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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

The Big Picture

The Big Picture


Co-Chair of the Congressional Inquiry Into 9/11 – and Former Head of the Senate Intelligence Committee – Calls for a New 9/11 Investigation

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 10:00 PM PDT

The Co-Chair of the Congressional Inquiry into 9/11 and former Head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Bob Graham, previously stated that an FBI informant had hosted and rented a room to two hijackers in 2000 and that, when the Inquiry sought to interview the informant, the FBI refused outright, and then hid him in an unknown location, and that a high-level FBI official stated these blocking maneuvers were undertaken under orders from the White House (confirmed here).

Today, Graham called for a new 9/11 investigation. As Raw Story notes:

Graham on Monday called on the U.S. government to reopen its investigation into 9/11 after a report found that links between Saudi Arabia and the hijackers were never disclosed by the FBI to the 2002 joint Congressional intelligence committee investigating the attacks.

"In the final report of the congressional inquiry, there was a chapter related primarily to the Saudi role in 9/11 that was totally censored, every word of the chapter has been withheld from the public," Graham said on MSNBC's The Dylan Ratigan Show.

"Some of the other questions we ought to be asking are if we know that the Saudis who lived in San Diego and now apparently in Sarasota received substantial assistance, what about the Saudis who lived in Phoenix, Arizona? Or Arlington, Virginia? … What was happening in those places?"

"I believe these are questions for which there are definitive answers, but the American people and largely their elected representatives have been denied that information."

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Many other 9/11 Commissioners and congressmen have called for a new investigation, including:

For example:

In addition,many high-level military and intelligence officials have called for a new investigation, including:

  • Former Deputy Secretary for Intelligence and Warning under Nixon, Ford, and Carter (Morton Goulder), former Deputy Director to the White House Task Force on Terrorism (Edward L. Peck), and former US Department of State Foreign Service Officer (J. Michael Springmann), as well as a who's who of liberals and independents) jointly call for a new investigation into 9/11

And numerous high-level judges, legal professors and trial lawyers call for a new investigation. See this and this.

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Italy Downgraded: Credit Rating Lowered By S & P

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 08:31 PM PDT

Italy Downgraded by S& P

S&P just downgraded Italy's credit.

I've been warning about Italy since 2008.

The Problem Will Spread Because NONE of the Fundamental Problems Have Been Fixed

None of the fundamental economic problems in Italy or Europe or anywhere else have been addressed … let alone fixed. So the problem will only spread.

Fraud largely caused Italy's – and Europe's, and the entire world's – financial problems.

And as I've noted since 2008, shifting the banks' fraudulent debts onto the nations' balance sheets only leads to national crises:

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) is often called the "central banks' central bank", as it coordinates transactions between central banks.

BIS points out in a new report that the bank rescue packages have transferred significant risks onto government balance sheets, which is reflected in the corresponding widening of sovereign credit default swaps:

The scope and magnitude of the bank rescue packages also meant that significant risks had been transferred onto government balance sheets. This was particularly apparent in the market for CDS referencing sovereigns involved either in large individual bank rescues or in broad-based support packages for the financial sector, including the United States. While such CDS were thinly traded prior to the announced rescue packages, spreads widened suddenly on increased demand for credit protection, while corresponding financial sector spreads tightened.

In other words, by assuming huge portions of the risk from banks trading in toxic derivatives, and by spending trillions that they don't have, central banks have put their countries at risk from default.

As I wrote in July:

A study of 124 banking crises by the International Monetary Fund found that propping banks which are only pretending to be solvent hurts the economy:

Existing empirical research has shown that providing assistance to banks and their borrowers can be counterproductive, resulting in increased losses to banks, which often abuse forbearance to take unproductive risks at government expense. The typical result of forbearance is a deeper hole in the net worth of banks, crippling tax burdens to finance bank bailouts, and even more severe credit supply contraction and economic decline than would have occurred in the absence of forbearance.

Cross-country analysis to date also shows that accommodative policy measures (such as substantial liquidity support, explicit government guarantee on financial institutions' liabilities and forbearance from prudential regulations) tend to be fiscally costly and that these particular policies do not necessarily accelerate the speed of economic recovery.

