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December 10, 2010

Ron Paul, Author of `End the Fed,’ to Lead Panel Overseeing Central Bank - Bloomberg

Filed under: loans, term — Tags: , , , — Professor @ 12:56 am

Representative Ron Paul, Texas Republican and author of “End the Fed,” will take control of the House subcommittee that oversees the Federal Reserve.

House Financial Services chairman-elect Spencer Bachus, an Alabama Republican, selected Paul, 75, to lead the panel’s domestic monetary policy subcommittee when their party takes the House majority next month, the committee chairman said today.

“This is the leadership team that crafted the first comprehensive financial reform bill to put an end to the bailouts, wind down the taxpayer funding of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and enforce a strong audit of the Federal Reserve,” Bachus said in a statement.

Paul, in an interview last week, said he plans a slate of hearings on U.S. monetary policy and will restart his push for a full audit of the Fed’s functions.

“We are ready to hit the ground running, and I look forward to continuing our work in the next Congress,” Bachus said.

Paul, who has introduced legislation to abolish the Fed, became nationally known during his 2008 presidential campaign. His campaign to audit the Fed picked up steam as the central bank deployed trillions of dollars in emergency loans in the midst of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. Paul’s bill gained the support of 320 of 435 members of the House and a portion of the measure ended up in the Dodd-Frank financial regulatory overhaul enacted this year.

Attacks on Bernanke

Paul’s assignment comes as the Republican Party has stepped up attacks on Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and the central bank in the wake of the Nov. 3 announcement that it would buy bonds in an attempt to bring down unemployment and prevent inflation.

“Congress must act to rein in Chairman Bernanke and the Fed before they destroy our currency and permanently damage our economy and financial system,” Senator Jim Bunning, a Kentucky Republican, said in his farewell speech on the Senate floor today. “Public awareness of what the Fed is doing is increasing while public opinion of the Fed is falling faxless cash advances.”

Bunning’s views are reflected throughout the country, according to a Bloomberg National Poll that reveals deep skepticism about the Fed.

Americans across the political spectrum say the central bank shouldn’t retain its current structure of independence, according to the poll. Asked if the central bank should be more accountable to Congress, left independent or abolished entirely, 39 percent said it should be held more accountable and 16 percent that it should be abolished. Thirty-seven percent favor the status quo.

Other Subcommittees

Paul, who has been passed up twice before for the subcommittee chairmanship, may cause a problem for Republicans who have traditionally defended the central bank, Representative Barney Frank, the outgoing chairman of the Financial Services Committee, said today in a Bloomberg Television interview.

“I think you’re going to see a significant dispute within the Republican Party,” said Frank, who was re-appointed by his party as the senior Democrat on the committee. “I do not believe that Ron Paul’s views on the Fed represent the views of most Republicans.”

Bachus will keep the senior Republicans on the panel in leadership positions. Representative Jeb Hensarling of Texas will take over as the panel’s vice chairman, replacing fellow Texas Republican Randy Neugebauer, who moves over to lead the oversight and investigations subcommittee.

Representative Scott Garrett of New Jersey will become chairman of the capital markets panel, which would oversee any work done on government-owned mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Representatives Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia and Judy Biggert of Illinois will take over the financial institutions and housing subcommittees, respectively. Representative Gary Miller of California will take over as chairman of the international monetary policy panel.

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December 6, 2010

Swan Urges Bank Customers to Seek Options Amid Australian Competition Plan - Bloomberg

Filed under: house, term — Tags: , , , — Professor @ 6:48 pm

Australia’s four biggest banks, led by Commonwealth Bank of Australia and Westpac Banking Corp., face mounting competition after Treasurer Wayne Swan urged customers to turn to credit unions and building societies.

“Competition from smaller lenders in the banking sector has to be activated by empowering consumers to shop around,” Swan said yesterday in a statement. “I’d encourage every Australian family to check out the range of products on offer.”

Swan has said he’ll issue proposals this month to reduce the dominance of the four lenders, which also include National Australia Bank Ltd. and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. Calls from politicians to rein in the quartet have mounted after some posted record profits and they boosted mortgage rates faster than the central bank raised borrowing costs last month.

“It seems that a left-leaning Federal government is determined to see major banks become less profitable and dominant,” Craig Williams, a Melbourne-based analyst at Citigroup Inc., said in a report today. “It’s hard to get too positive about the outlook for the banking sector in Australia.”

National Australia Bank fell 0.8 percent today in Sydney, while Commonwealth Bank declined 0.5 percent. Westpac slid 0.2 percent and ANZ Bank was little changed.

