the awards raised questions among compensation experts.
“This is spectacular money but where are the spectacular results?” said Brian
Foley, a pay consultant in White Plains. “In terms of the stock price, they are
back to where they were in 2008, about three years ago. That’s great, but is
that really worth this award?”
Compensation for Viacom’s founder and executive chairman, Sumner M. Redstone,
was more restrained. Mr. Redstone received compensation for the 2010 period
valued at about $15 million, a decline from the $16.9 million he received in
2009, the company said.
Viacom’s 2010 fiscal year covered the three quarters from January to September.
Last year, the company changed its fiscal year to begin in October to align its
financial reporting more closely with the seasonality of the television
industry, giving it only three quarters last year. It is scheduled to report
results from the first quarter of its latest fiscal year on Feb. 3.
The compensation is reminiscent of the large payouts Viacom’s top executives
received in 2005. At that time, Mr. Redstone, then the chief executive, and Tom
Freston and Leslie Moonves, both then presidents, received total compensation
for the previous year valued at about $52 million to $56 million.
The company said Friday that about 90 percent of the compensation for its 2010
period was in long-term stock options, which aligned the executives’ interests
with those of the company. It said the compensation was also justified by
Viacom’s performance.
“In 2010 Viacom achieved outstanding operational and financial results,
including double-digit growth in operating income, adjusted net earnings and
total shareholder return,” Viacom said in the statement. “Viacom shares
appreciated 33 percent during calendar year 2010, versus the S.& P. 500 gain of
12 percent.”
Mr. Folta predicted that executive compensation would be less for the current
2011 fiscal year because it would not be inflated by the one-time payments
linked to the contract renewals.
In November, it reported third-quarter earnings that surpassed the expectations
of analysts. Its flagship MTV has enjoyed something of a renaissance recently as
a cultural tastemaker and a corresponding upswing in ratings. In that quarter,
revenue rose 5 percent, to $3.3 billion.
Pay Doubles for Bosses at Viacom, NYT, 21.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/22/business/media/22viacom.html
At Google,
a Boost From E-Commerce
January 20, 2011
The New York Times
By CLAIRE CAIN MILLER
Google’s strong fourth-quarter earnings proved that it is now firmly
ensconced in e-commerce, and also showed that, with its Android operating system
and related apps, it is smoothly transitioning to the mobile world.
But that news, reported on Thursday, was quickly followed by the announcement
that Larry Page, a Google co-founder, will replace Eric E. Schmidt as chief
executive in April.
The move marks a return to the helm of the company for Mr. Page, who left the
role in 2001 when Google was still a private company. Mr. Schmidt will become
executive chairman, focusing on outside partnerships and government outreach,
the company said.
The upheaval at the top may have overshadowed the earnings report, but the
numbers were good. Google benefited from the best online holiday shopping season
since 2006, as Web users increasingly began their shopping sprees at the search
engine.
“Whenever e-commerce improves, we see more advertisers competing for the same
keywords, and that means more revenue for Google,” said Sandeep Aggarwal, an
Internet analyst at Caris & Company.
To make it easier for shoppers to find what they were looking for, Google in the
run-up to the holiday season introduced tools like Boutiques.com and search
results that showed which offline stores have an item in stock. It also began
offering retailers product ads with images.
Google reported on Thursday that net income in the quarter ended Dec. 31 was
$2.54 billion, or $7.81 a share, up from $1.97 billion, or $6.13 a share, in the
year-ago quarter. Excluding the cost of stock options and the related tax
benefits, Google’s fourth-quarter profit was $8.75 a share, up from $6.79.
The company said revenue climbed 17 percent, to $8.44 billion, from $6.67
billion a year earlier. Net revenue, which excludes commissions paid to
advertising partners, was $6.37 billion, up from $4.95 billion.
“Our strong performance has been driven by a rapidly growing digital economy,
continuous product innovation that benefits both users and advertisers, and by
the extraordinary momentum of our newer businesses, such as display and mobile,”
Mr. Schmidt said in a statement.
While Google’s e-commerce offerings drove its search business during the
quarter, the company also began to convince investors that it is successfully
moving into new businesses, particularly mobile and display ads.
On a call after the earnings report, Jonathan Rosenberg, senior vice president
for product management, said the winners of 2010 were Google’s display
advertising business, which now has two million publishers; YouTube, where
revenue doubled; businesses that have begun using Google products; and Android,
with 300,000 phones activated a day.
Mr. Rosenberg also said there were 10 times as many searches year over year done
from Android devices, which translates into advertising revenue for Google.
Google has been selling display ads, those with images and sometimes video, on
YouTube and other Web sites. The company does not break out display ad revenue,
but eMarketer, a research firm, estimated that Google accounted for 13.4 percent
of display ad revenue in the United States last year, up from 4.7 percent in
2009. Meanwhile, Yahoo, the market leader, lost share, eMarketer said.
Google’s mobile business is particularly promising, analysts said, as people
increasingly neglect the laptops on their desks for the phones in their pockets.
For Google to maintain its dominance, it has needed to follow them, which it has
been doing with apps to search the Web on the go, look up directions, watch
videos, find local businesses and even make phone calls.
This year, Mr. Rosenberg said, the company will focus on products that allow
people to access local information on mobile phones, as well as commerce, adding
that the two are tied together.
“They key to unlocking mobile commerce was to make it easier for people to both
search and then consummate the transaction on the mobile device,” he said.
“As smartphones become ubiquitous and local businesses put their inventory
online, I think this will be the year that smartphones” change the way commerce
is done, he added.
Still, other Google businesses have yet to find success. Google TV has faced
delays and poor reviews; the Justice Department is still deciding whether to
permit Google to acquire the flight software company ITA; and analysts are
watching closely to see if the iPhone’s debut on Verizon affects sales of
Android phones.
Also, analysts expressed concern about Google’s spending; the company is
continually hiring and paid more than $2 billion for a building in New York to
house growing operations.
At Google, a Boost From
E-Commerce, NYT, 20.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/21/technology/21google.html
In
Wreckage of Lost Jobs,
Lost Power
January 19,
2011
The New York Times
By DAVID LEONHARDT
Alone among
the world’s economic powers, the United States is suffering through a deep jobs
slump that can’t be explained by the rest of the economy’s performance.
The gross domestic product here — the total value of all goods and services —
has recovered from the recession better than in Britain, Germany, Japan or
Russia. Yet a greatly shrunken group of American workers, working harder and
more efficiently, is producing these goods and services.
The unemployment rate is higher in this country than in Britain or Russia and
much higher than in Germany or Japan, according to a study of worldwide job
markets that Gallup will release on Wednesday. The American jobless rate is also
higher than China’s, Gallup found. The European countries with worse
unemployment than the United States tend to be those still mired in crisis, like
Greece, Ireland and Spain.
Economists are now engaged in a spirited debate, much of it conducted on popular
blogs like Marginal Revolution, about the causes of the American jobs slump.
Lawrence Katz, a Harvard labor economist, calls the full picture “genuinely
puzzling.”
That the financial crisis originated here, and was so severe here, surely plays
some role. The United States had a bigger housing bubble than most other
countries, leaving a large group of idle construction workers who can’t easily
switch industries. Many businesses, meanwhile, are reluctant to commit to hiring
workers out of a fear that heavily indebted households won’t spend much in
coming years.
But beyond these immediate causes, the basic structure of the American economy
also seems to be an important factor. This jobless recovery, after all, is the
third straight recovery since 1991 to begin with months and months of little job
growth.
Why? One obvious possibility is the balance of power between employers and
employees.
Relative to the situation in most other countries — or in this country for most
of the last century — American employers operate with few restraints. Unions
have withered, at least in the private sector, and courts have grown friendlier
to business. Many companies can now come much closer to setting the terms of
their relationship with employees, letting them go when they become a drag on
profits and relying on remaining workers or temporary ones when business picks
up.
Just consider the main measure of corporate health: profits. In Canada, Japan
and most of Europe, corporate profits have still not recovered to precrisis
levels. In the United States, profits have more than recovered, rising 12
percent since late 2007.
For corporate America, the Great Recession is over. For the American work force,
it’s not.
Unfortunately, fixing the job market will take years. Even if job growth
accelerated to the rapid pace of the late 1990s and remained there, the
unemployment rate would not fall below 6 percent (which some economists consider
full employment) until 2016. We could now be in only the first half of the
longest stretch of high unemployment since World War II.
The best way to put people back to work is to lift economic growth. For
Washington, lifting growth will first mean avoiding the mistakes of 2010, when
the Fed, the White House and some members of Congress prematurely assumed that a
solid recovery was under way. The risk this year is that they will start
reducing the budget deficit immediately by cutting federal programs, rather than
having the cuts take effect in future years.
Policy makers could also help the unemployed by spreading economic pain more
broadly among the population. I realize this idea may not sound so good at
first. Who wants pain to spread? But the fact is that this downturn has
concentrated its effects on a relatively narrow group of Americans.
In Germany and Canada, some companies and workers have averted layoffs by
agreeing to cut everyone’s hours and, thus, pay. In this country, average wages
for the employed have risen faster than inflation since 2007, which is highly
unusual for a downturn. Yet unemployment remains terribly high, and almost half
of the unemployed have been out of work for at least six months. These are the
people bearing the brunt of the downturn.
Germany’s job-sharing program — known as “Kurzarbeit,” or short work — has won
praise from both conservative and liberal economists. Senator Jack Reed,
Democrat of Rhode Island, has offered a bill that would encourage similar
programs. So far, though, the White House has not pursued it aggressively.
Perhaps Gene Sperling, the new director of the National Economic Council, can
put it back on the agenda.
Restoring some balance to the relationship between employers and employees will
be more difficult. One problem is that too many labor unions, like the auto
industry’s, have been poorly run, hurting companies and, ultimately, workers. Of
course, many other companies — AT&T, General Electric, Southwest Airlines — have
thrived with unionized workers, and study after study has shown that unions
usually do benefit workers. As one bumper sticker says, “Unions: The folks who
brought you the weekend.”
Today, unions are clearly playing on an uneven field. Companies pay minimal
penalties for illegally trying to bar unions and have become expert at doing so,
legally and otherwise. For all their shortcomings, unions remain many workers’
best hope for some bargaining power.
The list of promising solutions to the jobs slump can go on and on. Reforming
the disability insurance system so it does not encourage long-term joblessness
would help. “Once people enter the system,” as Mr. Katz of Harvard says, “they
basically never come back.” Improving high schools and colleges — reclaiming the
global lead in education — would help even more. Remember, the jobless rate for
college graduates is only 4.8 percent, and some highly skilled jobs continue to
go unfilled.
The jobs slump has become too severe to disappear anytime soon. It will be part
of the American economy and American politics for years to come. But there is no
reason to treat it as a problem that’s immune from solutions. For starters, it
would be worth figuring out what other countries are doing right.
In Wreckage of Lost Jobs, Lost Power, NYT, 19.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/19/business/economy/19leonhardt.html
Apple’s
Strong Holiday Season
Lifts Revenue 70%
January 18,
2011
The New York Times
By MIGUEL HELFT
SAN
FRANCISCO — The holidays were really good to Apple.
Consumers around the world flocked into the company’s stores and other outlets
to snap up iPhones and iPads at a dizzying rate. They also bought millions of
laptops, especially the new ultralight MacBook Air.
Even businesses, which have historically shunned Apple’s costly gadgets,
embraced its products in larger numbers.
As a result, Apple on Tuesday reported record sales and profits for the last
three months of 2010 that far exceeded analysts’ bullish forecasts.
“Apple is already the envy of a lot of companies,” said Shaw Wu, an analyst with
Kaufman Brothers. “Yet after they have reached such a high pinnacle, they seem
to be able to distance themselves even further from the competition.”