***

All too often, central banks privilege stability over cost in the heat of the containment phase: if so, they may too liberally extend loans to an illiquid bank which is almost certain to prove insolvent anyway. Also, closure of a nonviable bank is often delayed for too long, even when there are clear signs of insolvency (Lindgren, 2003). Since bank closures face many obstacles, there is a tendency to rely instead on blanket government guarantees which, if the government's fiscal and political position makes them credible, can work albeit at the cost of placing the burden on the budget, typically squeezing future provision of needed public services.

Now, Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Italy and many other European countries – as well as the U.S. and Japan – are facing serious debt crises. We are no longer wealthy enough to keep bailing out the bloated banks.

10 Monday PM Reads

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 03:00 PM PDT

My afternoon train reading material:

• How to resign from the EU (The Economist) see also European finance ministers ignore US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s warning of ‘catastrophic risk’ over debt crisis (The Telegraph)
• Headline-grabbing super investors are relics of the past (Marketwatch)
• ‘Greece Must Live Up to Its Commitments’ (Spiegel Online) see also German Taxpayers Want Equity in Bank Bailouts: Karl Heinz Daeke (Bloomberg)
• WTF? Apple Ends at All-Time High (Marketbeat)
• How to Assess the Market Potential of Your Idea (Inc.com)
• The Omen: How an obscure Breton trader gamed oversight weaknesses in the banking system (New Yorker)
• Prohibition: a 3-part, 5-and-1/2 hour documentary directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick on the rise, rule, and fall of the 18th Amendment and the entire era it encompassed. (PBS)
This is Hilarious! Netflix "Qwikster" has a Twitter problem. A thuggish, weed-loving, Twitter problem. (boingboing)
• 5 Things Google Plus Can Do to Outbox Facebook (Read Write Web)

What are you reading?

>

Source: TRB

Think Like A Rockstar

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 02:42 PM PDT

Deficit Polls: Tax Increases vs Spending

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 01:15 PM PDT

More people support tax increases then the doctrinaire right-wing position favoring spending cuts during a weak economy.

Here’s Bruce Bartlett:

>

Can/Should the Budget Deficit Be Reduced with Spending Cuts Alone or Should There Be Some Increase in Taxes?
Poll
Date
Some/All Taxes
No Taxes/
All Spending
9-16-11
74
21
9-14-11
48
38
8-26-11
69
29
8-10-11
66
33
8-10-11
63
36
8-9-11
68
29
8-4-11
63
34
8-2-11
60
40
7-26-11
68
19
7-25-11
56
34
7-21-11
64
34
7-19-11
66
32
7-19-11
62
27
7-18-11
69
28
7-14-11
67
25
7-13-11
73
20
6-9-11
61
37
6-9-11
59
26
5-13-11
64
33
5-12-11
61
27
4-29-11
76
20
4-25-11
62
33
4-22-11
66
19
4-20-11
62
36
3-15-11
67
31
12-12-10
62
36
11-26-10
65
33
Average
64.5
30
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Infrastructure Plan: A Third Option

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 09:15 AM PDT

Infrastructure Plan: A Third Option
David R. Kotok
cumber.com
September 19, 2011

>

President Obama proposed $447 billion in a package designed to stimulate infrastructure spending and project-oriented job creation in the United States. House Speaker Boehner and House Republicans will offer an alternative plan. These plans then go through super-committee negotiations that are attempting to design a budget-deficit, spending, tax-management proposition in a much divided Congress.

The outlook for any of the elements offered to lead to a successful compromise is considered bleak by many Washington observers. However, we want to place another option on the table, along with a concise way to pay for it without expanding the Federal deficit.

Rather than a mixed package of $447 billion, we propose $535 billion in a five-year program to be allocated to infrastructure spending. The mechanics of this program are via Build America Bonds, a proven and tested method of infrastructure finance.

You may be asking yourself: why the number 535? That is the exact number of Senators and Representatives that comprise our Congress. If they vote no, they will each be taking responsibility for voting against one billion dollars of infrastructure spending.

We further propose that the monies be distributed among the fifty states in proportion to the number of Senators and Congressmen in each state. Therefore, a small state with one Congressman and two Senators would receive an allocation of $3 billion of Build America Bonds. A larger state with ten Congressmen and two Senators would receive an allocation of $12 billion in Build America Bonds.

