Friday, September 30, 2011

Podcast: European Debt, a Tax Plan and General Motors

It’s been a difficult three months for the financial markets, and the global economy is weak. Unfortunately, more problems are probably on the way.

A resolution of the Greek financial crisis is not in sight. Approval of new powers for a stopgap bailout fund depends on the approval of all 17 members of the euro zone, and Finland, Germany and Austria all gave a thumbs-up in the last several days, as I write in the Strategies column in Sunday Business. But in a conversation in the new Weekend Business podcast, Floyd Norris says that many other countries still need to vote, and that even if they approve the strengthening of the fund, further remedies for Greece — requiring many further votes — will undoubtedly be required. The global economy, meanwhile, appears to be losing steam.

The United States has not come up with a solution for its fiscal problems yet, and many Republicans in Congress are opposed to raising taxes. In a separate conversation, and in the Economic View column in Sunday Business, Tyler Cowen, the George Mason University economist, says that a tax increase is inevitable sooner or later. If it doesn’t come as part of a “grand bargain” to reduce the deficit, he says, it will be forced on the United States later on — so it’s best to try to come up with a reasonable solution now.

And in his new book, “Once Upon a Car,” Bill Vlasic says G.M.’s plight in 2008 was so serious that it contemplated a merger with its cross-town rival, Ford. That merger didn’t take place, of course, but in a conversation with David Gillen, he says that it was actually proposed in a meeting between the leaders of the two companies. An article adapted from Mr. Vlasic’s book appears on the cover of Sunday Business.

You can find specific segments of the podcast at these junctures: Floyd Norris (30:27); news headlines (18:47); Bill Vlasic on G.M. (14:45); Tyler Cowen (6:50); the week ahead (1:30).

You can download the program by subscribing from The New York Times’s podcast page or directly from iTunes.

California breaks from 50-state probe into mortgage lenders [Updated]


 

Kamala Harris
California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris will no longer take part in a national foreclosure probe of some of the nation's biggest banks, which are accused of pervasive misconduct in dealing with troubled homeowners.

Harris removed herself from talks by a coalition of state attorneys general and federal agencies investigating abusive foreclosure practices because the nation's five largest mortgage servicers were not offering California homeowners relief commensurate to what people in the state had suffered, Harris told The Times on Friday.

The big banks were also demanding to be granted overly broad immunity from legal claims that could potentially derail further investigations into Wall Street's role in the mortgage meltdown, Harris said.

“It has been  a process of negotiating and sitting at a table in good faith, but ultimately I have decided that we have to go our own course and take an independent path. And that decision is because we need to bring relief to Californians that is equal to the pain California experienced, and what is being negotiated now is insufficient," Harris told The Times in an interview.

Harris delivered the news in a letter sent Friday to Iowa Atty. Gen. Tom Miller, who has been leading the 50-state coalition.

[Updated 5:36 p.m.: Iowa Atty. Gen. Tom Miller, who has been leading the negotiations, vowed to press on.

“California has been an important part of our team and has made a significant contribution to this case,” Miller said in a statement. “However, the multistate effort is pressing forward and we fully expect to reach a settlement with the banks.”]

The removal of California from the discussions is a major blow to fraying efforts by the coalition, which has been trying to strike a settlement deal with the big banks for months. The move by Harris to reject the settlement talks is also a key departure from efforts by the Obama administration, which has been pushing for a fast resolution to the so-called robo-signing scandal that erupted last year.

“This whole concept of a settlement on foreclosure abuse is probably dead,” said Christopher Whalen, the founder of Institutional Risk Analytics. “Nobody in their right mind is going to opt into a settlement right now.”

For California homeowners, the move means the probable end of an opportunity for relatively quick relief stemming from revelations last year that banks improperly foreclosed on troubled borrowers. Key reforms to mortgage-servicing and foreclosure practices pushed by the attorneys general may also be delayed.

Harris has faced increasing pressure in recent weeks from inside and outside the state to reject any deal that was considered too weak, particularly as the foreclosure crisis in the Golden State appears to be worsening.

Among the states with the highest foreclosure rates, California led the pack in new foreclosure proceedings last month, with an increase of 55% over July, according to data from Irvine-based RealtyTrac. Metro areas in the inland parts of California posted big jumps in August, with Riverside and San Bernardino counties soaring 68%, Bakersfield 44% and Modesto 57%.

In rejecting the 50-state talks, California also widens the riff among law enforcement officials nationwide over the best approach to pursuing banks for mortgage misdeeds.

New York Atty. Gen. Eric Schneiderman, who was originally part of the 50-state negotiations, has launched a wide-ranging investigation into Wall Street's role in the mortgage meltdown -– focusing on the efforts to bundle low-quality mortgages into sophisticated bonds.

Schneiderman has been highly critical of the proposed 50-state settlement and expressed concern that his counterparts in other states may let the banks off too lightly and provide immunity from other efforts to bring them to account for misdeeds. Schneiderman has also won support from attorneys general in Delaware, Nevada, Massachusetts, Kentucky and Minnesota, some of whom have launched their own investigations.

A spokesman for Schneiderman, Danny Kanner, welcomed Harris's move.

“Attorney General Schneiderman looks forward to his continued work with Attorney General Harris and his other state and federal counterparts to ensure those responsible for the mortgage crisis are held accountable and homeowners who are suffering receive meaningful relief,” said Kanner.

RELATED:

New-home slump keeping door shut on U.S. recovery

Kamala Harris a key player in settlement over mortgage crisis

BofA, Chase must do more to help troubled homeowners, Obama administration says 

-- Alejandro Lazo and Nathaniel Popper

Photo: California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris speaks at a news conference in May to announce the creation of the California Attorney General's Mortgage Fraud Strike Force. At left is Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. Credit: Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times

[Updated] Citibank slaps customers with $15 monthly fee for checking

Another day, another new bank fee.