Many Australians don’t know they can buy financial services from 60 credit unions and building societies, which are institutions owned by their customers, at post offices, according to Swan. He will probably present his proposals, including ways to help them issue more loans, to the Cabinet today and an announcement is likely Dec. 9 or Dec. 10, according to the Melbourne-based Age newspaper.

Cost of Funding

Public debate on competition in financial-services is intensifying as banks and officials contribute to a Senate inquiry. Central Bank Governor Glenn Stevens is due to appear before the committee on Dec. 13.

Westpac, Australia’s second-largest lender, last week published its submission, saying there are currently 179 entities competing to sell banking services.

Chief Executive Officer Gail Kelly called on the government to introduce measures that reduce major banks’ reliance on offshore funds, which has become more expensive following the global financial crisis. The biggest banks have blamed those costs for driving up mortgage prices. Kelly also said a “wide- ranging” inquiry should wait as long as four years, until the effect of new worldwide liquidity and capital rules become clearer.

Tighter Grip

In an interview published Dec. 4 in the Australian Financial Review, Kelly said the only way to reduce mortgage prices is to help banks obtain cheaper sources of funding.

Australia’s four largest banks used the global financial crisis to tighten their grip on the home-loan market as smaller bank struggled to access credit. The major banks, dubbed the “Four Pillars” after a law preventing takeovers among them, account for about 88 percent of the residential home lending market, according to data from the Australian Prudential Regulatory Authority.

Credit unions and building societies argue that the country needs more competition and have asked the government to introduce policies to help them access funding.

In a Nov. 30 submission to the senate inquiry, the Association of Building Societies and Credit Unions asked for the introduction of a flat-fee guarantee of wholesale debt funding for smaller lenders.

The government has invested A$16 billion ($15.7 billion) in Triple-A rated residential mortgage-backed securities to support smaller lenders and lower the cost of funds, Swan said yesterday.

Australia’s largest banks are already poised to face greater competition in other areas.

AMP Ltd., which is buying the Australian and New Zealand units of Axa Asia Pacific Holdings Ltd., plans to use the deal to compete with the wealth-management businesses of the largest banks, AMP Chief Executive Officer Craig Dunn told yesterday’s Inside Business program on the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

Source

December 3, 2010

Bank of America says no contact with WikiLeaks

Filed under: term, uk — Tags: , , , — Professor @ 1:04 pm

BOSTON

November 17, 2010

Wholesale prices fall as output flat

Filed under: loans, term — Tags: , , , — Professor @ 12:48 am

Core U.S. producer prices recorded their largest fall in more than four years in October and industrial output was flat, underlining concerns at the Federal Reserve about low inflation amid moderate growth.

Economists said the data supported the U.S. central bank’s November 3 decision to ease monetary policy further even though the 0.6 percent drop in the core Producer Price Index largely reflected the annual introduction of new motor vehicle models.

Stripping out the sharp declines in vehicle prices, core producer prices — which exclude volatile food and energy costs — would have risen by 0.2 percent, the Labor Department said on Tuesday, a modest gain consistent with the economy’s sluggish growth trend and tepid domestic demand.

“Today’s PPI data shows you that beneath the surface there is not a whole lot of inflation and tomorrow’s (consumer price) data is likely to show the same thing,” said John Canally, a economist at LPL Financial in Boston.

“The Fed is not going to be proven right with one month of inflation data, but you just need to look around where wage costs are. The PPI data supports what the Fed is doing cash until payday.”

The overall decline in the core index was the biggest since July 2006 and followed a 0.1 percent gain in September. A similar increased had been expected in October.

The weak inflation report ignited a rally on the U.S. government debt market, where the 30-year bond posted its biggest one-day gain. Ongoing concerns over Ireland’s debt crisis and tight credit in China eroded risk appetite.

U.S. stock indices ended down more than 1.5 percent, while the dollar scaled a seven-week high against the euro.

Concerns that low inflation could spiral into a damaging phase of deflation prompted the U.S. central bank this month to ease monetary policy further, a step that will see it buy $600 billion worth of government bonds through the middle of 2011.

That measure has been criticized by some economists, amid signs that the recovery from the worst economic downturn since the 1930s is regaining some strength after losing momentum in the summer.

Despite brighter signs, soft demand is forcing retailers to continue with price discounting to lure customers.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), the world’s largest retailer, said on Tuesday there were indications consumers were still shopping paycheck-to-paycheck. Still, cost cutting helped it to a higher quarterly profit.

Home improvement chain Home Depot Inc (HD.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) also reported earnings that beat expectations, but it softened its full-year sales forecast [ID:nN1627318].