For what would the money be used? We propose that it must be spent on infrastructure, construction, and municipal development projects. Think of it as a way of funding schools, airports, sewer and water plants, toll roads, and bridges – all that is in the purview of government.

Who would determine what projects would be undertaken? Existing local and state-level agencies would decide their needs and how to structure their own projects. If a town needed a water company, they could use a Build America Bond to finance it. If a district needed a new school, they could do the same.

Fortunately, the structure would be the same as the Build America Bonds we already know. The Federal government would pay 35% of the interest in the form of a rebate to the issuer of the bonds. We already have close to $200 billion of Build America Bonds issued. The disclosures and techniques in order to finance them are established, so there is no need to form a new federal agency, allocating to other agencies. A federal presence is not required, other than to define the use for which Build America Bond proceeds may be applied.

Would this create more federal deficits? Yes, if it was standalone, but we propose an alternative to pay for it. The interest subsidy on a Build America Bond at current market prices is somewhere around 1.5% per year. It works like this: a tax-free bond could be sold in conventional terms, and the buyers of such bonds would be limited to high-tax-bracket, wealthy Americans. Build America Bonds, on the other hand, are taxable instruments to the bond buyer. They are not tax-free municipal bonds, but the Federal government rebates a portion of the interest to the issuer of the bond. So, the issuer of the bond makes a decision as to which method is less costly when it issues bonds. Does it use tax-free bonds? Does it use taxable bonds? Whichever one results in the least expensive finance is the one that is preferred.

So, how would the interest-rebate portion be paid out of the Federal budget? The answer here is simple: repeal the ethanol subsidy, which is approximately the same amount of money as it would take to have a half-trillion-dollar Build America Bonds program. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) would score ethanol subsidy and Build America Bonds at about the same amount of money per year for the next, say, thirty years.

What would happen if you stopped the ethanol subsidy? You would use that money instead to rebuild the infrastructure of the United States. You would stop driving up corn prices. You would free up almost half the corn crop, which is currently going into ethanol, and instead let it be applied for food. If ethanol remains economically viable because of the mandate that requires it to be part of the fuel system, so be it. If not, then there will be changes in different types of ethanol-like products. Even the most intense supporters of the ethanol subsidy admit that when the oil price is approximately $100 a barrel, the need for a subsidy for ethanol is really not justified.

Why five years instead of two, like the original BABs program? It takes time to plan infrastructure projects. If the project were approved tomorrow, for example, the school board would need to hire architects, contractors, and workers. It would have to go through the process of determining what type of school to build, how it would be built, and enter the process of bidding and construction and permit applications. The same would be true for the sewer plant upgrade or the reconstruction of a bridge. Infrastructure is a long-lead-time activity.

Would this create jobs right away? The answer is yes! Most projects create jobs immediately, because engineering firms, designer firms, architectural firms – those who do the preliminary work on a project – get employed quickly. The evolution of a project takes place over several years. Would it create the million jobs that the Obama administration says are needed to rebuild the infrastructure of the United States? We do not know, but we do know what we have seen with Build America Bond-financed projects. We have acted as a financial advisor on a number of them, and we have determined from our experience that many construction, project, and infrastructure-related jobs result from them.

Would state and local governments have to use the Build America Bonds money? Absolutely not. This is not a wasteful program; it is an optional program. The money is available; the rerouting of ethanol subsidy money to Build America Bonds is there. The allocation goes to the states, and the states determine their level of participation.

Will these bonds stand on their own credit, since the Federal government is not guaranteeing the bond principal? The answer here is yes. Market-based credit analysis and revenues have to be allocated to amortize the bonds – all that goes into the mix of each specific bond project. Each project must stand on its own merit. It must have the revenue, support, and economic research. This gets packaged into an official statement that can be presented to bond investors, who will determine on their own if they want to take the risk and buy this bond.

Who will buy these bonds? Build America Bonds are taxable securities. Therefore, they become desirable for pension plans, IRAs, institutions, charitable foundations, banks, and others who are seeking investments at yields that can justify those investments and who at the moment are thirsting to find them. In addition, foreigners will buy Build America Bonds. We saw that in the last round of BABs, when foreign buyers came into the market and started to participate in this form of finance.