Apple’s strong results are likely to go a long way toward easing investors’
worries — at least for now — over the health of Steven P. Jobs, the company’s
co-founder and chief executive. Mr. Jobs, a survivor of pancreatic cancer who
received a liver transplant in early 2009, said Monday that he would take an
indefinite medical leave.
“We had a phenomenal holiday quarter with record Mac, iPhone and iPad sales,”
Mr. Jobs said in a news release. “We are firing on all cylinders and we’ve got
some exciting things in the pipeline for this year.”
In a conference call with top Apple executives, including Timothy D. Cook, the
chief operating officer, who will be running the company during Mr. Jobs’s
absence, analysts did not ask a single question about Mr. Jobs’s health.
Two analysts said they believed that Apple would not have answered them and that
its executives would have been “irritated” by the questions. Apple said its net
income in the last three months of 2010 rose 78 percent from a year earlier to a
record $6 billion, or $6.43 a share, from $3.4 billion, or $3.67 a share, a year
earlier. Revenue soared more than 70 percent to $26.74 billion, from $ 15.68
billion a year earlier.
On average, Wall Street analysts forecast that Apple would report revenue of
$24.5 billion in the last three months of the year and have net income of about
$5.38 a share.
While much of the focus on Apple recently has been on the company’s mobile
products, sales of Mac computers have once again far outpaced the overall market
for PCs, growing 22 percent, to 4.1 million units. Sales of laptops were
particularly strong, growing 37 percent from a year earlier.
Sales of iPhones continued to defy expectations, as Apple sold 16.24 million
units, 86 percent more than a year earlier. The company also sold 7.3 million
iPads, 75 percent more than in the previous quarter. The iPad was not available
for the 2009 holiday season.
Analysts said the results should give investors reason to think that the company
could do well with or without Mr. Jobs.
“He is an iconic leader, but this is not a one-man operation and hasn’t been one
for a long time,” said Barry Jaruzelski, a partner at Booz & Company and the
head of its innovation practice. “There are steady hands at the tiller.”
Even before Apple reported its quarterly results, investors appeared to take in
stride the news of Mr. Jobs’s leave. Shares dropped more than 6 percent after
the opening bell, but recovered to close at $340.65, down $7.83, or 2.2 percent,
from the Friday close. The decline was far smaller than the 10 percent drop that
analysts had predicted.
Analysts said there was no accident in the timing of the release of news about
Mr. Jobs on a federal holiday, when the markets were closed, and a day before it
would report strong results.
“The precision of the spoon feeding of the news to everyone was classic Apple,”
said Gene Munster, an analyst with Piper Jaffray.
During the conference call, Mr. Cook expressed confidence that Apple still had
plenty of room to continue its torrid growth. He said that the company still had
a relatively small share of the PC market and that the smartphone and tablet
businesses were expanding quickly.
“We feel very, very confident about the future of the company,” Mr. Cook said.
Apple said that the only factor preventing it from selling even more iPhones was
its inability to make them more quickly. While the company has solved backlog
issues with the iPad and reduced the backlog of iPhone orders, demand is still
exceeding supply, a factor that may accelerate when Verizon Wireless begins
carrying the iPhone next month.
Mr. Cook said he felt good about the progress Apple had made in meeting iPhone
demand and added: “It is not enough. We are working around the clock to build
more.”
Christine Hauser contributed reporting from New York.
Apple’s Strong Holiday Season Lifts Revenue 70%, NYT, 18.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/19/technology/19apple.html
Obama
Orders Review
of Business Regulations
January 18, 2011
The New York Times
By JACKIE CALMES
WASHINGTON — President Obama on Tuesday ordered “a
government-wide review” of federal regulations to root out those “that stifle
job creation and make our economy less competitive,” but exempted many agencies
that most vex corporate America.
The executive order that Mr. Obama signed at the White House would not apply to
federal agencies created to be largely independent of the White House and
Congress, which includes most of those currently enforcing and writing rules for
banks and other financial institutions mandated by the regulatory overhaul law
that Mr. Obama signed last year to avoid future crises.
While it remains unclear what substantive impact Mr. Obama’s action will have,
the political underpinning was apparent.
The president has made no secret of his desire for détente with the business
community that was so alienated by the agenda of his first two years, in
particular the laws strengthening financial regulatory system and overhauling
health care and insurance. More broadly he has sought to tack to the political
center after Democrats’ defeats in the midterm elections confirmed his party’s
loss of support from independent voters.
Business and conservative groups welcomed the initiative, while liberal and
consumer-oriented groups were more wary, even critical. But each side was mostly
skeptical, as were nonpartisan policy analysts, about what might come of the
regulatory review, since Mr. Obama is following in the well-worn tracks of
presidents going back four decades, at least to Gerald R. Ford, in seeking to
respond to businesses’ complaints about burdensome government rules.
“It’s more of a talking point than a policy,” said Robert E. Litan, the vice
president for research and policy at the Kauffman Foundation, who oversees
academic research relating to entrepreneurship.
“Even if you find a rule you don’t like, and they probably will, then they’re
going to have to go through rule-making and then it’s going to take a year or
two or longer,” Mr. Litan added. “And then somebody will sue them; if it’s not
another industry it will be a consumer interest group or a Republican interest
group.”
He recalled that one of Ronald Reagan’s first acts as president was to win
repeal of a requirement for auto airbags that car-makers had fought. The
insurance industry sued, arguing that the bags would save lives and medical
costs, and ultimately won in the Supreme Court.
While administration officials denied that Mr. Obama was seeking to appeal to
business and described the order as long in the making, the president announced
it himself via an op-ed article in Tuesday’s Wall Street Journal.
Mr. Obama cited the automobile fuel economy deal negotiated with automakers,
state and federal officials, auto workers and environmental advocates as an
example of how difficult regulatory questions can be resolved through
negotiation rather than confrontation. But that plan, which set a schedule for
carmakers to increase auto and light truck fuel economy over the next five
years, was possible in large part because two major American car companies —
General Motors and Chrysler — were in bankruptcy and receiving federal bailout
funds. They were not in a position to challenge the nationwide mileage
regulations.
Automakers, who returned to profitability last year, are contesting proposed new
federal fuel economy and emissions rules that would take effect beginning in
2017.
The Obama administration is also moving ahead with new regulations on greenhouse
gas emissions from large stationary sources like power plants and refineries,
but has said it would do so in a cost-effective and common-sense way. The first
stage of the program took effect earlier this month, but the Environmental
Protection Agency has said it would not impose new performance standards on such
facilities until next year and that smaller plants would be exempt for several
years.
The environmental agency has also delayed new rules governing smog and toxic
emissions from industrial boilers, in part because of stiff opposition from
industry and from newly assertive Republicans in Congress.
Business groups have welcomed the recent moves, but are wary about new clean air
regulations on mercury, coal ash and other pollutants that are due later this
year. Republicans in Congress have already announced they intend to mount a
robust challenge to the administration’s announced plans to address climate
change using executive branch rule-making authority rather than legislation.
Obama Orders Review
of Business Regulations, NYT, 18.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/19/business/19regulatoy.html
U.S. Shifts Focus
to Press China for Market Access
January 18,
2011
The New York Times
By HELENE COOPER
and MARK LANDLER
WASHINGTON
— A year ago, the fight over how China’s cheap currency was hurting American
companies in marketplaces at home and abroad was shaping up to be the epic
battle between the world’s biggest power and its biggest economic rival.
But when President Hu Jintao walks into the Eisenhower Executive Office Building
with President Obama on Wednesday to face a group of 18 American and Chinese
business leaders, much of the clash will be about a new economic battlefield —
inside China itself.
A series of trade restrictions imposed by the Chinese government within China,
including administrative controls, requirements to transfer sophisticated
technology, state subsidies to favored domestic companies and so-called
indigenous laws meant to favor homegrown businesses, have angered many American
manufacturing and high-tech companies, which are rapidly finding themselves cut
out of the world’s fastest growing market.
The result is that the two countries have to resolve a wider range of economic
tensions, including what American multinational corporations see as a
deteriorating environment for investing and making money in what has become the
world’s second largest economy.
So it is no longer just a fight over cheap Chinese textile, electronic and toy
imports. China won that battle years ago. Now the question — reminiscent of
trade tensions with Japan in the 1980s — is whether General Electric and
Microsoft and other American companies that dearly want to expand into China’s
rapidly expanding markets will find themselves beaten at their own game by
Chinese companies, backed by the Chinese government, “competing at every point
in the technology spectrum,” said Eswar Shanker Prasad, a former economist with
the International Monetary Fund who now teaches trade policy at Cornell
University.
Myron Brilliant, a senior vice president at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said,
“It’s no longer just a question of Nucor complaining about dumping,” referring
to the American steel manufacturing company that has accused China of selling
steel fasteners and bolts at below-market prices abroad. “Those concerns may not
be going away, but the noise out there now has additional voices. The voices are
not just low-cost products coming here; the competition is about China’s
marketplace.”
For Mr. Obama, the shift gives him stronger backing from American businesses for
a tougher approach to China when he sits down with Mr. Hu. The Chinese president
arrived in Washington on Tuesday afternoon for two full days of high-level
meetings that began with a private dinner at the White House on Tuesday evening.
“The business community has historically been the bastion of support for the
U.S.-China relationship,” said Michael Froman, the deputy national security
adviser for international economic affairs, in an interview. “Now that support
is more qualified.” Mr. Froman said that Mr. Obama and American officials would
be “underscoring the importance of addressing these issues if we’re going to
have a level playing field.”
American companies have always had a love-hate relationship with China — with
the manufacturing companies in the South and steel companies in the Midwest
urging the government to take tough action against China, and advanced
manufacturers and high-tech companies that want access to the Chinese
marketplace pressing for a more conciliatory tone.
Now, both sides seem to want the administration to get tough. Last year, Jeffrey
R. Immelt of G.E. complained to a meeting of business leaders in Rome that it
was getting harder for foreign companies to do business in China, and he
expressed a growing irritation that China was protecting its own national
companies at the detriment of American companies.
Google last March moved its Chinese service out of mainland China to avoid
censorship rules. The American Chamber of Commerce in Beijing has also
complained that is members are facing an increasingly difficult regulatory
environment.
Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner signaled the Obama administration’s
stance in a speech last week, when he said that the United States would grant
China more access to high-tech American products and expand trade and investment
opportunities within the United States only if China opened its own domestic
market to American products. That push for market access, administration
officials said, will be at the top of Mr. Obama’s agenda with Mr. Hu, both
during their one-on-one meetings and when they meet with the business leaders.
American multinational corporations, experts said, are hurt by Chinese
regulations that openly favor Chinese companies over foreign ones for government
contracts. These rules, which are intended to stimulate technological innovation
in China, have the effect of cutting American and other non-Chinese companies
out of many of the big contracts there.
“U.S. companies have issues with China in many different business sectors,” said
John Frisbie, president of the U.S.-China Business Council in Washington. “But
if I were to point to one single issue over the last year, it has been China’s
innovation policies and how they link to government procurement.”
Under pressure from the United States and other countries, the Chinese have
paused in their rollout of the rules. But Beijing has not scrapped them, and the
administration will raise the issue again this week with Mr. Hu.
Mr. Frisbie also pointed to intellectual property rights as another “existential
issue” for software developers and movie producers. There is some evidence of
progress on this issue: at a meeting in Beijing last month, the Chinese
government pledged to use only properly registered software in government
offices.
As important as these issues are, some economists argue that they pale when
compared with the distortions caused by an undervalued currency. While
nationalistic rules that favor Chinese companies affect technology and
entertainment giants, China’s cheap currency undercuts tens of thousands of
small-scale American manufacturers — companies that still make their products at
home.