As the uproar swelled over Bank of America Corp.'s planned $5 monthly charge for debit cards, megabank rival Citigroup Inc. was telling checking accounts holders that it would sock them with a $15 a month fee unless they maintain a balance above $6,000.

Customers such as Cheryl Holt of Burbank were complaining to The Times about the letters they received this week from Citibank, Citigroup’s retail arm. Holt said she opened the envelope and was confronted by what she called an "absurd salutation."

"Customers like you have told us that what they want from their banks are simple options and great rewards," the giant New York bank said. "We heard you and are writing to let you know that we are making some changes to your EZ Checking Package."

The demand for $15 a month -- $180 a year -- for a checking account sent Holt out Friday morning on a quest for free checking, an endangered service as big banks, awash in deposits, raise fees and cut costs to keep their profits up despite the sluggish economy.

"I’m on my way out the door right now," Holt wrote in an email to The Times, "off to start a new account at my nearest credit union.

"Should have done it years ago!"

Citi representatives didn’t immediately return a call for comment.

UPDATE: A Citibank spokeswoman said customers can avoid the fee by opting for a “basic” checking account, having at least one direct deposit made into it each month, and making at least one automated bill payment from the account monthly.

RELATED:

At many big banks, no more free checking

Bank deposits soar despite rock-bottom interest rates

 Dumping your big bank? How to choose a new one

-- E. Scott Reckard

 

Homeowner advocates laud Harris for break with mortgage settlement

Advocates for homeowners in California applauded California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris' decision to bow out of talks aimed at reaching a national foreclosure settlement with the nation's biggest banks.

Harris has said that the proposed settlement, the product of nearly 11 months of negotiations, let the banks off too easily. She has said that her office will conduct a more rigorous investigation.

“She stayed at the table on the settlement as long as was reasonable,” said Brian Heller de Leon, a representative of PICO California, an advocacy group for homeowners. “It became clear that there was no longer a reasonable path for California to stay in these negotiations.”

Heller de Leon said the proposed settlement would only have helped a tiny minority of California homeowners.

Harris has recently come under pressure from politicians and progressive groups inside and outside the state who wanted her to reject the settlement that was being discussed by the banks and the committee of state attorneys general.

Richard Hopson, chairman of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment, said Friday that "a thorough investigation" is needed.

"We applaud Attorney General Harris for pulling out of this proposed 'settlement,' " Hopson said in a statement. "The banks need to pay for what they have done."

Meanwhile, Iowa Atty. Gen. Tom Miller, who has been leading the national negotiations, vowed to press on for a settlement without Harris.

His statement:

California has been an important part of our team and has made a significant contribution to this case. However, the multistate effort is pressing forward and we fully expect to reach a settlement with the banks. This multistate is about foreclosures and mortgage servicing abuse, and we are 100% focused on providing relief to homeowners while it can still make a difference and save homes from foreclosure. Providing relief after the foreclosure crisis is over would be a hollow victory indeed. Individual states are situated differently and after a settlement is reached it will be provided to all 50 states so that each Attorney General can make a decision on whether or not to join.

RELATED:

California bows out of probe of mortgage lenders

Kamala Harris a key player in settlement over mortgage crisis

Kamala Harris explains decision to exit mortgage settlement talks

-- Nathaniel Popper

Kamala Harris explains decision to exit mortgage settlement talks

California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris just announced that she is bowing out of national efforts to reach a settlement with banks over their handling of mortgage foreclosures. 

She delivered the news to Iowa Atty. Gen. Tom Miller, who has been leading the efforts.

Read the letter: "There now exists a proposed settlement that is inadequate for California homeowners"

Kamala Harris Letter

RELATED:

California bows out of probe of mortgage lenders

Kamala Harris a key player in settlement over mortgage crisis

BofA, Chase must do more to help troubled homeowners, Obama administration says 

-- Alejandro Lazo and Nathaniel Popper

Stocks plunge again to finish worst quarter since 2008

Protest
The reality of a debt-heavy global economy stuck in low gear hit home in the last three months, driving U.S. stocks to their worst quarterly loss since the 2008 financial crisis.

On Friday, share prices ended mostly lower around the globe, heaping more misery on equity investors battered by growing doubts about the economic outlook. The Dow Jones industrial average slumped 240.60 points, or 2.2%, to close the quarter at 10,913.38.

The 30-stock Dow lost 12.1% in the three months. And that was pretty much the good news: The biggest stocks held up much better than the rest of the market.

The broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index, a benchmark for many 401(k) retirement accounts, fell 2.5% on Friday and 14.3% for the quarter. It was the biggest decline since the index crashed 22.6% in the fourth quarter of 2008.

Market losses generally were worse overseas, particularly in Europe, as the continent’s government-debt crisis raged on. The average European blue-chip stock tumbled 17.4% for the three months. The Hong Kong market plunged 21.5% and Brazilian shares lost 16.2%.

And in another blow to investor confidence, the asset many people had viewed as a haven -- gold -- was pummeled in the final few weeks of the quarter amid a steep decline in commodities in general. The yellow metal slid from nearly $1,900 an ounce in late August to end Friday at $1,620.

As commodities fell further on Friday, U.S. crude oil dropped $2.94 to $79.20 a barrel, a new 52-week low. That should be good for consumers -- unless it's a sign that demand for raw materials is ebbing because of a deeper slowdown in global growth.

The two hiding places that actually lived up to that billing this quarter: cash and high-quality bonds, particularly U.S. government debt.

On Friday, investors jumped back into Treasury bonds as stocks slumped. The 10-year T-note yield fell to 1.90%, down from 2.00% on Thursday and down from 3.16% on June 30.