In summary, here is our proposition. No Federal deficit impact. Repeal ethanol subsidy. Reallocate ethanol subsidy to an interest subsidy in the Build America Bonds program. Launch the Build America Bonds program with a five-year time horizon. With the size of $535 billion, we can easily convince Washington that the math is simple. In Washington, if it is not simple it does not have a chance. That would enable each Congressman to stare down a vote of a $1 billion allocation for his or her state. A concise program that creates infrastructure spending, puts the incentives to do it where they belong, and allows for independent credit analysis, could be implemented immediately and does not interfere with the super-committee's work or any other committee's work. This is our option to rebuild the infrastructure of the United States.

~~~

David R. Kotok, Chairman and Chief Investment Officer

How Rare: S&P Dividend Yields vs Treasuries

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 08:30 AM PDT

Last week, Ron Griess of the Chart Store brought to my attention a common misunderstanding about dividend yields.

The charts below show some of the thinking behind our discussions.

To begin with, the common usage of Treasuries — think 10 Year or 30 year for that matter — may not be an ideal comparison. The US sovereign debt has as little default risk as an instrument — certainly much less than any equity has in terms of risk.

Towards that end, a better measure might be comparable corporates — either Moody’s Aaa or Bbb rated corporate bonds. Note that the charts, which run from 1920 to present, may belie some current assumptions about dividends and Treasuries:

>

10 year U.S. Treasury Yields compared to S&P Comp Yield

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Moody’s Aaa Yields vs S&P Comp Yield

More charts (30 Year Treasury and Moody’s BBB), after the jump

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Long-term U.S. Treasury Yields vs S&P Comp Yield

~~~

Moody’s Baa Yields vs S&P Comp Yield

Skylar Tibbits: Can we make things that make themselves?

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 07:45 AM PDT

MIT researcher Skylar Tibbits works on self-assembly — the idea that instead of building something (a chair, a skyscraper), we can create materials that build themselves, much the way a strand of DNA zips itself together. It’s a big concept at early stages; Tibbits shows us three in-the-lab projects that hint at what a self-assembling future might look like.

10 Monday AM Reads

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 06:30 AM PDT

Here is what I am starting off my week reading:

• A Little Inflation Can Be a Dangerous Thing (NYT)
• Rearranging the Deck Chairs (Tim Duy’s Fed Watch) see also Fed Ponders Jobs, Inflation Targets (WSJ)
• Ray Dalio and Bridgewater Associates Continue to Amaze with 25% YTD Gains (International Business Times)
• Effort on Home Loans Stalls (WSJ)
• A New York double feature:
……-Jobs and the G.O.P. (New Yorker)
……-Obama's Economic Quagmire:  (New York Mag)
• The real truth about Social Security (The Economist)
Bartlett: Class Warfare, Republican Style (Social Science Research Network) see also Republicans Accuse Obama of Waging ‘Class Warfare’ With Millionaire Tax Plan (Fox News)
• Is In Time the intelligent sci-fi film we’ve been waiting for? (Guardian) see also What Would Humanity Be Like Without Aging? (Discover Magazine)
• The United States of Design (Fast Company)
• Adult GOP Governor Calls for a More Honest Debate (NYT) see also Republican front-runners Mitt Romney, Rick Perry come from different worlds (Washington Post)

What are you reading?
>

The Greek hour glass

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 04:44 AM PDT

“We can’t move along without real implementation of fiscal reforms and we are late,” said Greece’s Finance Minister over the weekend, publicly acknowledging that they have not fully followed thru with the conditions demanded by the EU and IMF in order to release more money to Greece as part of Bailout 1. The Finance Minister will have a call with the EU and IMF at 12pm est time to discuss the current situation. I still assume Greece gets the next allotment of money in 2 weeks, followed by full passage of the EFSF by all 17 Parliaments and then an orderly restructuring of Greek debt where bondholders suffer at least a 50% cut in the value of their holdings off par value, more than twice the 21% reduction assumed with the current debt exchange. There are 3 ways to cut debt, pay it off, write it off or inflate out of it. Option 1 is a sign of health, option 2 is always painful but it cleanses while door #3 is the most dangerous. Greece needs to cleanse. In Asia, the Shanghai index fell to the lowest since July ’10 and the Hang Seng closed at the lowest since July ’09.

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