“The small mom-and-pop companies, which are getting crushed by the renminbi, you
never hear from them,” said Nicholas R. Lardy, an expert on the Chinese economy
at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. “They don’t really have a
voice. They just shrink and go out of business.”
While the renminbi, China’s currency, has risen 3.6 percent against the dollar
since China loosened its link to the dollar last June, Mr. Lardy estimates that
it is still undervalued by 15 percent to 17 percent on a trade-weighted basis.
Mr. Geithner has argued that it is in China’s self-interest to allow its
currency to rise, to curb building inflationary pressures in the Chinese
economy. The Chinese government has also declared that it wants to reduce the
share of exports in overall economic growth.
But Mr. Lardy said he was skeptical that the Chinese would take the advice,
given that they had not accelerated the rise in the currency last fall, when
inflation began heating up. And in the wake of a financial crisis that
originated in the United States, he said, China would be even less inclined to
listen to economic prescriptions from Washington.
“They learned that the advice they’ve been getting from previous Treasury
secretaries wasn’t worth the paper it was printed on,” Mr. Lardy said.
U.S. Shifts Focus to Press China for Market Access, NYT,
18.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/19/world/asia/19prexy.html
Apple
Says
Steve Jobs Will Take
a New Medical Leave
January 17,
2011
The New York Times
By MIGUEL HELFT
Steven P.
Jobs, the co-founder and chief executive of Apple, is taking a medical leave of
absence, a year and a half after his return from a liver transplant, the company
said on Monday.
Mr. Jobs announced his leave in a letter to employees that said he was stepping
aside “so I can focus on my health” but would continue to be involved in major
strategic decisions at the company.
“I love Apple so much and hope to be back as soon as I can,” Mr. Jobs said.
As during his prior medical leave in 2009, Timothy D. Cook, the company’s chief
operating officer, will run day-to-day operations, Mr. Jobs said.
“I have great confidence that Tim and the rest of the executive management team
will do a terrific job executing the exciting plans we have in place for 2011,”
Mr. Jobs said in the message.
Mr. Jobs recovered from pancreatic cancer after surgery in 2004, but has
continued to be beset by health issues. In January 2009, Mr. Jobs went on a
medical leave. During the leave Mr. Jobs secretly flew to Tennessee for a liver
transplant.
In June 2009, Apple said Mr. Jobs was back at work, and he reappeared in public
for the first time in September of that year. While he was energetic and
exhibited his unique brand of salesmanship as he unveiled new products during
90-minute event, he continued to look gaunt. Since then, Mr. Jobs has headlined
a string of product introductions, including the iPhone 4 and the iPad and a new
line of MacBook Air laptops, where he was equally energetic and focused, but
still looked frail.
At one such event in July 2010, a reporter asked Mr. Jobs about his health, and
he replied, “I’m feeling great.”
In recent months, he has looked increasingly frail, according to people who have
seen him.
In his message to the staff on Monday, Mr. Jobs said, “My family and I would
deeply appreciate respect for our privacy.”
During his prior leave of absence, Apple kept details of Mr. Jobs’s health
private, prompting criticism among some shareholders who contended that the
company had an obligation to be more forthcoming with information.
Mr. Jobs suffers from immune system issues common with people who have received
liver transplants and, as a result, his health suffers from frequent “ups and
downs,” according to a person with knowledge of the situation, who agreed to
speak on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss it.
In recent weeks, Mr. Jobs began a down cycle and slowed his activities at Apple,
the person said. Mr. Jobs has been coming to the office about two days a week,
and appeared increasingly emaciated, the person said. He frequently lunched in
his office, rather than in the company cafeteria, the person said.
An Apple spokeswoman, Katie Cotton, said Apple would have no further comment
beyond Mr. Jobs’s statement.
Apple’s stock immediately dipped on foreign exchanges Monday, falling 6 percent
in Germany. Financial markets in the United States are closed on Monday in
observance of Martin Luther King’s Birthday.
Analysts said that many investors might wonder whether Mr. Jobs will come back
to Apple at all, and trade accordingly.
“It is natural that investors will expect the worse,” said Charles Wolf, an
analyst with Needham & Company, noting that Apple has a history of “minimal
disclosure” and “obfuscating” details about Mr. Jobs’s health.
Mr. Wolf said that regardless of whether Mr. Jobs returns to Apple, the company
would probably continue doing well for the foreseeable future, though its
long-term prospects are a matter of speculation. “Right now Apple has a
management team that is one of the greatest in American business,” Mr. Wolf
said. “Whatever trajectory the company is on will continue for two to five
years, regardless of whether Steve comes back.”
Apple Says Steve Jobs Will Take a New Medical Leave, NYT?
17.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/18/technology/18apple.html
Facing
Scrutiny,
Banks Slow Pace of Foreclosures
January 8,
2011
The New York Times
By DAVID STREITFELD
PHOENIX —
An array of federal and state investigations into the way banks foreclose on
delinquent homeowners has contributed to a sharp slowdown in foreclosures across
the country, especially in hard-hit cities like this one.
Over the last several months, some banks have been reluctant to seize homes from
distressed borrowers, economists and government officials say, as they face
scrutiny from regulators and the prospect of sanctions when investigations wrap
up in the coming weeks and months.
The Obama administration, in its most recent housing report, said foreclosure
activity fell 21 percent in November from October, the biggest monthly decline
in five years. Here in Phoenix, foreclosures fell by more than a third in the
same period, reflected in the severe drop in foreclosed homes being auctioned on
the courthouse plaza.
“There’s no product, just nothing to buy,” complained Sean Waak, an agent for
investors, during a recent auction.
The pace of foreclosures could be curtailed further by courts. In a closely
watched case, the highest court in Massachusetts invalidated two foreclosures in
that state on Friday. The court ruled that two banks, U.S. Bancorp and Wells
Fargo, failed to prove they owned the mortgages when they foreclosed on the
homes.
If the slowdown continued through this month and into the spring, it could be a
boost for the economy. Reducing foreclosures in a meaningful way would act to
stabilize the housing market, real estate experts say, letting the
administration patch up one of the economy’s most persistently troubled sectors.
Fewer foreclosures means that buyers pay more for the ones that do come to
market, which strengthens overall home prices and builds consumer confidence in
housing.
“Anything that buys time, that reduces the supply of houses coming onto the
market, is helpful,” said Karl Guntermann, a professor of real estate finance at
Arizona State University.
It is not that borrowers have stopped defaulting on their mortgages. They are
missing payments as frequently as ever, data shows. But the lenders are not
beginning formal foreclosure proceedings or, when they are, do not complete them
with an auction sale. And in the most favorable outcome for distressed
borrowers, some lenders are modifying loans so foreclosure becomes unnecessary.
The drop in foreclosures began in late September when some lenders were revealed
to have been using so-called robo-signers to process thousands of foreclosures
without verifying the accuracy of the data. As the investigations into the
problems proceeded, the uncertainty caused many lenders to become more cautious.
Their foreclosure procedures, the banks have repeatedly said, are sound. But
preliminary results of several of the investigations have indicated substantial
problems. Coordinating many of the inquiries is the Financial Fraud Enforcement
Task Force, established by President Obama.
“The administration is committed to taking appropriate action on these issues
where wrongdoing has occurred,” said Melanie Roussell, an administration
spokeswoman.
The diminished supply of foreclosed homes has already had an effect on prices at
the auctions on the courthouse plaza here, bidders said.
Houses change hands on the plaza with a minimum of ceremony. Three sets of
trustees hired by the banks sit a few feet apart, their backs to a statue of a
naked family looking for all the world as if its members had just been cast out
of their home. The trustees call off properties in a monotone to bidders
clustered around them. Winners must immediately hand over a $10,000 deposit in
the form of a cashier’s check.
On a recent afternoon, one bidder, Pam Mullavey of Infoclosure, found herself in
a bidding war with Chris Romuzga of Posted Properties for a 2001 house that had
fetched $644,000 at the very peak of the boom.
This time around, the bank set the floor at $271,000. Ms. Mullavey and Mr.
Romuzga rapidly pushed up the price in varying increments of $100 and $500. Mr.
Romuzga’s client had planned to pull out at $307,000 but asked him to keep
bidding as Ms. Mullavey sailed on. Her winning bid was $310,100, well above what
a similar house might have fetched just a few months ago.
“Sometimes I wonder why people are bidding so much,” Ms. Mullavey said.
For Mr. Romuzga, it was the fourth time that afternoon he had been outbid. Only
once had he secured a property.
The investors’ frustration could be a good thing for Phoenix homeowners, who
have seen values fall 54.5 percent since 2006. In the last few months, home
prices have started to drop again. A decline in foreclosures, economists say,
could break the fall.
Cameron Findlay, chief economist with the mortgage company LendingTree, said
that the shifting behavior of lenders had helped change perceptions about the
foreclosed.
“Initially, society’s view was to run them out of the house,” he said.
That resulted in vacant and dilapidated homes, which blighted neighborhoods and
drove potential buyers away.
“People should be hopeful the modification programs work — for their own
benefit,” said Mr. Findlay.
More than four million households are in serious default and vulnerable to
losing their homes. Lenders maintain that cases of borrowers improperly
foreclosed are extremely rare.
But the Federal Reserve, which is investigating lenders’ policies in conjunction
with other banking regulators, has found significant weaknesses in risk
management, quality control, auditing and compliance.
Another investigation is being conducted by the Federal Housing Administration,
which is examining whether loan servicers are exhausting all legally required
options before foreclosing on government-insured mortgages. An agency
spokeswoman said that initial reviews indicated “significant differences” in
efforts by servicers to keep borrowers in their homes.
A third investigation is being conducted by the Executive Office for U.S.
Trustees, part of the Justice Department. It is looking into documentation
errors by lenders and their law firms in homeowners’ bankruptcy filings.
At the state level, there is a joint effort by all 50 state attorneys general,
with the specific goal of changing the face of foreclosure in America by making
it more difficult for lenders to act against homeowners. The effort, led by
Iowa’s attorney general, Tom Miller, is in flux as several prominent attorneys
general left office and their replacements decide whether to make foreclosure
reform a priority.
There have been many attempts during the housing crash to stem the flow of
foreclosures, only fitfully successful. Some experts think neither federal
reforms nor any agreements brokered by the attorneys general will make much of a
difference.
“Whether it is really true that there are millions of foreclosures that could be
avoided if servicers were just more willing to do more modifications that make
sense — meaning overall losses would be less than would otherwise be the case —
is far from clear, and in fact highly unlikely,” said Tom Lawler, an economist.
Loan servicers are not set up to identify the true financial picture of each
borrower having trouble, Mr. Lawler said, and cannot easily figure out who is
likely to stop paying without a modification and who will keep sending a check
every month.
The courthouse plaza bidders in Phoenix do not believe their livelihood is
threatened. By the end of January, several bidders predicted, lenders would gear
up and foreclosures would once again be abundant.
In the meantime, Tom Peltier watched unhappily as a house started at $68,000 and
quickly spiraled up. He finally locked it in at $98,500. “That was about 20
grand more than I wanted to pay,” said Mr. Peltier, who planned to rent it to
his sister as soon as he moved out the former owner.
Facing Scrutiny, Banks Slow Pace of Foreclosures, NYT,
8.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09foreclosure.html
The
Downsizing in Detroit
January 6,
2011
The New York Times
By BILL VLASIC
WAYNE,
Mich. — Ten years ago, the Ford Motor plant here churned out giant Expedition
and Navigator sport utility vehicles that got 12 miles to the gallon — and it
was one of the most profitable auto factories in the world.