But with Treasury yields near generational lows, they aren’t offering investors much incentive to buy at this point. Wall Street’s remaining cadre of stock bulls argues that equities are cheap. And they may be right -- if the bottom isn’t about to fall out of the economy.

That's setting up for another potentially wild market ride in October. More evidence of economic weakness could trigger a new selling wave. Better economic data, on the other hand, could bring a torrent of cash in from the sidelines.

“Once you break either way I think it’s going to be pretty dramatic,” said Bill Strazzullo, market strategist at Bell Curve Trading in Freehold, N.J.

Just what everyone was looking forward to: more insane volatility.

RELATED:

Small investors feel -- what else? -- gloomy

Personal income fell in August, first drop in two years

Hallmark's new line: Greeting cards for the jobless

-- Tom Petruno

Photo: One of the signs of protesters who have been camping out near Wall Street this week to rail against corporate interests. Credit: Mario Tama / Getty Images

California breaks from 50-state probe into mortgage lenders


Kamala Harris
California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris will no longer take part in a national foreclosure probe of some of the nation's biggest banks, which are accused of pervasive misconduct in dealing with troubled homeowners.

Harris removed herself from talks by a coalition of state attorneys general and federal agencies investigating abusive foreclosure practices because the nation's five largest mortgage servicers were not offering California homeowners relief commensurate to what people in the state had suffered, a person familiar with the matter said.

The big banks were also demanding to be granted overly broad immunity from legal claims that could potentially derail further investigations into Wall Street's role in the mortgage meltdown, the person said.

The removal of California from the discussions is a major blow to fraying efforts by the 50-state coalition that has been trying to strike a settlement deal with the big banks for months. The move by Harris to reject the settlement talks is also a key departure from efforts by the Obama administration, which has been pushing for a fast resolution to the so-called robo-signing scandal that erupted last year.

For California homeowners, the move means that gone is the chance for quick relief stemming from revelations last year that banks improperly foreclosed on troubled borrowers. Key reforms to mortgage-servicing and foreclosure practices pushed by the attorneys general may also be delayed, affecting hundreds of thousands of Californians facing the loss of their homes.

But Harris has faced increasing pressure in recent weeks from inside and outside the state to reject any deal that was considered too weak, particularly as the foreclosure crisis in the Golden State appears to be worsening.

Among the states with the highest foreclosure rates, California led the pack in new foreclosure proceedings last month, with an increase of 55% over July, according to data from Irvine-based RealtyTrac. Metro areas in the inland parts of California posted big jumps in August, with Riverside and San Bernardino counties soaring 68%, Bakersfield 44% and Modesto 57%.

In rejecting the 50-state talks, California also widens the riff among law enforcement officials nationwide over the best approach to pursuing banks for mortgage misdeeds.

New York Atty. Gen. Eric Schneiderman, who was originally part of the 50-state negotiations, has launched a wide-ranging investigation into Wall Street's role in the mortgage meltdown -– focusing on the efforts to bundle low-quality mortgages into sophisticated bonds.

Schneiderman has been highly critical of the proposed 50-state settlement and expressed concern that his counterparts in other states may let the banks off too lightly and provide immunity from other efforts to bring them to account for misdeeds. Schneiderman has also won support from attorneys general in Delaware, Nevada, Massachusetts, Kentucky and Minnesota, some of whom have launched their own investigations.

RELATED:

New-home slump keeping door shut on U.S. recovery

White House forecasts high unemployment through 2012

BofA, Chase must do more to help troubled homeowners, Obama administration says 

-- Alejandro Lazo and Nathaniel Popper

Photo: California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris speaks at a news conference to announce the creation of the California Attorney General's Mortgage Fraud Strike Force. Credit: Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times

Citibank slaps customers with $15 monthly fee for checking

Another day, another new bank fee.

As the uproar swelled over Bank of America Corp.'s planned $5 monthly charge for debit cards, megabank rival Citigroup Inc. was telling checking accounts holders that it would sock them with a $15 a month fee unless they maintain a balance above $6,000.

Customers such as Cheryl Holt of Burbank were complaining to The Times about the letters they received this week from Citibank, Citigroup’s retail arm. Holt said she opened the envelope and was confronted by what she called an "absurd salutation."

"Customers like you have told us that what they want from their banks are simple options and great rewards," the giant New York bank said. "We heard you and are writing to let you know that we are making some changes to your EZ Checking Package."

The demand for $15 a month -- $180 a year -- for a checking account sent Holt out Friday morning on a quest for free checking, an endangered service as big banks, awash in deposits, raise fees and cut costs to keep their profits up despite the sluggish economy.

"I’m on my way out the door right now," Holt wrote in an email to The Times, "off to start a new account at my nearest credit union.

"Should have done it years ago!"

Citi representatives didn’t immediately return a call for comment.

RELATED:

At many big banks, no more free checking

Bank deposits soar despite rock-bottom interest rates

 Dumping your big bank? How to choose a new one

-- E. Scott Reckard

 

BofA: Online banking outage was unrelated to debit fee uproar

BofAbranchTimesSquareGettyImagesMarioTama 
Bank of America Corp. customers on the East Coast lost online banking services for about two hours -- an outage the bank says was not caused by hackers, malware or its hugely unpopular decision to charge customers who make debit-card purchases.

Bank spokeswoman Tara Burke emphasized that the outages, from 6:15 to 11:26 a.m. EDT Friday, were not related to the uproar over news of the $5 monthly debit-card fees. BofA's mobile and text banking services were unaffected, she added.

As the nation's largest retail bank, Bank of America also is believed to have the largest number of customers who use online banking services -- 29 million, Burke said. Reports of online outages are not uncommon, although Burke wouldn't say how frequently the system short-circuits.

She also wouldn't disclose how many customers were affected by Friday's outage or what caused it, saying only: "There were some issues, some customers have had trouble with access." 