A separate report from the Fed showed industrial production was flat last month, short of economists’ expectations for a rise of 0.3 percent, largely because of weak utility output that reflected unusually warm weather. But manufacturing production rose 0.5 percent, its biggest gain since July.

“The rise in manufacturing is consistent with other reports out there showing the economy picked up strength at the start of the fourth quarter,” said Jim O’Sullivan, chief economist at MF Global in New York.

Economists do not expect the distortions from the annual introduction of new vehicle models to spill over into data on consumer inflation, which is due on Wednesday California payday loan lenders. Core consumer prices are expected to have edged up 0.1 percent after being flat in September.

The core PPI was depressed by a 4.3 percent drop in the price of light motor trucks and a 3 percent drop in prices for passenger cars. In the 12 months to October, core prices have risen just 1.5 percent.

While core prices fell sharply, overall prices received by U.S. farms, factories and refineries rose 0.4 percent, but that was well below economists’ expectations for a 0.8 percent gain. Wholesale prices increased 0.4 percent in September.

Though upward pressure from rising commodity prices is starting to show, economists said it was unlikely to feed through to consumer prices in a meaningful way.

“It is not true to say that no cost increases are filtering through, but there’s still so much excess capacity in the economy that core inflation will remain quiet despite higher costs,” said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts.

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October 30, 2010

Existing home sales on the rise

Filed under: term — Tags: , , — Professor @ 9:06 am

Existing home sales climbed for the second month in a row in September, fueling some hope that a housing recovery is underway.

Sales of previously owned homes rose 10% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.53 million units last month, the National Association of Realtors reported Monday. That was up from a 4.12 million rate in August.

The report came in much stronger than expectations. Economists had forecast sales to edge up to an annual rate of 4.25 million units, according to consensus estimates from Briefing. com.

The gains of the past two months were welcome news, after home sales sank 27% to their lowest level in 15 years in July. While some economists say a housing recovery is underway, a foreclosure moratorium in October may have a negative impact on next month’s report.

"A housing recovery is taking place but will be choppy at times depending on the duration and impact of a foreclosure moratorium," Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said in a release. "But the overall direction should be a gradual rising trend in home sales, with buyers responding to historically low mortgage interest rates and very favorable affordability conditions."

While Tuesday’s report offered a glimmer of hope for housing, home sales remained 22% below this year’s peak in April, and 19% from a year earlier. The housing market peaked thanks to an $8,000 tax credit for first-time buyers, which has since expired.

But now, amid high unemployment and uncertainty about the economy, consumers just aren’t ready to take the plunge into home ownership, like they were a year ago, said Leif Thomson, chief executive of Mortgage Master Inc., a privately owned lending firm.

"Despite having unbelievably great interest rates and low housing prices, the housing market is stuck in the mud right now," he said.

The inventory of homes on the market edged down 1.9% in September to 4.04 million units, but that number is still "unbelievably high," Thomson said.

About 35% of homes sold during the month were in foreclosure, the Realtors said.

The median price of homes sold in September was $171,700, down 2.4% from a year earlier, the report showed. 

Source

June 17, 2010

Goody Clancy lays out draft plan for downtown Wichita

Filed under: term — Tags: , — Professor @ 1:30 am

Local government in Wichita should establish a more stringent set of guidelines as it examines whether to support public-private development proposals in the city’s core, the city’s downtown development consultants said Monday.

As they laid out their draft master plan for downtown Wichita, Goody Clancy executives said the city should ensure that public dollars are spent on projects that have strong public-use components — such as parking garages and public parks. Government also should establish a point system to score potential projects and developers on whether their programs are viable and worth helping.

But the city should be ready with incentives to develop downtown sites, which often are plagues with land acquisition hurdles, environmental concerns and parking issues.

“If we don’t want to play that game, then we run the risk of stagnation and deterioration,” said Sarah Woodworth, a member of the Goody Clancy team.

The Boston-based consulting firm presented its draft plan on Monday during a public meeting at the Wichita Scottish Rite building. The meeting will be followed later this week with a series of public input sessions.

Goody Clancy executives said city capital should be used only for projects that have a strong public benefit so the money has a broader impact than just the private sector project itself.

The city also should establish a point system to rate projects, the consultants said. Criteria could be whether a developer has downtown development experience in the area, how financial solvent he is and whether his proposed development agreement would be fair to all parties.

On financing, Woodworth said, “We should not have any criteria that a bank would not have.”

The projects themselves would have to fit into the downtown master plan. The city should push for them to have a design and location that promotes downtown walkability — one of the key elements of Goody Clancy’s work. Projects also should include buildings at least two stories tall to fit with the character of downtown and shouldn’t come with surface parking lots.