Today, after a $550 million renovation, the 140-acre plant is a symbol of a very
different Detroit: a greener, leaner industry focused on smaller,
energy-efficient cars. The factory will now build Ford’s newest compact car, the
Focus, in four different and progressively more fuel-efficient versions,
including an all-electric one that will be unveiled on Friday and go on sale
this year.
Although the transformation has been a long time coming, Ford and the rest of
the domestic auto industry appear to be finally giving up their addiction to
gas-guzzling trucks and sport utility vehicles. Prodded first by rising federal
fuel economy standards, then shocked in 2008 by $145-a-barrel oil and a global
credit crisis that forced General Motors and Chrysler to seek federal bailouts,
Detroit is making a fundamental shift toward lighter, more fuel-conscious cars —
and turning a profit doing so.
Japanese automakers still hold a lead in overall fuel economy, and Toyota,
despite its recall troubles, remains the top seller of hybrids with its Prius.
But Detroit has closed the gap significantly. Last year, passenger cars made by
Ford and G.M. averaged more than 30 miles per gallon, according to federal
rankings, compared with 27 m.p.g. a decade ago.
G.M. began delivering a plug-in electric hybrid, the Chevrolet Volt, in
December, and the company will show off a new compact Buick sedan next week at
the Detroit auto show. It is expected to get 31 m.p.g. in highway driving, a far
cry from the lumbering Buick Roadmaster of the past.
Of course, many American consumers have yet to give up their affection for
larger vehicles, and the domestic automakers still rely on light trucks and
S.U.V.’s for a large share of their profits. But the huge, 8,000-pound land
yachts of yore have given way to slimmer so-called crossover vehicles that have
less powerful engines but can still hold seven people.
With oil prices once again trading around $90 a barrel and gasoline topping $3 a
gallon, the American auto companies are pushing hard to accelerate their green
transition. G.M.’s new chief executive, Daniel F. Akerson, has told his product
executives to plan for oil at $120 a barrel and gasoline at more than $4 a
gallon, according to company insiders.
The Obama administration is also nudging the industry along with money for
cutting-edge auto technology. The Energy Department has made nearly 50 grants
worth $2.4 billion for research and manufacturing. G.M. alone received $241
million, most of it related to the Volt.
Ford, which avoided the disruptions of bankruptcy that befell G.M. and Chrysler
in 2009, is further ahead than its hometown rivals in overhauling its fleet, and
it is eager to get that message out.
On Friday, it will unveil the all-electric version of its Ford Focus — its
answer to the Nissan Leaf and Chevrolet Volt — at an event in New York with its
chairman, William Clay Ford Jr., and another in Las Vegas with its chief
executive, Alan R. Mulally.
“All of us know energy is going to be more expensive going forward,” Mr. Mulally
said in an interview. “Consumers are coming together around the world on quality
as a reason to purchase and fuel efficiency as a reason to purchase.”
By 2012, the Focus compact will be available to buyers in four versions:
gasoline-powered, conventional hybrid, plug-in hybrid and fully electric. All
will be built in the Wayne plant, which can easily change the mix of vehicles
produced.
While the American automakers still make more truck-based models than their
foreign rivals, they have radically scaled back their production. Since 2004,
G.M., Ford and Chrysler have closed 17 assembly plants in the United States and
Canada that built pickup trucks, S.U.V.’s and vans. It was an unprecedented
overhaul that removed about 3.5 million low-mileage vehicles from their annual
manufacturing capacity.
The government-sponsored bankruptcies of G.M. and Chrysler, and significant
reorganization at Ford on its own, have restored fiscal health to the industry,
which had been reeling from overcapacity, huge health care costs and a collapse
in consumer credit.
Now Ford can make money building the Focus in its former S.U.V. plant. Health
care costs for retirees, which used to add about $1,500 to every vehicle made in
a union plant, have been offloaded to a trust administered by the United
Automobile Workers. The union has also trimmed staff levels and agreed to lower
starting wage scales to bring down manufacturing costs.
“We’ve always had a great market for small vehicles in the United States,” Mr.
Mulally said. “We didn’t have small vehicles because we couldn’t make them here
profitably.”
Both G.M. and Ford are expected to report impressive profits for 2010, despite
annual United States sales well below the 17 million that the industry sold a
few years ago. Chrysler, which is still losing money, is lagging in the
switchover from trucks to smaller cars as it awaits new products from its
Italian partner, Fiat.
Skeptics concede that the domestic companies have narrowed the gap in fuel
economy with Japanese automakers, but say that the American automakers need to
extend their advanced gas-saving technology to all of their models.
“It’s clear that the Detroit manufacturers are aware of the right decisions and
are selectively applying them,” said Jim Kliesch, a senior engineer in the
clean-vehicle program at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “What we want to see
them do is apply them across the board.”
Ford still sold nearly twice as many light trucks as cars in 2010 in the United
States. But the vehicle size and mileage of its overall fleet of products have
changed substantially.
Its best-selling S.U.V. last year was the smallest in the lineup, the compact
Ford Escape, which gets 23 miles to the gallon and is available as a
gas-electric hybrid that gets 32 miles a gallon. A decade ago, the iconic Ford
Explorer was the industry’s top-selling S.U.V. at 15 m.p.g. (Ford just revamped
the Explorer and improved its gas mileage by 25 percent.)
The company is also offering its first full-size pickup with a smaller,
turbocharged engine instead of a traditional V-8. And once its big sedans like
the Crown Victoria are discontinued, Ford’s largest passenger car will be the
medium-size Taurus.
Analysts say that the auto industry’s big investments in electric and plug-in
models will not pay off for some time in the marketplace but represent an
attempt to gain an important foothold with environmentally conscious consumers.
“There are significant questions about the economic viability of
battery-electric vehicles, yet all of the major auto companies are engaged in
it,” said Jay Baron, the chairman of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann
Arbor, Mich.
Last year, hybrid sales fell 8 percent, and accounted for just 2 percent of the
overall domestic sales, of 11.6 million vehicles.
Far more important to reducing the nation’s fuel consumption are the industry’s
efforts to make gasoline-powered cars and trucks more efficient.
“The domestic automakers have done a terrific job of catching up to some of the
technology that’s been available, such as direct fuel injection,” Mr. Baron
said. “Those technologies can get 30 percent improvements in fuel economy, but
there is a limit.”
Even if consumers are not necessarily ready to buy hybrid and electric cars in
big numbers, the carmakers say there is no turning back on their efficiency
drive. New federal standards will require a fleet average of 36 miles per gallon
by 2016. That is a 30 percent improvement from the 27 m.p.g. required for the
2011 model year.
“Are we going to stick with improving fuel economy? You don’t have a choice,”
Mr. Akerson of G.M. said. “The government has told us what we have to do, and we
will meet those goals.”
Nick Bunkley
contributed reporting.
The Downsizing in Detroit, NYT, 6.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/07/business/07green.html
Donald
J. Tyson,
Food Tycoon,
Is Dead at 80
January 6,
2011
The New York Times
By ROBERT D. McFADDEN
Donald J.
Tyson, an aggressive and visionary entrepreneur who dropped out of college and
built his father’s Arkansas chicken business into the behemoth Tyson Foods, one
of the world’s largest producers of poultry, beef and pork, died on Thursday. He
was 80 and lived in Fayetteville, Ark. The cause was complications of cancer,
Tyson Foods said.
Shrewd, folksy and often likened to fellow Arkansans Sam Walton, the late
Wal-Mart tycoon, and former President Bill Clinton, Mr. Tyson was a risk-taking,
bare-knuckle businessman who bought out dozens of competitors, skirted the edge
of the law and transformed a Depression-era trucking-and-feed venture into a
global enterprise with an army of employees and millions of customers in 57
countries.
Tyson Foods became a household name as he popularized the Rock Cornish game hen
as a high-profit specialty item; helped develop McDonald’s Chicken McNuggets and
KFC’s Rotisserie Gold, and stocked America’s grocery stores with fresh and
frozen chickens — killed, cleaned and packaged in his archipelago of processing
plants.
“It was pretty much Don’s vision that fueled the company,” Mark A. Plummer, an
analyst for Stephens Inc., a Little Rock financial services firm, told The New
York Times in 1994, the year before Mr. Tyson stepped down after nearly three
decades as chairman. “He saw that if you added more convenience by further
processing the chicken, consumers would pay for it.”
Mr. Tyson grew up on a farm with squawking chickens and became one of the
world’s richest men, a down-home billionaire who dressed in khaki uniforms like
his workers, with “Don” and the Tyson logo stitched over the shirt pockets. He
looked like a farmer down at the feed co-op: a short, stocky man with a paunch
and a round weather-beaten face, a baldish pate and a gray chin-strap beard.
But he cultivated presidents and members of Congress, threw lavish society
parties, took glamorous young women to Wall Street meetings, jetted around the
world and spent weeks at a time on his yacht fishing off Brazil or Baja
California for the spear-nosed, blue-water trophy marlins that decorated his
company headquarters and his homes in Arkansas, England and Mexico.
Critics said his tigerish corporate philosophy — “grow or die” — led to many
acquisitions, notably the bitterly contested purchase of Holly Farms for $1.5
billion in 1989, which made Tyson Foods the nation’s No. 1 poultry producer,
dwarfing ConAgra and Perdue Farms. But it also led to risky deals, questionable
business practices and political ties that produced legal entanglements for him
and the company.
Mr. Tyson and his son and future successor, John H. Tyson, were accused of
helping to arrange illegal gifts to President Clinton’s first-term secretary of
agriculture, Mike Espy, including plane trips, lodging and football tickets,
when his agency was considering tougher safety and inspection regulations
affecting Tyson Foods.
Mr. Espy resigned in 1994, but four years later was acquitted of accepting
illegal gifts. In 1997, Tyson Foods pleaded guilty to making $12,000 in such
gifts to Mr. Espy and paid $6 million in fines and costs. Don and John Tyson
were named unindicted co-conspirators and testified before a grand jury in
exchange for immunity from prosecution. (In an unrelated 2004 case, Don Tyson
and Tyson Foods agreed to pay $1.7 million to settle a federal complaint that
the company did not fully disclose benefits to Mr. Tyson.)
Mr. Tyson’s legal problems tainted but hardly overshadowed a career widely
regarded as a stunning American success story. But his legacy of aggressive
management continued to trouble the company when he served as the semiretired
“senior chairman” after 1995 and even after he retired in 2001.
Environmentalists accused Tyson of fouling waterways. Animal rights groups said
it raised chickens in cruel conditions. Regulators said it discriminated against
women and blacks and cheated workers out of wages. Tyson Foods denied
wrongdoing, but paid fines, back wages and penalties to settle some cases.
In 2001 the company and three managers were charged with conspiring for years to
smuggle illegal immigrants from Mexico and South America to work in its plants,
but all were acquitted.
Marvin Schwartz, who wrote a history of Tyson Foods, “Tyson: From Farm to
Market,” said its culture reflected its leader. “Don is a gambler, and he’s very
comfortable taking risks,” he said. “And in a state like Arkansas, where there
are very few regulatory controls, corporations have more flexibility. The state
motto was ‘The Land of Opportunity,’ and that’s why entrepreneurs like Sam
Walton and Don Tyson have made it here.”
Donald John Tyson was born on April 21, 1930, in Olathe, Kan., to John and Helen
Knoll Tyson. They settled in Springdale, Ark., and his father began hauling
chickens from farms to markets in the Southeast and Midwest. The boy attended
public schools and at 14 started working for his father. After graduating from
Kemper Military School in Boonville, Mo., he enrolled at the University of
Arkansas, but quit in his senior year in 1952 to join the business, which had
added a hatchery and feed mill.