Response to news of the debit-card fee has been huge and overwhelmingly negative, as the comments on the Times' blog post about the fee reflect.

Bank of America spokeswoman Anne Pace declined to characterize the attitude of the customers who were bombarding the bank with questions at its branches, call centers and via Twitter.

"Most of them want to understand what this means for them and how it will impact their accounts," she said in an email. "We are doing our best to explain the impacts, the value and convenience the debit card offers and how to avoid the fee if necessary."

Short of taking out a BofA mortgage or depositing $20,000 with the Charlotte, N.C., bank, the way to avoid the fee is to avoid making purchases with debit cards and using them only for ATM transactions, which remain free.

Customers also could jump to another bank, of course, although major institutions such as Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase have been testing $3 monthly fees for debit cards.

Bank of America stock, meantime, sank by 14 cents, or 2.2%, to $6.21 in early afternoon trading in New York. It has been the worst performing stock of the 30 in the Dow Jones Industrial Average during the third quarter, having fallen 42% as of Wednesday's close of $6.35.

RELATED:

BofA to charge customers $5 for debit card use

With debit card fee, Bank of America reaches deeper into customers' pockets

CEO Brian Moynihan says Bank of America is turning the corner on its Countrywide woes

--E. Scott Reckard

Photo: Bank of America branch in Times Square, New York. Credit: Mario Tama / Getty Images

Consumer Confidential: Less income, more recession, free pancakes

Souppic Here's your faster-pussycat Friday roundup of consumer news from around the Web:

-- No, you're not mistaken: You're now a little poorer. Americans earned less last month, the first decline in nearly two years. At the same time, though, we spent a bit more in August despite seeing our incomes drop 0.1%, according to the Commerce Department. Consumer spending rose just 0.2%, after a more robust 0.7% gain in July. Most of the increase in spending went to pay higher prices for food and gas. When adjusted for inflation, consumer spending was flat last month. Many tapped their savings to cover the steeper costs. In August, the savings rate fell to its lowest level since December 2009.

-- And things may be about to get even worse. The U.S. economy is staring down another recession, according to a forecast from the Economic Cycle Research Institute. "It's either just begun, or it's right in front of us," says Lakshman Achuthan, managing director of ECRI. "But at this point that's a detail. The critical news is there's no turning back. We are going to have a new recession." Jeepers. The ECRI produces widely followed leading indicators which predict when the economy is moving between recession and expansion. Achuthan says all those indicators are now pointing to a new economic downturn in the immediate future.

-- On the bright side: Our friends at IHOP say that participating restaurants nationwide will serve up a free Scary Face Pancake giveaway for kids 12 and under on Friday, Oct. 28, from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. (one per child). Parents can sign up on IHOP's website for a wake-up call on Oct. 28 from "Count Spatula" with a reminder about the free Scary Face Pancake giveaway. So things could be worse, I guess.

-- David Lazarus

Photo: Pancakes, anyone? Credit: L.A. Times file photo

 

Personal income declined in August for first time since 2009

Mall shopper
In another sign of Americans' economic struggles, personal income declined in August for the first time in more than two years, the Commerce Department reported Friday.

Growth in personal income -- an individual's total earnings, including wages and investments -- has been sluggish for months. But the drop of 0.1% from July to August was the first since October 2009. Personal income had risen 0.1% in July.

The drop was driven by a 0.2% decline in wages and salaries in August. The decrease of $11.8 billion was the largest since November, according to the department's Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Although people earned less money, they spent slightly more in August. Consumer spending rose 0.2% from July, although was flat when higher prices were taken into account. Consumer spending had risen 0.7% in July.

The new figures came after some mildly encouraging economic data on Thursday that indicated another recession might not be approaching. The data included an upward revision of second-quarter growth and a drop in weekly jobless claims.

RELATED:

U.S. data point away from another recession

Durable goods orders fall in August, but some signs are positive

No new jobs added in August as unemployment rate holds at 9.1%

-- Jim Puzzanghera

Photo: A shopper in Los Angeles. Credit: Associated Press.

Wall Street: Bad quarter ends with stocks and gold falling

Wall Street
Gold: Trading now at $1,615 an ounce, down 0.1% from Thursday. Dow Jones industrial average: Trading now at 11,064.89, down 0.8% from Thursday.

Goodbye to a bad quarter. As the worst quarter for stocks since the financial crisis comes to a close, investors are showing some pessimism today.

Investors turn on Obama. President Obama's favorability ratings among investors have plummeted in recent months, though he can take consolation in approval among investors for his plan to tax those earning $1 million-plus a year. 

DJ + S&P. The two kings of the stock index world -- Standard & Poor's and Dow Jones -- are talking about joining forces.

-- Nathaniel Popper in New York
Twitter.com/nathanielpopper

Photo credit: Stan Honda / Getty Images

Weak stock market may be hurting weak economy, report suggests

Luxury-spending-MariahTauger-LAT
Is the stock market a mirror that simply reflects what's going on in the underlying economy? Or is it a force unto itself, actually pushing the economy up or down?

That question -- whether there's a "wealth effect" or, in today's troubled economy, a "reverse wealth effect" -- has been debated a lot over the years. But it's getting renewed attention lately as investors, corporate managers and just about everybody else try to make sense of the stubbornly weak economy.

The basic question is whether the dramatic gyrations in the stock market -- and to lesser degrees, in the fixed-income and commodities markets -- affect consumer and business spending.

A new report from Merrill Lynch suggests the answer may be yes -- that the stock market is weighing on the economy because its acute fluctuations are so psychologically unsettling.

"Market expectations can be self-fulfilling in the short-run; the equity market can create its own reality," economists Neil Duta and Ethan Harris write in their report "The chicken or the egg?"