“It doesn’t make for a very pleasant walking environment,” said Goody Clancy’s Ben Carlson.

Goody Clancy’s draft plan, which has been in the works for six months, also laid out a series of possibilities for different areas of town payday advance.

The consulting team laid out numerous potential development districts with their own identities, such as Old Town, Commerce Street Arts, Douglas-Delano, Douglas-Arkansas River, Century II-WaterWalk and the governmental center.

The consultants also made several proposals within some of those districts, offering up sketches for the sites to help people visualize what could happen there.

At the Broadview Hotel near Century II, the consultants suggested the city extend Water Street south to WaterWalk and create a new development site at Douglas and Water that could hold retail and dining. They also said a hotel could be established near the site. All of that would serve Century II and warm up a streetscape that today is wide and relatively unfriendly to pedestrians.

At Broadway and William, Goody Clancy consultants said the former Allis Hotel site could be converted to a park with a parking garage. The former Henry’s store could be converted to 50,000 square feet of office, and the Douglas building just north of there could be rehabbed as an apartment building. A parking garage could serve both the Henry’s and Douglas street buildings.

At Douglas and St. Francis, the consultants urged an improvement of the connection between Old Town and Intrust Bank Arena with more unique pavement styles for pedestrians. They also said Naftzger Park at that intersection could be improved and a hotel could be built just east of it near the Central Rail Corridor. New housing also could be built into existing buildings near that corner.

Just to the east, near Union Station, the city should install a stop light to make that intersection more pedestrian friendly, the consultants said. A parking lot on the northwest side of that intersection could be home to a new residential, office and retail building. The parking that currently is on that site could be moved south to a newly built parking garage.

The consulting team also had renderings for the site of the new public library, the site of the old Coleman factory near Old Town and the site of the 1st Street Bridge over the Arkansas River.

In some cases, the city owns land in those areas and could steer development in the way it chooses, the consultants said.

Source

June 15, 2010

ABIM sanctions docs for sharing exam info

Filed under: term — Tags: , — Professor @ 2:30 am

The American Board of Internal Medicine sanctioned 139 physicians for soliciting or sharing confidential examination questions used to certify doctors in internal medicine and its subspecialties.

Officials at ABIM, which is based in Philadelphia, also said the board initiated legal action in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania last week against five physicians who were among the most egregious offenders.

The sanctioned physicians participated in Arora Board Review, an independent test-preparation course provider based in Livingston, N.J., that purported to help physicians prepare for board certification exams. Participants in the course were allegedly encouraged to relay questions from memory to the company immediately after they took an ABIM examination. They were also allegedly provided with questions obtained by other physicians who had completed ABIM examinations.

Through an extensive investigation, ABIM established that the physicians being sanctioned shared or solicited actual ABIM examination questions — which it called a significant breach in the professional standards ABIM requires of all of its board-certified physicians and any physician taking the exam for certification bad credit payday advance. Hundreds of questions were compromised and immediately removed from the ABIM exam question pool.

“Physicians are, and should be, held to an exceptionally high standard of clinical skill and ethical behavior,” said Dr. Christine K. Cassel, ABIM’s president and CEO. “Board certification provides patients with assurance that the physicians they choose are competent and knowledgeable in their chosen field of practice. Through the actions we are taking today, we are telling patients that they can trust this process; and we are sending a very clear message to physicians. Anyone who seeks to compromise the integrity of our examinations will face swift and serious consequences.”

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April 17, 2010

Severn Bancorp narrows 4Q loss

Filed under: term — Tags: , , — Professor @ 11:45 pm

Severn Bancorp Inc. pared its loss in the first quarter, setting aside less money to cover potential losses in its loan portfolio.

The Annapolis-based parent of Severn Savings Bank (NASDAQ: SVBI) lost $528,000, or 10 cents a share, for the three months ended March 31. That was an improvement from the $1.3 million, or 18 cents a share, the company lost in the period a year earlier.

During first quarter 2010 Severn added $2.5 million to its loan-loss reserves, down from $4.5 million a year earlier and $5.5 million in fourth quarter 2009.

Severn’s capital levels exceed the requirements for federal banking regulators to consider the bank “well capitalized,” it said in a press release Thursday no faxing pay day loans.

“While we are not satisfied with the loss for the quarter, we are encouraged by the improvement in asset quality and the prospects for improved performance for the remainder of 2010,” Severn CEO Alan J. Hyatt said in a statement.

Severn Savings Bank has four branches in Annapolis, Edgewater and Glen Burnie.