In 1952, he married Twilla Jean Womochil. He is survived by his son, John; three
daughters, Carla Tyson, Cheryl Tyson and Joslyn J. Caldwell-Tyson; and two
grandchildren.
In 1957, the company built its first poultry-processing plant, and in the 1960s
began buying farms and competitors. It went public in 1963. Two years later, it
introduced Rock Cornish game hens, which became enormously popular and
profitable. Mr. Tyson became president in 1966 and chairman in 1967 after his
parents were killed in a car-train wreck.
Over the next three decades, Tyson grew exponentially. It bought beef, pork and
seafood companies, built 60 processing plants and diversified into 6,000
products. It supplied fast-food chains and secured markets abroad. When Mr.
Tyson surrendered day-to-day control in 1995, the company ranked 110th on the
Fortune 500 list, with sales of $5.2 billion.
Mr. Tyson supported Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush for president,
along with many charitable, educational and development programs. He called
himself a moderate Democrat, but went fishing with Republicans too, and made his
Baja California home available for legislative junkets.
“My theory about politics is that if they will just leave me alone, we’ll do
just fine,” he said in 1993. “We pretty much stay home and run chickens.”
Donald J. Tyson, Food Tycoon, Is Dead at 80, NYT,
6.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/07/business/07tyson.html
A
Bonanza in TV Sales Fades Away
January 5,
2011
The New York Times
By SAM GROBART
LAS VEGAS —
By now, most Americans have taken the leap and tossed out their old boxy
televisions in favor of sleek flat-panel displays.
Now manufacturers want to convince those people that their once-futuristic sets
are already obsolete.
After a period of strong growth, sales of televisions are slowing. To counter
this, TV makers are trying to persuade consumers to buy new sets by promoting
new technologies. At this week’s Consumer Electronics Show, which opens
Thursday, every TV maker will be crowing about things like 3-D and Internet
connections — features that have not generated much excitement so far.
Unit sales of liquid-crystal and plasma displays were up 2.9 percent in 2010
from the previous year, according to figures from the market researcher
DisplaySearch. That is tiny compared with the gains of more than 20 percent in
each of the prior three years.
Those heady days of the last decade were the result of an unusual set of
circumstances. The rise of flat-panel television technologies like plasma and
LCD almost perfectly coincided with a government-mandated switchover to digital
broadcasting and the availability of high-definition shows and movies —
something these new televisions were all ready to display.
That sparked a mass migration of consumers from using the old cathode-ray tube
television sets to the thinner and lighter plasma and liquid-crystal displays.
“Those were the golden years,” Paul Gagnon, director of North American TV
research at DisplaySearch, said. “During that period, the whole pie grew.
Technology inflated the size of the category.”
But now, most people who want a flat-screen TV already own one. Industry
watchers and manufacturers estimate that nearly two-thirds of households in the
United States have a flat-screen set.
“The laggards are stubborn,” Mr. Gagnon said. “They will not move as quickly as
the rest of the market has.”
The industry’s response has been to promote 3-D and Internet capabilities. But
these were also the buzzwords at last year’s show, indicating that after a
period of consistent innovation and improvement — from higher resolutions to
thinner displays — the TV market is maturing and stabilizing.
“In the next decade, the rate of change may not be the same,” said James
Sanduski, Panasonic’s senior vice president for sales. “That said, it will still
be significant.”
So far, 3-D has not prompted a rush to upgrade. John Revie, senior vice
president for home entertainment at Samsung, said 3-D had been saddled with a
perception that it stumbled out of the gate, even though its introduction
compared favorably with other technological introductions.
“More than one million 3-D TVs were sold in 2010,” he said. “But LED, HD and
Blu-ray each sold less than a million in their first year.”
That said, Mr. Revie acknowledged the perceived shortfall. “Frankly, Samsung was
hoping to drive a bigger market.”
Some feel that 3-D’s appeal will remain limited. Riddhi Patel, director for
television systems and retail services at iSuppli, a market researcher, said the
sales pitch for 3-D was a complicated one.
“Consumers are aware of the hidden costs,” Ms. Patel said. “It’s not just the
display, but now you need a 3-D Blu-ray player and 3-D media and additional
glasses.”
She also questioned the payoff. “When everyone markets 3-D to you, they talk
about ‘Avatar’ and the theatrical experience,” she said. “When you have a
42-inch TV or even a 50-inch TV, it’s not the same experience.”
Internet features are now common in new TV models. But recent missteps by
technology companies like Google with its Google TV service, as well as the
often confusing mosaic of streaming and download providers, has left the market
looking a little muddled.
“Every manufacturer has their own way” of dealing with Internet video, Mr.
Sanduski said. “There’s not one standard.”
One way manufacturers are trying to make these features friendlier is by using
Apple’s iPhone model, allowing outside companies like Netflix to develop
applications that work on their displays. On Wednesday, Panasonic and LG
announced new Internet TV platforms that will open up the interfaces of their
sets to outside developers.
One big issue for TV makers is price. From 2007 to 2010, the average price of an
LCD TV dropped 36.3 percent, according to DisplaySearch. Plasma TV prices had an
even more precipitous decline, dropping 51.6 percent in the same period.
But those price drops have slowed recently, as manufacturers have gotten a
handle on what had been an oversupply of product and have started to charge more
for the new features.
“It’s kind of like having the auto industry trying to raise the prices of cars
by 20 percent by adding all these options to every vehicle,” Mr. Gagnon said.
In another bright spot for TV makers, consumers seem willing to upgrade their
sets more frequently than they did in the tube era, when it was not uncommon for
them to use the same sets for a decade or more. “People held on to their TV like
an appliance,” Mr. Sanduski said.
Analysts and TV makers now assume a five-to-seven-year replacement cycle for
televisions. For the manufacturers, that may feel like an awfully long time. But
it is only slightly longer than the cycle for PCs, which are replaced every
three to four years. “There’s a little bit of fatigue,” Mr. Sanduski said. “Many
consumers are saying, ‘I just bought a TV. I’m going to wait.’ ”
A Bonanza in TV Sales Fades Away, NYT, 5.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/06/technology/06sets.html
Unexpected Rise
in U.S. Factory Orders
in November
January 4,
2011
The New York Times
By REUTERS
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) — New orders received by American factories unexpectedly rose in
November, and orders excluding transportation recorded their largest gain in
eight months, according to a government report on Tuesday that pointed to
underlying strength in manufacturing.
The Commerce Department said orders for manufactured goods increased 0.7 percent
after dropping by a revised 0.7 percent in October.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast factory orders slipping 0.1 percent in
November from a previously reported 0.9 percent decline in October. Orders have
risen in four of the last five months and Tuesday’s data was the latest to offer
evidence the recovery was now firmly on a sustainable path.
Manufacturing has been the star performer during the recovery from the worst
recession since the 1930s and continues to expand even as businesses are
starting to pull back in rebuilding their inventories.
On Monday the Institute for Supply Management said its index of national factory
activity climbed to a seven-month high in December, hoisted by sturdy gains in
new orders and production.
The Commerce Department report showed orders excluding transportation increased
2.4 percent in November, the highest since March, after a 0.1 percent gain the
previous month.
Unfilled orders at American. factories increased 0.6 percent in November after
rising 0.7 percent in October. Shipments increased 0.8 percent, rising for a
third consecutive month, while inventories gained 0.8 percent after rising 1.1
percent in October.
The department revised durable goods orders for November to show a much smaller
0.3 percent fall rather than the previously reported 1.3 drop. Excluding
transportation, orders for durable goods increased a bigger 3.6 percent in
November instead of 2.4 percent.
Orders for non-military capital goods excluding aircraft, seen as a measure of
business confidence, increased 2.6 percent after 3.2 percent decline in October.
Unexpected Rise in U.S. Factory Orders in November, NYT,
4.1.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/05/business/05econ.html
Wall
Street Starts New Year
With a Jump
January 3,
2011
The New York Times
By REUTERS
Indexes on
Wall Street rose Monday as investors bet a 2010 rally would continue and factory
and housing data pointed to a strengthening recovery.
At noon, the Dow Jones industrial average was 126.39 points, or 1.1 percent,
higher while the broader Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index gained 17.99 points
or 1.4 percent. The technology heavy Nasdaq added 48.29 points or 1.8 percent.
The Institute for Supply Management said its index of national factory activity
rose to 57 points last month from 56.6 in November. That was in line with the
median forecast of economists surveyed by Reuters. A reading above 50 indicates
expansion in the sector.
“We are starting the year off on the right note here. Everybody’s back and
suddenly everybody realizes that the economy is pretty good,” said Stephen
Massocca, managing director at Wedbush Morgan in San Francisco.
“There is a lot of money in cash, a lot of money in bonds that would like out of
bonds, and it’s only natural with the economic improvement it’s finding its way
to equities.”
In addition, the Commerce Department said that construction spending rose more
than expected in November to touch its highest level in five months, a
government report showed on Monday, a further sign that the economic recovery
was gaining momentum.
Construction spending increased 0.4 percent to an annual rate of $810.2 billion,
the highest level since June, after rising by an unrevised 0.7 percent in
October. November’s increase in construction outlays marked the third straight
month of gains. “The New Year is starting off as expected, with a fresh surge
showing enthusiasm and optimism for a solid market,” said Andre Bakhos, director
for market analytics at Lek Securities in New York.
“This reflects the better economic backdrop that we’ve seen,” Mr. Bakhos said,
“as many look at early January to be a barometer for the year ahead, and it
appears we are starting off on the right foot.”
Marc Pado, United States market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald in San
Francisco. also pointed to the “January effect” of lifting stocks as fund
managers are no longer engaged in window dressing and focusing on stocks they
find attractive versus names that have done well for the year.
“You get to the first day of the new quarter, new year,” Mr. Pado said. “It’s an
opportunity to invest in some names that you won’t have to show investors your
for awhile.”
Adding to the optimistic economic picture, the official Chinese purchasing
managers’ index edged down in December and fell short of forecasts, easing
concerns that rising inflation would lead the government to take more steps to
control growth.
The official Chinese purchasing managers’ index edged down in December from
November and fell short of forecasts, easing concerns that rising inflation
would lead the government to take more steps to control growth.
American indexes ended 2010 with double-digit gains, with the S.& P. 500
recording its best December since 1991. The gains marked a recovery to levels
before the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008. For the year, the S.&
P. rose 12.8 percent, the Dow Jones industrial average climbed 11 percent, and
the Nasdaq surged 16.9 percent.
In corporate news, Bank of America said that it would put aside $3 billion in
the fourth quarter related to poorly underwritten mortgages it sold to Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac after the bank agreed to settle claims over the repurchase
of those loans. Bank of America shares were up 4.7 percent.
The aluminum maker Alcoa gained 4.6 percent after Deutsche Bank upgraded the
stock to “buy” from “hold,” citing “growing optimism on both aluminum’s
likelihood of higher prices and a belief that Alcoa has turned the corner from
an operational point of view.”
European shares also rose, led by the German automaker Porsche, which won a
legal challenge from hedge fund groups.
The euro fell against the dollar on concerns the Continent’s sovereign debt
crisis could resurface soon.
German government bond futures rose but pared earlier gains as stocks bounced
and after the release of stronger-than-expected euro zone manufacturing data.
Gold prices held steady while oil extended its rally above $92 a barrel on
optimism the global recovery was gaining momentum. American Treasuries prices
fell, in anticipation of stronger economic data that would support rising
yields.
With markets in Britain and parts of Asia closed, trading was very thin.
In early afternoon trading, the DAX in Frankfurt rose 1.2 percent, while the CAC
40 in Paris was up 2.3 percent.
Shares of Porsche rose nearly 14 percent in Frankfurt after a federal judge in
the United States dismissed a lawsuit by hedge funds seeking more than $2
billion in damages.