"In an environment of high uncertainty, the economy is more vulnerable to financial shocks," they wrote. "A sharp negative shift in investor sentiment can feed on itself, reducing economic activity. This is the big risk for the economy today."

Merrill points to the stock market's deep selloff last month after the U.S. government's credit rating downgrade by Standard & Poor's. The economy was weak but wasn't demonstrably worsening. But the selloff was so severe that it raised worries that the economy was sinking quickly.

The report quotes two prominent experts bemoaning the negative effect of the market.

“On days without much news, the market is simply reacting to itself," said Robert Shiller, a Yale University economics professor. "And because anxiety is running high, investors make quick, sometimes impulsive, responses to relatively minor events.”

And this from famed hedge-fund manager George Soros:

"If a double-dip recession was in doubt a few weeks ago, it is less in doubt now because financial markets have a very safe way of predicting the future: They cause it."

RELATED:

It's not 2008 all over again — yet

Americans are saving more in 401(k) retirement plans

Small investors feel -- what else? -- gloomy

-- Walter Hamilton

Photo: Shoppers wander down Rodeo Drive outside the Salvatore Ferragamo store in Beverly Hills. Credit: Mariah Tauger/Los Angeles Times

 

 

NEIN, NEIN, NEIN, and the death of EU Fiscal Union


Angela Merkel with Eastern European leaders today (Photo: AP)


Judging by the commentary, there has been a colossal misunderstanding around the world of what has just has happened in Germany. The significance of yesterday’s vote by the Bundestag to make the EU’s €440bn rescue fund (EFSF) more flexible is not that the outcome was a "Yes".


This assent was a foregone conclusion, given the backing of the opposition Social Democrats and Greens. In any case, the vote merely ratifies the EU deal reached more than two months ago – itself too little, too late, rendered largely worthless by very fast-moving events.


The significance is entirely the opposite. The furious debate over the erosion of German fiscal sovereignty and democracy – as well as the escalating costs of the EU rescue machinery – has made it absolutely clear that the Bundestag will not prop up the ruins of monetary union for much longer.


Horst Seehofer, the leader of Bavaria’s Social Christians, said his party would go "this far, and no further".


There can be no question of beefing up the EFSF to €2 trillion or any other sum, whether by leverage or other forms of structured trickery. "The financial markets are beginning to ask whether Germans can afford all this help. We must not risk the creditworthiness of the German state," he said.


The best-read story in today’s Handelsblatt is the mounting rebellion against the EFSF in the Bundesrat, the German senate representing the interests of the regions. While this chamber does not have the power to block budget deals, it has begun to express deep alarm about the drift of events.


Marcel Huber, Bavaria’s Staatskanzleichef, gave an explicit warning that the Free State of Bavaria will not take one step further towards an EMU fiscal union or debt pool.


“A collectivisation of debts will under no circumstances be accepted. We oppose credit lines for the EFSF or leveraging through the ECB. Our message is simple and clear.”


Since the existing EFSF is too small to make any material difference to the EMU debt crisis, this means that nothing has in fact been resolved. We are where we started, almost entirely reliant on the ECB to play the role of lender-of-last resort.


Can it realistically play this role after the double resignation of Axel Weber at the Bundesbank and Jurgen Stark at the ECB itself over bond purchases? Can it defy Europe’s paymaster state for long? You decide.


This great eruption of feeling in Germany has been the transforming political and strategic fact of Europe over the summer. Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble is no doubt scrambling around trying to find some formula to breach his pledge that there is no secret plan to leverage the EFSF into the stratosphere.


He will try to pretend that this is not a flagrant double-cross. But his scheming with the French is largely irrelevant at this point. Bigger events are rolling over him. If he really thinks he can dupe the Bundestag yet again, he is out of his mind. And will soon be out of office.


As Bundestag president Norbert Lammert said yesterday, lawmakers had a nasty feeling that they had been "bounced" into backing far-reaching demands. This can never be allowed to happen again. He warned too that Germany's legislature would not give up its fiscal sovereignty to any EU body.


In a sense, the Bundestag vote was much like the ruling by the Constitutional Court earlier this month. It too said "Yes" to the bail-out machinery, but that was not relevant fact. What mattered was the Court’s implicit warning that Germany had reached the outer boundaries of EU integration, that German democracy is under threat, and its explicit warning that the Bundestag’s fiscal powers could not be alienated to Brussels.


Something profound has changed. Germans have begun to sense that the preservation of their own democracy and rule of law is in conflict with demands from Europe. They must choose one or the other.


Yet Europe and the world are so used to German self-abnegation for the EU Project – so used to the teleological destiny of ever-closer Union – that they cannot seem to grasp the fact. It reminds me of 1989 and the establishment failure to understand the Soviet game was up.


Our own Chancellor George Osborne has fallen into this trap. I can entirely understand why he is calling for quick moves towards EMU fiscal union, but such an outcome is not on the table.


Repeat after me:


THERE WILL BE NO FISCAL UNION.


THERE WILL BE NO EUROBONDS.


THERE WILL BE NO DEBT POOL.


THERE WILL BE NO EU TREASURY.


THERE WILL BE NO FISCAL TRANSFERS IN PERPETUITY.


THERE WILL BE A STABILITY UNION – OR NO MONETARY UNION.


Get used to it. This is the political reality of Europe, since nothing of importance can be done without Germany. All else is wishful thinking, clutching at straws, and evasion. If this means the euro will shed some members or blow apart – as it almost certainly does – then the rest of the world must prepare for the day.


It has certainly been an electrifying few weeks.


I happened to be in the room with a group of Nobel economists in Lindau last month when German President Christian Wulff lashed out at Europe, accusing the ECB of violating its mandate and subverting the Lisbon Treaty.