Source

April 13, 2010

Airline quality improved in 2009

Filed under: term — Tags: , , — Professor @ 5:51 am

Travelers had a better overall experience on airlines in 2009, according to the annual Airline Quality Report.

Airlines improved in three of the four categories used to determine the rankings.

Dean Headley, associate professor of marketing at Wichita State University, will present the report and overall airline scores in Washington, D.C. Monday.

He will be joined by Paul Bowen, a former professor at WSU who is now the head of the aviation technology department at Purdue University.

The AQR uses information the airlines report to the U.S. Department of Transportation regarding on-time performance, involuntary denied boardings, mishandled bags and customer complaints to determine an overall score for the industry and individual airlines.

The industry scored better compared to 2008 in on-time performance, mishandled bags and customer complaints. It scored worse in 2009 on involuntary denied boardings.

Hawaiian Airlines had the best on-time performance, 92.1 percent, in 2009. Atlantic Southeast Airlines had the worst at 71.2 percent.

Fourteen airlines improved on-time performance in 2009, but only six of the 18 rated had on-time percentages higher than 80 percent.

American Eagle had the highest rate of involuntary denied boardings at 3.76 per 10,000 passengers.

Jet Blue was perfect in that category, scoring no involuntary denied boardings.

AirTran Airways had the best baggage handling rate at 1.67 mishandled bags per 1,000 passengers. Atlantic Southeast scored the worst at 7.87 mishandled bags per 1,000 passengers.

However, all 18 of the airlines rated improved their baggage handling scores in 2009.

Southwest Airlines had the rate of customer complaints at 0.21 percent per 100,000 passengers. Delta Air Lines had the highest rate at 1.96 customer complaints per 100,000 passengers.

Source

March 28, 2010

Census Bureau: Dallas posts biggest population gain

Filed under: term — Tags: , , — Professor @ 1:27 pm

Don’t mess with Texas! Cities in the Lone Star State were among the fastest growing places in 2009.

Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston gained the most new residents of any city — netting more than 140,000 each — according to the Census Bureau’s annual metropolitan area population estimates released on Wednesday. Meanwhile, music center Austin posted the second highest growth rate among top cities — 3.1% — just behind Raleigh, N.C.

"Texas stands as the most prominent Sun Belt survivor of the last half of the decade because of its diversified economy, smaller run-ups in housing prices, and fewer foreclosures," said William Frey, a demographer for the Brookings Institute, a liberal think tank.

Overall, the population of the United States has grown more than 9% to 307,006,550 since the 2000 census. The population grew 0.86% since last year’s estimates.

These figures are an advance look at what to expect when the 2010 census results are released in December. The population figures determine how much federal money states and cities receive, as well their representation in Congress, among other things.

The Brookings Institute study estimates that federal program will dole out more than $500 billion a year to states and communities over the next decade based on data collected through the 2010 Census.

For example, since the 2000 census, the population in Provo-Orem, Utah, has jumped by more than 47%, according to the 2009 estimates. That puts the area in line for a boost in federal funding; in 2008 the area collected more than $300 million, according to the Brookings Institute

Plus, Utah stands to gain a fourth congressional seat, according to projections from the Virginia-based political consulting firm Election Data Services.

In the past decade the Dallas area has added almost 1 faxless cash advances.3 million people — more than any other city. As a result, it stands to receive quite a bit more than the $4 billion in federal funds it earned in 2008. And Election Data Services predicts that Texas will pick up at least three more seats in Congress. (It currently has 32 House seats.)

Biggest losers: Detroit, which was battered by the collapse of the auto industry and faces a 15.6% unemployment rate, lost more than 20,000 people in 2009, or 0.5% of its residents. The Youngstown, Ohio, metropolitan area, which includes parts of Pennsylvania, shed more than 1% of its population.

Over the past decade, New Orleans has struggled the most. The population held relatively steady prior to Hurricane Katrina but lost more than 300,000 residents between 2005 and 2006 and posted a net loss of more than 126,000 people, or 9.6% of its residents, since the 2000 census.

The Big Easy could see its federal funds come down from the $1.8 billion collected in 2008. And Louisiana could lose one of its seven congressional seats, according to Election Data Services.

Census 2010: Last week more than 120 million census questionnaires were mailed to residential addresses and workers continued delivering questionnaires to 12 million addresses in rural areas. The bureau will use the completed questionnaires and data collected through door-to-door visits to determine the nation’s headcount.

To ensure they get a fair share of federal funding, state and local officials are promoting the 2010 Census and pushing for residents to fill out forms. And the Census Bureau is spending $133 million to boost participation rates.  

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