Analysts said equity markets were expected to remain volatile in 2011 as issues
including the euro zone debt crisis resurfaced.
A lot of the positive news has been priced into equities and the first half is
going to be a bumpy ride for the equity market,” said Lutz Karpowitz, senior
currency strategist at Commerzbank in Frankfurt. The euro dipped against the
dollar, with traders and analysts warning that the euro zone debt crisis, and
the year’s first sovereign debt auctions in the bloc, could weigh on the
currency.
“Bond market spreads could be a bit of a burden for the euro,” Mr. Karpowitz
said.
Germany and France are scheduled to sell bonds this week, and indebted Portugal
sells treasury bills.
“There’s the question of whether things are going to blow up again with everyone
having so much issuance to do and that will lead to more stresses on the
periphery,” a debt trader said, referring to the euro zone’s weaker economies.
Crude oil in the United States traded 69 cents higher at $92.07 a barrel, .
Wall Street Starts New Year With a Jump, NYT, 3.1.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/04/business/04markets.html
The
Economy in 2011
January 1,
2011
The New York Times
When people
say that the recovery does not feel like a recovery, they are describing
reality. The economy is growing, but for many Americans life is not getting
better. Unemployment remains high. Home values are depressed. And state budgets
are in deep trouble, presaging more layoffs, service cuts and tax increases.
The question for 2011 is whether growth will ever translate into broad
prosperity.
For that to happen, the federal government must ensure that the recovery does
not falter for lack of adequate stimulus, while fostering job-creating
industries and committing itself to long-term deficit reduction.
With corporate profits robust and a one-year payroll tax cut set to start this
month, there are reasons to hope for continued growth in 2011. Yet, growth is
not expected to be strong enough to make a real dent in unemployment, which at
9.8 percent remains close to the recession’s peak of 10.2 percent in October
2009.
Rising corporate profits should spur hiring, but recent history is not
encouraging. Part of the problem is that companies are more apt to spend their
cash on stock buy-backs and acquisitions that increase share prices but not
hiring. Many companies that are hiring are doing it in fast-growing markets like
China and India.
The rift between recovery and prosperity is also painfully evident in housing.
Prices are likely to fall another 5 percent in 2011, as unemployment-related
defaults and the failure to adequately address the foreclosure crisis add to the
inventory of unsold homes. Some two million homes will probably be lost in 2011,
on top of 6.8 million homes lost in the bust so far.
Joblessness and the housing bust will continue to batter state and city budgets
in 2011. Promises by so many newly elected state officials to balance their
budgets without raising any taxes are not only cynical, they are a recipe for
more crises to come.
President Obama’s recent tax-cut deal with the Republicans included measures to
support growth, notably extended unemployment benefits, and the payroll tax cut.
Deep state budget cuts could offset much of that, unless Congress funnels more
aid to states. The administration must continue to press banks for more and
better mortgage workouts to help borrowers keep their homes.
Such efforts, while vital, are only the start. Competing in a global economy
requires spare-no-expense effort to improve education. And Washington needs to
do a lot more to help create globally competitive industries with jobs that pay
well. We have heard President Obama talk about green jobs and rebuilding the
nation’s infrastructure. The country and the economy need a big idea and a big
project to move forward.
The federal deficit must be addressed. But cutting too deep, too fast will stall
the recovery. There will have to be painful cuts ahead, and everything will have
to be on the table, including entitlements and defense. Despite what the
Republicans claim, there is no way to tackle the deficit and keep growing
without raising taxes.
President Obama will need to make that case clearly in 2011 and challenge
politicians — from both parties — to do what is necessary to ensure real
prosperity.
The Economy in 2011, NYT, 1.11.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/02/opinion/02sun1.html
The New
Speed of Money,
Reshaping Markets
January 1,
2011
The New York Times
By GRAHAM BOWLEY
Secaucus,
N.J.
A SUBSTANTIAL part of all stock trading in the United States takes place in a
warehouse in a nondescript business park just off the New Jersey Turnpike.
Few humans are present in this vast technological sanctum, known as New York
Four. Instead, the building, nearly the size of three football fields, is filled
with long avenues of computer servers illuminated by energy-efficient blue
phosphorescent light.
Countless metal cages contain racks of computers that perform all kinds of
trades for Wall Street banks, hedge funds, brokerage firms and other
institutions. And within just one of these cages — a tight space measuring 40
feet by 45 feet and festooned with blue and white wires — is an array of servers
that together form the mechanized heart of one of the top four stock exchanges
in the United States.
The exchange is called Direct Edge, hardly a household name. But as the lights
pulse on its servers, you can almost see the holdings in your 401(k) zip by.
“This,” says Steven Bonanno, the chief technology officer of the exchange,
looking on proudly, “is where everyone does their magic.”
In many of the world’s markets, nearly all stock trading is now conducted by
computers talking to other computers at high speeds. As the machines have taken
over, trading has been migrating from raucous, populated trading floors like
those of the New York Stock Exchange to dozens of separate, rival electronic
exchanges. They rely on data centers like this one, many in the suburbs of
northern New Jersey.
While this “Tron” landscape is dominated by the titans of Wall Street, it
affects nearly everyone who owns shares of stock or mutual funds, or who has a
stake in a pension fund or works for a public company. For better or for worse,
part of your wealth, your livelihood, is throbbing through these wires.
The advantages of this new technological order are clear. Trading costs have
plummeted, and anyone can buy stocks from anywhere in seconds with the simple
click of a mouse or a tap on a smartphone’s screen.
But some experts wonder whether the technology is getting dangerously out of
control. Even apart from the huge amounts of energy the megacomputers consume,
and the dangers of putting so much of the economy’s plumbing in one place, they
wonder whether the new world is a fairer one — and whether traders with access
to the fastest machines win at the expense of ordinary investors.
It also seems to be a much more hair-trigger market. The so-called flash crash
in the market last May — when stock prices plunged hundreds of points before
recovering — showed how unpredictable the new systems could be. Fear of this
volatile, blindingly fast market may be why ordinary investors have been
withdrawing money from domestic stock mutual funds —$90 billion worth since May,
according to figures from the Investment Company Institute.
No one knows whether this is a better world, and that includes the regulators,
who are struggling to keep up with the pace of innovation in the great
technological arms race that the stock market has become.
WILLIAM
O’BRIEN, a former lawyer for Goldman Sachs, crosses the Hudson River each day
from New York to reach his Jersey City destination — a shiny blue building
opposite a Courtyard by Marriott.
Mr. O’Brien, 40, works there as chief executive of Direct Edge, the young
electronic stock exchange that is part of New Jersey’s burgeoning financial
ecosystem. Seven miles away, in Secaucus, is the New York Four warehouse that
houses Direct Edge’s servers. Another cluster of data centers, serving various
companies, is five miles north, in Weehawken, at the western mouth of the
Lincoln Tunnel. And yet another is planted 20 miles south on the New Jersey
Turnpike, at Exit 12, in Carteret, N.J.
As Mr. O’Brien says, “New Jersey is the new heart of Wall Street.”
Direct Edge’s office demonstrates that it doesn’t take many people to become a
major outfit in today’s electronic market. The firm, whose motto is “Everybody
needs some edge,” has only 90 employees, most of them on this building’s sixth
floor. There are lines of cubicles for programmers and a small operations room
where two men watch a wall of screens, checking that market-order traffic moves
smoothly and, of course, quickly. Direct Edge receives up to 10,000 orders a
second.
Mr. O’Brien’s personal story reflects the recent history of stock-exchange
upheaval. A fit, blue-eyed Wall Street veteran, who wears the monogram “W O’B”
on his purple shirt cuff, Mr. O’Brien is the son of a seat holder and trader on
the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in the 1970s, when the Big Board was by
far the biggest game around.
But in the 1980s, Nasdaq, a new electronic competitor, challenged that
dominance. And a bigger upheaval came in the late 1990s and early 2000s, after
the Securities and Exchange Commission enacted a series of regulations to foster
competition and drive down commission costs for ordinary investors.
These changes forced the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq to post orders
electronically and execute them immediately, at the best price available in the
United States — suddenly giving an advantage to start-up operations that were
faster and cheaper. Mr. O’Brien went to work for one of them, called Brut. The
N.Y.S.E. and Nasdaq fought back, buying up smaller rivals: Nasdaq, for example,
acquired Brut. And to give itself greater firepower, the N.Y.S.E., which had
been member-owned, became a public, for-profit company.
Brokerage firms and traders came to fear that a Nasdaq-N.Y.S.E. duopoly was
asserting itself, one that would charge them heavily for the right to trade, so
they created their own exchanges. One was Direct Edge, which formally became an
exchange six months ago. Another, the BATS Exchange, is located in another
unlikely capital of stock market trading: Kansas City, Mo.
Direct Edge now trails the N.Y.S.E. and Nasdaq in size; it vies with BATS for
third place. Direct Edge is backed by a powerful roster of financial players:
Goldman Sachs, Knight Capital, Citadel Securities and the International
Securities Exchange, its largest shareholder. JPMorgan also holds a stake.
Direct Edge still occupies the same building as its original founder, Knight
Capital, in Jersey City.
The exchange now accounts for about 10 percent of stock market trading in the
United States, according to the exchange and the TABB Group, a specialist on the
markets. Of the 8.5 billion shares traded daily in the United States, about 833
million are bought and sold on Mr. O’Brien’s platforms.
As it has grown, Direct Edge and other new venues have sucked volumes away from
the Big Board and Nasdaq. The N.Y.S.E. accounted for more than 70 percent of
trading in N.Y.S.E.-listed stocks just five years ago. Now, the Big Board
handles only 36 percent of those trades itself. The remaining market share is
divided among about 12 other public exchanges, several electronic trading
platforms and vast so-called unlit markets, including those known as dark pools.
THE Big Board is embracing the new warp-speed world. Although it maintains a
Wall Street trading floor, even that is mostly electronic. The exchange also has
its own, separate electronic arm, Arca, and opened a new data center last year
for its computers in Mahwah, N.J.
From his office in New Jersey, Mr. O’Brien looks back across the water to
Manhattan and his former office on the 50th floor of the Nasdaq building at One
Liberty Plaza, and he reflects wistfully on the huge changes that have taken
place.
“To walk out of there to go across the river to Jersey City,” he says. “That was
a big leap of faith.”
His colleague, Bryan Harkins, the exchange’s chief operating officer, sounds
confident about the impact of the past decade’s changes. The new world is
fairer, he says, because it is more competitive. “We helped break the grip of
the New York Stock Exchange,” he says.
In this high-tech stock market, Direct Edge and the other exchanges are
sprinting for advantage. All the exchanges have pushed down their latencies —
the fancy word for the less-than-a-blink-of-an-eye that it takes them to
complete a trade. Almost each week, it seems, one exchange or another claims a
new record: Nasdaq, for example, says its time for an average order “round trip”
is 98 microseconds — a mind-numbing speed equal to 98 millionths of a second.
The exchanges have gone warp speed because traders have demanded it. Even
mainstream banks and old-fashioned mutual funds have embraced the change.
“Broker-dealers, hedge funds, traditional asset managers have been forced to
play keep-up to stay in the game,” Adam Honoré, research director of the Aite
Group, wrote in a recent report.
Even the savings of many long-term mutual fund investors are swept up in this
maelstrom, when fund managers make changes in their holdings. But the exchanges
are catering mostly to a different market breed — to high-frequency traders who
have turned speed into a new art form. They use algorithms to zip in and out of
markets, often changing orders and strategies within seconds. They make a living
by being the first to react to events, dashing past slower investors — a
category that includes most investors — to take advantage of mispricing between
stocks, for example, or differences in prices quoted across exchanges.