“I regard the huge buy-up of bonds of individual states by the ECB as legally and politically questionable. Article 123 of the Treaty on the EU’s workings prohibits the ECB from directly purchasing debt instruments, in order to safeguard the central bank’s independence,” he said.


“This prohibition only makes sense if those responsible do not get around it by making substantial purchases on the secondary market,” he said.


Mr Wulff said Germany itself risks being engulfed by escalating debts. Who will “rescue the rescuers?” as the dominoes keep falling, he asked.


"Solidarity is the core of the European Idea, but it is a misunderstanding to measure solidarity in terms of willingness to act as guarantor or to incur shared debts.


"With whom would you be willing to take out a joint loan, or stand as guarantor? For your own children? Hopefully yes. For more distant relations it gets a bit more difficult."


More distant relations?


“All I heard was Germany, Germany, Germany. There was nothing about Europe. It was astonishing,” said Myron Scholes, the winner of the 1997 Nobel Prize.


Indeed it was. Fellow laureate Joe Stiglitz said that if President Wulff’s views reflected the outlook of the German government, monetary union would have collapsed already.


Well yes. Quite.



Hallmark creates unemployment cards to send to laid-off workers

Getprev
What do you say to a friend who's just been laid off? Try sending a greeting card instead.

With national unemployment sticking around 9%, Hallmark -- long in the business of marking holidays and special occasions -- has come out with a line of "encouragement" cards geared for people out of work.

Call it a sign of the times.

One card depicts animals clad in business attire queuing up outside an unemployment office. "It's hard to know what to say at a sensitive time like this," goes the message. "How about, 'I'm buying!'"

Another urges: "Don't think of it as losing youGetprevr job. Think of it as a time-out between stupid bosses."

Hallmark Creative Director Derek McCracken told NPR's All Things Considered that the idea for producing unemployment cards came from the company's own customers.

"They sent us letters. They phoned it in. They asked their retailers, you know, in their neighborhood, where do I find a card that said this?" McCracken said. "Loss of a job, like any loss, is a grieving process."

A Hallmark spokesman told the AFP that the company didn't expect the cards to be blockbusters but will fill a "relevant and niche consumer need."

The eight cards, which range from funny to groaningly sentimental, retail for $3.49.

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-- Shan Li

Photos: Hallmark unemployment cards. Credit: Hallmark

The Money Flow From Households to Health Care Providers

Uwe E. Reinhardt is an economics professor at Princeton. He has some financial interests in the health care field.

My last post, “The Role of Prices in Health Care,” contained a chart connecting health spending with health income. One reader commented:

The graph misses a very major, and growing, component of the U.S. health care system. In between “the rest of society” and the “owners of health care resources” there is not only the “health care system” but also the United States government (unless we view the government as one of those resources). This is sapping a not insignificant portion of the resources that could and should otherwise be devoted to the provision of actual health care services.

Today’s Economist

Perspectives from expert contributors.

I am not sure just what to make of this. Is the argument that government is a sinkhole that absorbs “a not insignificant portion of the resources” that could otherwise be devoted to health care proper? Are there not other intermediaries, such as private insurers? Or is the argument that government as a public provider of health insurance to millions of Americans siphons off financial resources and returns no benefits to society, while private insurers do?

Consider the chart below. It illustrates that the flow of money through health care in the United States is complicated, with many detours on the way from households, which ultimately pay for all of the nation’s health care, to providers. Along the way are a number of pumping stations, employers among them.

Perspectives from expert contributors.

Naturally, the providers of health care receive less than what households originally contributed to finance health care. Like private insurers, public insurers are pumping stations along the way that keep some of the money to finance their own operations. And both the public and private pumping stations provide society benefits in return, namely, access to health care when needed and the peace of mind that the family will not go broke over medical bills from a major illness.

Readers who seek to get a feel for the dollars flowing through this piping system — $2.6 trillion in 2010 — can find insight in Table 16 of the most recent National Health Expenditure Projections published by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the Department of Health and Human Services (referred to hereafter as C.M.S. data).

This next chart conveys an idea of changes over time in the money flow through major public and private insurance programs and through out-of-pocket payments by patients. It should be noted that the fraction of Medicaid in this chart includes the federal match, which is about two-thirds of total Medicaid spending. It is a fact that government insurance programs have played an increasing role in the overall health care money flow. Their role in the future is now a fiercely debated issue in the political arena.

To get a rough indication of what fraction of the money flow is retained by the various pumping stations in the money flow, it is helpful to compare what the C.M.S. actuaries call National Health Expenditures, or N.H.E., with what they call Personal Health Care Expenditures, or P.H.C., a component. N.H.E. includes all outlays on health care, including research and construction. It also includes what the intermediate pumping stations (i.e., public and private health insurers) retain for their operations. P.H.C., on the other hand, represents only what the providers of health care received from the various intermediaries and directly from patients.

This next chart exhibits personal health spending as a percentage of total national health spending for three health insurers: private insurers, Medicare and Medicaid. These data are calculated from Tables 3 and 5 of the C.M.S. data. These percentages suggest that a relatively high share of the funds Congress and state legislators appropriate for the two largest government programs, Medicaid and Medicaid, becomes revenue for the providers of health care.

According to a C.M.S. actuary, for the traditional Medicare program excluding money contributed by Medicare to private Medicare Advantage plans on behalf of beneficiaries choosing those plans, as much as 98 cents is paid to providers for every $1 appropriated by Congress for Medicare. (The 93.8 percent shown in the next chart includes Medicare dollars channeled through Medicare Advantage plans.)

In fairness, it must be added that traditional Medicare basically sets prices and then just pays bills. It makes no active attempt to manage care (utilization controls, disease management, coordinating care and so on), because it has not been allowed by Congress to do so. It is almost as if Congress did not want traditional Medicare to be a prudent purchaser of heath care for the elderly.

From the viewpoint of prudent purchasing, most economists would probably judge these prices too low. On the other hand, the fact that traditional Medicare just pays bills more or less passively may be precisely the reason that it is still so popular among the elderly. Traditional Medicare still offers beneficiaries completely free choice of providers and therapy — a degree of freedom that many younger Americans in insurance plans with limited networks of providers no longer enjoy.

The ratio of P.H.C. to N.H.E. for private insurance reflects what is known as the medical loss ratio, or M.L.R., on which I have written a post previously. It is the fraction of the premium an insurer pays out for “health benefits.” The overall average of 88.3 percent for private insurance includes M.L.R.’s ranging all the way from a low 55 percent for small insurers selling policies to individuals and small employers, mainly through insurance brokers, to M.L.R.’s above 90 percent for large insurers performing merely administrative services (e.g., negotiating fees or claims processing) for self-insuring large employers.

The ratios in the last chart should not be confused with the overall administrative overhead of health care in the United States, a topic already touched on in an earlier post. A public or private health insurance program not only has its own operating costs but visits substantial administrative costs on the providers of health care, mainly on billing properly for services rendered.

I shall comment on these additional overhead costs in a future post.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Solyndra bankruptcy is aberration, solar power executives say

Solarsmudrichpedroncelli09

National media "chatter" surrounding the much-publicized bankruptcy of Fremont, Calif., solar panel producer Solyndra Inc. and the loss of $535 million in federal loan guarantees is hurting more successful renewable energy companies and obscuring the new industry's success, solar executives said.

In a conference call Thursday, members of Californians for Clean Energy & Jobs, a coalition of green businesses and environmentalists, said they wanted to put the Solyndra scandal into context. The controversy led to high-profile hearings in Congress and widespread Republican party criticism of the Obama administration.

The solar executives stressed that solar panel costs have plummeted, fueling increased residential and commercial demand for renewable energy. Additionally, the solar industry has come up with creative financing programs that allow homeowners to get off the utility electric grid without having to invest large amounts of money in buying rooftop solar systems.

"Solar power is becoming more affordable every day," with costs down 30% in the last year, said Arno Harris, chief executive of Recurrent Energy in San Francisco, a large developer of solar photovoltaic panel projects. "We need to look beyond the failure of one company and see the tremendous success."

Solyndra, whose high-tech plant was visited by President Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, made less than two-tenths of 1% of solar panels on the market, said David Hochschild, vice president of Solaria Corp. in Fremont, which makes photovoltaic modules. The solar industry, he said, has grown by an average of 65% per year the last decade.

Sungevity Solar Home Specialists of Oakland has tripled the number of employees to 300 this year, said President Danny Kennedy. The company puts solar systems on homes without requiring any upfront payments from customers. It then leases the equipment, usually at far less cost than the electric bills they used to get, Kennedy said.

"This is a very affordable way for consumers to control costs at home, particularly in this uncertain environment," said Lynn Jurich, president of SunRun Inc. of San Francisco, which also installs and leases home solar systems.

Despite its growth and success, the solar industry still needs support from government in the form of tax credits, loan guarantees and subsidies, the executives said.

"Those programs are critical in generating success," said Hochschild. "Solar is on the cusp of playing a large role in mainstream markets."

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Solyndra's collapse is a tale of too much dazzle

Obama advisers raised warning flags before Solyndra bankruptcy

Obama administration approves 2 solar loans worth $1 billion

-- Marc Lifsher

Photo: Solar panel construction at the Sacramento Municipal Utility District in 2009. Credit: Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press.

 

Americans are saving more in 401(k) retirement plans

Golf-1 
If there's a bright side to the troubled economy and ever-rising medical costs, perhaps this is it: A new survey shows American workers are saving more in their 401(k)s to fortify themselves against the financial gloom they see around them.

Over the last year, 41% of people with 401(k) retirement accounts have boosted their contribution rates (up from 31% last year), while 11% expect to stash away the maximum $16,500 allowed under federal tax law (it was 8% a year ago), according to an annual survey by Mercer, a unit of Marsh & McLennan Cos.

The change is driven largely by deepening concerns about the economy.

Of those surveyed, 45% fear losing their jobs (up from 36% a year ago) while 44% expect to delay retirement (it was 35% last year). And the seemingly unstoppable rise in retiree health costs is registering with American workers: 36% said saving for healthcare is a major goal, up from 24% a year earlier.

"Participants seem to be saying that they can no longer rely on market performance, their employer or the government to build their retirement savings for them, but must take control of every aspect they can in order to provide for a successful retirement," said Suzanne Nolan, marketing and communications director for Mercer’s U.S. outsourcing business.

It's positive that people are taking greater control of their finances -- even if for depressing reasons -- but it's only part of the story.

The survey depicts Americans who already participate in 401(k) plans -- i.e., a self-selected group that tends to be financially aware and motivated. And to contribute to a 401(k), you have to have a job in the first place.

The bigger risk is for the millions of Americans who have little retirement savings, or who have lost their jobs and are raiding their nest eggs to buy food or pay the mortgage.

For them, their retirement hopes may rest on the ability of the economy to turn around.

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Typical 30-year mortgage in U.S. back above 4%, Freddie Mac says 

Smart money is a rare positive for the stock market 

-- Walter Hamilton

Photo: Golf course at Homestead Resort in Midway, Utah.

Peoria Got a Raise

CATHERINE RAMPELL
CATHERINE RAMPELL

Dollars to doughnuts.

In the first quarter of this year, the average weekly wage in the United States increased by 5.2 percent, to $935, compared to the same period last year. But in Peoria County, Ill., workers received an average raise of 18.9 percent, to $944.

Dollars to doughnuts.

That’s according to a report released Thursday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics on employment and pay for the 322 largest counties.

The county with the biggest cut in average weekly wages was Williamson County, Tex., where wages fell 3.8 percent, to $953.