One new strategy is to use powerful computers to speed-read news reports — even
Twitter messages — automatically, then to let their machines interpret and trade
on them.
By using such techniques, traders may make only the tiniest fraction of a cent
on each trade. But multiplied many times a second over an entire day, those
fractions add up to real money. According to Kevin McPartland of the TABB Group,
high-frequency traders now account for 56 percent of total stock market trading.
A measure of their importance is that rather than charging them commissions,
some exchanges now even pay high-frequency traders to bring orders to their
machines.
High-frequency traders are “the reason for the massive infrastructure,” Mr.
McPartland says. “Everyone realizes you have to attract the high-speed traders.”
As everyone goes warp speed, a number of high-tech construction projects are
under way.
One such project is a 428,000-square-foot data center in the western suburbs of
Chicago opened by the CME Group, which owns the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. It
houses the exchange’s Globex electronic futures and options trading platform and
space for traders to install computers next to the exchange’s machines, a
practice known as co-location — at a cost of about $25,000 a month per rack of
computers.
The exchange is making its investment because derivatives as well as stocks are
being swept up in the high-frequency revolution. The Commodity Futures Trading
Commission estimates that high-frequency traders now account for about one-third
of all volume on domestic futures exchanges.
In August, Spread Networks of Ridgeland, Miss., completed an 825-mile fiber
optic network connecting the South Loop of Chicago to Cartaret, N.J., cutting a
swath across central Pennsylvania and reducing the round-trip trading time
between Chicago and New York by three milliseconds, to 13.33 milliseconds.
Then there are the international projects. Fractions of a second are regularly
being shaved off of the busy Frankfurt-to-London route. And in October, a
company called Hibernia Atlantic announced plans for a new fiber-optic link
beneath the Atlantic from Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Somerset, England that will
be able to send shares from London to New York and back in 60 milliseconds.
Bjarni Thorvardarson, chief executive of Hibernia Atlantic, says the link, due
to open in 2012, is primarily intended to meet the needs of high-frequency
algorithmic traders and will cost “hundreds of millions of dollars.”
“People are going over the lake and through the church, whatever it takes,” he
says. “It is very important for these algorithmic traders to have the most
advanced technology.”
The pace of investment, of course, reflects the billions of dollars that are at
stake.
The data center in Weehawken is a modern building that looks more like a
shopping mall than a center for equity trading. But one recent afternoon, the
hammering and drilling of the latest phase of expansion seemed to conjure up the
wealth being dug out of the stock market.
As the basement was being transformed into a fourth floor for yet more
computers, one banker who was touring the complex explained the matter bluntly:
“Speed,” he said, “is money. “
THE “flash crash,” the harrowing plunge in share prices that shook the stock
market during the afternoon of May 6 last year, crystallized the fears of some
in the industry that technology was getting ahead of the regulators. In their
investigation into the plunge, the S.E.C. and Commodity Futures Trading
Commission found that the drop was precipitated not by a rogue high-frequency
firm, but by the sale of a single $4.1 billion block of E-Mini Standard & Poor’s
500 futures contracts on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange by a mutual fund
company.
The fund company, Waddell & Reed Financial of Overland Park, Kan., conducted its
sale through a computer algorithm provided by Barclays Capital, one of the many
off-the shelf programs available to investors these days. The algorithm
automatically dripped the billions of dollars of sell orders into the futures
market over 20 minutes, continuing even as prices started to drop when other
traders jumped in.
The sale may have been a case of inept timing — the markets were already roiled
by the debt crisis in Europe. But there was no purposeful attempt to disrupt the
market, the regulators found.
But there was a role played by some high-frequency machines, the investigation
found. As they detected the big sale and the choppy conditions, some of them
shut down automatically. As the number of buyers plunged, so, too, did the Dow
Jones Industrial Average, losing more than 700 points in minutes before the
computers returned and prices recovered just as quickly. More than 20,000 trades
were ruled invalid.
The episode seemed to demonstrate the vulnerabilities of the new market, and
just what could happen when no humans are in charge to correct the machines.
Since the flash crash, the S.E.C. and the exchanges have introduced marketwide
circuit breakers on individual stocks to halt trading if a price falls 10
percent within a five-minute period.
But some analysts fear that some aspects of the flash crash may portend dangers
greater than mere mechanical failure. They say some wild swings in prices may
suggest that a small group of high-frequency traders could manipulate the
market. Since May, there have been regular mini-flash crashes in individual
stocks for which, some say, there are still no satisfactory explanations. Some
experts say these drops in individual stocks could herald a future cataclysm.
In a speech last month, Bart Chilton, a member of the futures trading
commission, raised concerns about the effect of high-frequency trading on the
markets. “With the advent of ‘Star Trek’-like, gee-whiz H.F.T. technology, we
are witnessing one of the most game-changing and tumultuous shifts we have ever
seen in financial markets,” Mr. Chilton said. “We also have to think about the
myriad ramifications of technology.”
One debate has focused on whether some traders are firing off fake orders
thousands of times a second to slow down exchanges and mislead others. Michael
Durbin, who helped build high-frequency trading systems for companies like
Citadel and is the author of the book “All About High-Frequency Trading,” says
that most of the industry is legitimate and benefits investors. But, he says,
the rules need to be strengthened to curb some disturbing practices.
“Markets are there for capital formation and long-term investment, not for
gaming,” he says.
As it tries to work out the implications of the technology, the S.E.C. is a year
into a continuing review of the new market structure. Mary L. Schapiro, the
S.E.C. chairwoman, has already proposed creating a consolidated audit trail, so
that buying and selling records from different exchanges can be examined
together in one place.
In speeches, Ms. Schapiro has also raised the idea of limiting the speed at
which machines can trade, or requiring high-frequency traders to stay in markets
as buyers or sellers even in volatile conditions. just as human market makers
often did on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. .
“The emergence of multiple trading venues that offer investors the benefits of
greater competition also has made our market structure more complex,” she said
in Senate testimony last month, adding, “We should not attempt to turn the clock
back to the days of trading crowds on exchange floors.”
MOST of the exchanges have already eliminated a controversial electronic trading
technique known as flash orders, which allow traders’ computers to peek at other
investors’ orders a tiny fraction of a second before they are sent to the wider
marketplace. Direct Edge, however, still offers a version of this service.
The futures trading commission is considering how to regulate data centers, and
the practice of co-location. The regulators are also examining the implications
of so-called dark pools, another product of the technological revolution, in
which large blocks of shares are traded electronically and without the scrutiny
exercised on public markets. Their very name raises questions about the
transparency of markets. About 30 percent of domestic equities are traded on
these and other “unlit” venues, the S.E.C. says.
For Mr. O’Brien, the benefits of technology are clear. “One thing has surprised
me: people have looked at this as a bad thing,” he says. “There is almost no
other industry where people say we need less technology. Fifteen years ago,
trades took much longer to execute and were much more expensive by any measure”
because market power was more concentrated in a few large firms. “Now someone
can execute a trade from their mobile from anywhere on the planet. That seems to
me like a market that is fairer.”
For others who work at the company or elsewhere in the financial ecosystem of
New Jersey, it has been a boon.
“A lot of my friends work here or in this area,” says Andrei Girenkov, 28, one
of Direct Edge’s chief programmers, over lunch recently in Dorrian’s restaurant
in Direct Edge’s building. “It changed my life.”
But some analysts question whether everyone benefits from this technological
upending.
“It is a technological arms race in financial markets and the regulators are a
bit caught unaware of how quickly the technology has evolved,” says Andrew Lo,
director of the Laboratory for Financial Engineering at M.I.T. “Sometimes, too
much technology without the ability to manage it effectively can yield some
unintended consequences. We need to ask the hard questions about how much of
this do we really need. It is the Wild, Wild West in trading.”
Mr. Lo suggests a need for a civilizing influence. “Finally,” he says, “it gets
to the point where we have a massive traffic jam and we need to install traffic
lights.”
The New Speed of Money, Reshaping Markets, NYT, 1.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/02/business/02speed.html
Public
Workers Facing Outrage
as Budget Crises Grow
January 1,
2011
The New York Times
By MICHAEL POWELL
FLEMINGTON,
N.J. — Ever since Marie Corfield’s confrontation with Gov. Chris Christie this
fall over the state’s education cuts became a YouTube classic, she has received
a stream of vituperative e-mails and Facebook postings.
“People I don’t even know are calling me horrible names,” said Ms. Corfield, an
art teacher who had pleaded the case of struggling teachers. “The mantra is that
the problem is the unions, the unions, the unions.”
Across the nation, a rising irritation with public employee unions is palpable,
as a wounded economy has blown gaping holes in state, city and town budgets, and
revealed that some public pension funds dangle perilously close to bankruptcy.
In California, New York, Michigan and New Jersey, states where public unions
wield much power and the culture historically tends to be pro-labor, even
longtime liberal political leaders have demanded concessions — wage freezes,
benefit cuts and tougher work rules.
It is an angry conversation. Union chiefs, who sometimes persuaded members to
take pension sweeteners in lieu of raises, are loath to surrender ground.
Taxpayers are split between those who want cuts and those who hope that rising
tax receipts might bring easier choices.
And a growing cadre of political leaders and municipal finance experts argue
that much of the edifice of municipal and state finance is jury-rigged and,
without new revenue, perhaps unsustainable. Too many political leaders, they
argue, acted too irresponsibly, failing to either raise taxes or cut spending.
A brutal reckoning awaits, they say.
These battles play out in many corners, but few are more passionate than in New
Jersey, where politics tend toward the moderately liberal and nearly 20 percent
of the work force is unionized (compared with less than 14 percent nationally).
From tony horse-country towns to middle-class suburbs to hard-edged cities,
property tax and unemployment rates are high, and budgets are pools of red ink.
A new regime in state politics is venting frustration less at Goldman Sachs
executives (Governor Christie vetoed a proposed “millionaire’s tax” this year)
than at unions. Newark recently laid off police officers after they refused to
accept cuts, and Camden has threatened to lay off half of its officers in
January.
Fred Siegel, a historian at the conservative-leaning Manhattan Institute, has
written of the “New Tammany Hall,” which he describes as the incestuous alliance
between public officials and labor.
“Public unions have had no natural adversary; they give politicians political
support and get good contracts back,” Mr. Siegel said. “It’s uniquely
dysfunctional.”
Even if that is so, this battle comes woven with complications. Across the
nation in the last two years, public workers have experienced furloughs and pay
cuts. Local governments shed 212,000 jobs last year.
A raft of recent studies found that public salaries, even with benefits
included, are equivalent to or lag slightly behind those of private sector
workers. The Manhattan Institute, which is not terribly sympathetic to unions,
studied New Jersey and concluded that teachers earned wages roughly comparable
to people in the private sector with a similar education.
Benefits tend to be the sorest point. From Illinois to New Jersey, politicians
have refused to pay into pension funds, creating deeper and deeper shortfalls.
In California, pension costs now crowd out spending for parks, public schools
and state universities; in Illinois, spiraling pension costs threaten the state
with insolvency.
And taxpayer resentment simmers.
Trouble in
New Jersey
To venture into Washington Township in southern New Jersey is to walk the frayed
line between taxpayer and public employees, and to hear anger and ambivalence.
So many Philadelphians have flocked here over the years that locals call it
“South Philly with grass.”
These expatriates tend to be Democrats and union members, or sons and daughters
of the same. But property taxes are rising fast, and voters favored Governor
Christie, a Republican. Bill Rahl, a graying plug of a retiree, squints and
holds his hand against his throat. “I’m up to here with taxes, I can’t breathe,
O.K.?” he says. “I don’t know about asking anyone to give up a pension. Just
don’t ask for no more.”
Governor Christie faced a vast deficit when he took office last January, and
much of the federal stimulus aid for schools was exhausted by June. So he cut
deeply into state aid for education; Washington Township lost $900,000. That
forced the town to rely principally on property taxes. (Few states lean as
heavily on property taxes to finance education; New Jersey ranks 45th in state
aid to education.) The town turned its construction office over to a private
contractor and shed a few employees.
Assemblyman Paul D. Moriarty, a liberal Democrat, served four years as mayor of
Washington Township. As the bill for pension and health benefits for town
employees soared, he struggled to explain this to constituents.
“We really should not receive benefits any better than the people we serve,” he
says. “It leads to a lot of resentment against public employees.”
All of which sounds logical, except that, as Mr. Moriarty also acknowledges,
such thinking also “leads to a race to the bottom.” That is, as businesses cut
private sector benefits, pressure grows on government to cut pay and benefits
for its employees.
Robert Master, political director for the Communication Workers of America
District 1, which represents 40,000 state workers, speaks to that difficulty.
“The subtext of Christie’s message to a lot of people is that ‘you’re paying for
benefits you’ll never have,’ ” he says. “Our challenge is how to defend
middle-class health and retirement security, not just for our members but for
all working families, when over the past 30 years retirement and health care in
the private sector have been essentially demolished.”
This said, some union officials privately say that the teachers’ union, in its
battle against cuts to salaries and benefits, misread Mr. Christie and the
public temperament. Better to endorse a wage freeze, they say, than to argue
that teachers should be held harmless against the economic storm.
In the past, union leaders, too, have proven adept at winning gains not just at
the bargaining table. In 2000, union lobbyists persuaded legislators to cut five
years off the retirement age for police and firefighters — a move criticized as
a budget-buster by a state pension commission. The next year, the budget still
was flush and union leaders persuaded the Republican dominated legislature to
approve a 9 percent increase in pension benefits. (The legislators added a
sweetener for their own pensions.)
Those labor leaders, however, proved less successful in persuading their
legislative allies to pay for such benefits. For much of the last two decades,
New Jersey has shortchanged its pension contribution.
Governor Christie talked about tough choices this past year — then skipped the
state’s required $3.1 billion payment. Now New Jersey has a $53.9 billion
unfunded pension liability.
A recent Monmouth University/Gannett New Jersey poll found a narrow plurality of
respondents in the state in favor of ditching the pensions for a 401(k)-type
program. Public pensions, however, run the gamut, from modest (the average local
government pensioner makes less than $20,000 a year while teachers draw about
$46,000) to the gilded variety for police and firefighters, some of whom collect
six figures. And then there’s the political class, which has made an art form of
pension collection.
Some politicians draw multiple pensions as county legislators, called
freeholders, and as prosecutors or union leaders. Back in Washington Township,
people tend to talk of state government as a casino with fixed craps tables.
A white-haired retired undercover police officer, whose wrap-around shades match
his black Harley-Davidson jacket, pauses outside the Washington Township
municipal building to consider the many targets. He did not want to give his
name.
“Christie has all the good intentions in the world but has he hit the right
people?” he says. “I understand pulling in belts, but you talking about janitors
and cops, or the free-loading freeholder?”
Good Jobs,
at What Cost?
So how much is too much? On their face, New Jersey’s public salaries are not
exorbitant. The state has one of the highest per-capita incomes in the country,
and the average teacher makes $66,597, which even with benefits is on par with
or slightly behind similarly educated private sector workers, according to
Jeffrey H. Keefe, a Rutgers professor who studied the issue for the
liberal-leaning Economic Policy Institute.
Mr. Keefe, however, uncovered some intriguing class splits. Blue-collar public
workers make more money than their private sector counterparts. For such jobs,
public unions have established a higher wage floor.
The sense that public workers enjoy certain advantages is not a mirage. Public
employees pay into their pension funds, but health benefits often come at a
fraction of the cost of most private sector packages.
Government employment also tends to be more secure. When the economy crashed,
federal stimulus dollars safeguarded many public jobs. The alternative, many
economists point out, was to force towns and cities into extensive layoffs, even
as unemployment hovered around 10 percent and millions of Americans sought help
from public agencies.
But it accentuated the perception that public workers, however tenuously,
inhabited a protected class. That’s a tough sell in Washington Township.
Ask Michael Tini, 54, who works as a card dealer in Atlantic City, about teacher
salaries and benefits and he taps his head, not unsympathetically.
“Look, I understand that teachers are the brains of the operation, O.K.? But my
hours are cut, and my taxes are killing me.”
He taps his head again. “They have got to take it in the ear, too.”
Public Workers Facing Outrage as Budget Crises Grow, NYT,
1.1.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/02/business/02showdown.html
Real
Estate Developers Prosper
Despite Defaults
January 1,
2011
The New York Times
By CHARLES V. BAGLI
Larry
Gluck, the apartment building king whose company defaulted on loans in New York,
San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington, recently bought the Windermere Hotel
in Manhattan and Tivoli Towers, a subsidized housing complex in Brooklyn.
Ian Bruce Eichner, who lost two major New York skyscrapers to foreclosure in the
early 1990s and defaulted on a $760 million loan for a Las Vegas casino resort
in 2008, is working on a plan to rescue One Madison Park, a troubled 50-story
condominium project.
Even Harry Macklowe, whose $7 billion gamble on seven Midtown skyscrapers at the
top of the market almost cost him his entire empire, is out looking for new
deals.
Industry lore has it that New York is one of the toughest, most unforgiving real
estate markets in the world. The costs are so high, the unions so ornery, the
politicians so demanding and the rivalries so fierce, that one false move
invites financial disaster.
But the truth is that there have been surprisingly few career fatalities among
New York developers, even though they have lost billions of investor dollars on
overpriced real estate and have littered the city with unfinished apartment
buildings. While a homeowner who lost a house to foreclosure would find it
difficult to borrow for years, developers who defaulted on enormous loans have
still been able to attract money.
The reasons, experts say, are that there is still plenty of money floating
around and that the market has a very short memory.
“You can always find an investor who’ll put up equity with a guy, unless he’s
Attila the Hun,” said Daniel Alpert, managing partner at Westwood Capital, a
real estate investment bank.
For some of these developers, however, putting together a deal is not as easy as
it used to be. Large banks and pension funds that endured huge losses have
become very picky. Scott Lawlor, the founder of Broadway Partners, bought 28
office buildings in 2006 and 2007 and is now stuck with heavy debts on what is
left of a portfolio whose value has dropped by at least a third. He is trying to
come back with a focus on distressed residential real estate but has been unable
to attract institutional money, according to lawyers and real estate executives
who know him. He is now trying to line up wealthy investors.
Hedge funds and private equity funds are still offering backing for deals,
believing that the real estate market will warm up again this year. There are
also new investors looking to get into real estate, including funds based in
China, and Norwegian pension funds.
And there have been casualties. Shaya Boymelgreen, the once-ubiquitous developer
who built more than 2,400 apartments during the boom, broke with his money
partner, was peppered with lawsuits from condominium buyers and was evicted from
his offices in Brooklyn.
The $3 billion real estate portfolio that Kent Swig, a scion of a West Coast
real estate family, put together over the past two decades is slowly slipping
through his hands, and he warned last year that personal bankruptcy could be in
the offing.
But while a homeowner who is foreclosed upon is often on the brink of financial
ruin, many developers who defaulted emerged relatively unscathed themselves.
Most of them invested relatively little of their own money in the deals,
preferring “O.P.M.,” or “other people’s money.” One of the best-known examples
is Tishman Speyer Properties, which lost $56 million on Stuyvesant Town and
Peter Cooper Village, while lenders and other investors lost over $2.4 billion.
It was a rare stumble and, in perspective, a minor setback for the company,
which controls Rockefeller Center and operates on four continents. It has since
raised $2.5 billion to expand its portfolio and recently acquired two buildings
in Paris, one in Washington and a 45-story office tower in Chicago.
Mr. Macklowe, an unabashed property gambler, is also considered a real estate
genius with a keen eye for development, having turned the G.M. Building across
the street from the Plaza Hotel into a gold mine. He sought to double his
holdings in 2007 by buying seven office towers for $7 billion. Desperate for
cash during the credit crisis 15 months later, Mr. Macklowe was forced to
relinquish those buildings and to sell several other properties, including his
beloved G.M. Building.
Now a new set of investors is bringing him back to develop a site he once owned,
where the Drake Hotel stood, according to two real estate executives who work
with him.
In 2005, Mr. Gluck and a partner bought the 1,232-unit Riverton Houses complex
in Harlem for $131 million. The following year, he refinanced with $250 million
in loans, allowing him to renovate the lobbies and elevators and to put tens of
millions of dollars in his pocket.
But in less than two years, Mr. Gluck’s plan to replace residents of
rent-regulated apartments with tenants paying higher rents unraveled. The lender
foreclosed as the property’s value fell by half. Loan defaults followed in San
Francisco, Los Angeles and elsewhere.
Most recently, Mr. Gluck and a partner, Rob Rosania, paid $70 million for a
residential hotel in Manhattan, the Windermere. But the days of easy money, when
Wall Street would lend 90 percent or more of the purchase price, are over, Mr.
Gluck said. His lenders required his company to put up 28 percent of the
purchase price and to provide an additional $10 million for renovations.
Mr. Gluck and Mr. Rosania said they were buyers again because they were better
capitalized than their competitors and did not squabble with their lenders when
the money ran out. “If you behave like a gentleman and don’t leave your partners
and investors to fend for themselves, you will be rewarded for your loyalty,”
Mr. Gluck said.
In his case and others, investors and lenders are forgiving losses incurred
after a bubble in which everyone from the smallest homeowner to the largest bank
was overleveraged. “Throughout my 30 years in the business,” Mr. Alpert said, “I
have seen an enormous amount of forgiveness for market errors.”
It is an infuriating pattern for the city’s real estate aristocracy, like the
Durst family, which has been measured in its borrowing and has never defaulted
on a loan. Yet, Douglas Durst said, “That has not given us any advantage as we
go through each financial cycle in which the bankers who made bad loans are let
go, but the defaulting borrowers are waiting for the new team of bankers to
start the process over again.”
Mr. Eichner has been up and down more than once. After lenders took over two of
his skyscrapers in 1991, Mr. Eichner dismissed criticism that he was an example
of the excesses of the 1980s boom. “Everyone who was aggressive in the ’80s
suffered substantial losses,” he said in 1994.
Mr. Eichner’s lenders suffered the biggest losses, and at one troubled building,
1540 Broadway in Times Square, they paid him tens of millions of dollars in 1992
to relinquish control.
More recently, in Las Vegas, Mr. Eichner has said he was a victim of the credit
crisis after he was forced to walk away from the Cosmopolitan Resort Casino in
2008. Unable to obtain new financing and plagued by cost overruns and
environmental issues, he defaulted on loans from Deutsche Bank for the project.
Still, Mr. Eichner, who did not return calls requesting comment, vowed in 2008
that he would be back and that bankers would lend to him once again. He is now
putting together a reorganization plan to salvage the bankrupt tower, One
Madison Park. The lender, iStar, opposes Mr. Eichner’s involvement, arguing that
his approach would unfairly slash the mortgage in half while Mr. Eichner would
reap a huge return on his $40 million investment.
“Capital is blind,” said David W. Levinson, a founder of L & L Holding Company,
a real estate firm that controls 11 Manhattan buildings. “It will go wherever it
can for a return. That’s it in a nutshell.”
Real Estate Developers Prosper Despite Defaults, NYT,
1.11.2011,
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/02/realestate/02developers.html
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