In raw dollar figures, New York County (Manhattan) once again had the highest average weekly wage, at $2,634, and the biggest raise, at $222 (9.2 percent).

The county with the biggest increase in employment was also in the Midwest: Elkhart County, Ind., which gained 6.2 percent more jobs over the year, compared to the national average of 1.2 percent job growth. Elkhart County was primarily buoyed by manufacturing, which added 5,125 jobs over the year (12.4 percent).

On the other hand, Sacramento County, Calif., lost the highest percentage of jobs of all the major counties. Its employment fell by 1.6 percent year over year.

Bank of America to charge $5 monthly fee for debit card purchases

DebitswipeSeattle2009APElaineThompson

Most Bank of America customers will soon see a new charge on their statements -- $5 for any month in which they use a BofA debit card to make a purchase.

Consumers should prepare for more such charges, analysts say, as big banks strive to recover revenue they have lost to financial reforms adopted in the aftermatch of the economic meltdown.

The new Bank of America fee will be phased in early next year, said Anne Pace, a spokeswoman for BofA, the nation's largest retail bank.

Customers will still be able to use their cards at the bank's automated teller machines without being charged, the bank said Thursday.

They also can make debit purchases free if they have a mortgage from Bank of America or if they have a total of $20,000 on deposit at Bank of America and in certain Merrill Lynch accounts (you may recall that Bank of America's corporate parent bought Merrill Lynch as the financial crisis set in).

The bank, like others, has been testing ways to recover debit-card revenue that is going away because of new regulations.

Banks previously had charged merchants 44 cents on average every time they accepted a debit card for a purchase. Under new regulations that take effect Saturday, banks with more than $10 billion in assets will be able to charge merchants only 21 cents to 24 cents per transaction.

Bank of America and other big banks have said they will compensate by charging customers. "The economics of offering debit cards have changed," Pace said in an interview.

Merchant trade groups, which had engaged in a long and bitter lobbying war over the swipe" fees charged for debit-card purchases, said the changes would result in consumers paying lower prices for goods and services.

“Hidden fees are bad for consumers and bad for competition,” Jennifer Hatcher, vice president of government relations at the Food Marketing Institute, said in a statement.

“While the banks seem to try to skim every penny they can from their customers, retailers are doing everything that they can to educate consumers and protect them from hidden debit fees.”

Bank of America only plans to ding customers for $5 if they actually buy something with a debit card in any given month: no purchase, no fee. The fee applies no matter how many purchases are made in a month, Pace said, so a single purchase or 100 purchases, for example, would result in the same $5 charge. 

 RELATED:

Debit cards poised to get much costlier

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-- E. Scott Reckard

Photo: A customer swipes a debit card to make a purchase in Seattle. Credit: Associated Press / Elaine Thompson

Job Losses Across the Developed World

CATHERINE RAMPELL
CATHERINE RAMPELL

Dollars to doughnuts.

Across the developed world, the biggest job losses in the 2008-9 downturn were in mining, manufacturing and utilities, according to new data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Dollars to doughnuts.

Here’s a chart showing job losses and gains by sector for a selection of developed countries. Bars above the horizontal axis show industries that added jobs, and bars below the axis show industries that lost jobs. The red bars refer to jobs lost in mining, manufacturing and utilities:

Across the entire O.E.C.D., job losses in this sector equaled 35.3 percent of total employment changes in 2008 and 2009.

The biggest gains, by contrast, were in community, personal and social services (the light blue bars).

This is probably no surprise to people who have been following job trends in the United States, where the health industry has been going gangbusters in both good and bad economies. But actually growth across the broader sector has been smaller in the United States than elsewhere in the developed world.

In the United States, growth in community, personal and social services totaled 8.2 percent of overall employment changes in 2008-9, whereas across all O.E.C.D. member countries this supersector added jobs that equaled 18.3 percent of total job changes during the same period.

Consumer Confidential: BofA fee, casino bust, National Coffee Day

Bank of America fees
Here's your the-very-thought-of-you Thursday roundup of consumer news from around the Web:

--Another day, another new bank fee. This time it's Bank of America, which reportedly plans to charge customers a $5 monthly fee for making debit-card purchases starting early next year. The fee will apply to customers with various checking accounts during any month they use their debit card to make a purchase. The fee will not apply to customers who do not use their debit card to make a purchase or who only use it to make ATM transactions. BofA is trying to cushion revenue losses it expects to incur from new caps on the fees merchants pay when a customer uses a debit card at their stores. In June, the Federal Reserve Board finalized rules capping such fees at 24 cents per transaction, compared with a current average of 44 cents.

--Luck be a liposuction tonight. The Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resort plans to give $25,000 worth of plastic surgery to a winner from a player's card contest. The lucky one can mix and match surgeries including breast enhancements, tummy tucks, liposuction and face lifts until the total hits $25,000. According to the website Infoplasticsurgery.com, an arm lift can cost $5,000 to $6,500; Botox treatments range from $200 to $400 per area; breast augmentation surgery costs from $5,000 to $8,000; chin or cheek implants cost $3,000 to $4,500; and liposuction can range from $2,500 to $10,000.

--It's National Coffee Day (whoo-hoo!). And to celebrate, our friends at 7-Eleven, Krispy Kreme and Dunkin' Donuts are giving away free or discounted coffee. And if you're the sort of person who believes "I need a cup of coffee to start my day," you're not alone. Three out of five Americans think that about their first morning cup, according to a survey commissioned by 7-Eleven. Moreover, your career could dictate whether you're more likely chug coffee during the day, according to a Dunkin' Donuts/Career Builder survey. The top five professions likely to have a serious java jones are: scientist/lab Technician, marketing/public relations professional, educator/administrator, editor/writer and healthcare administrator. I'm sure newspaper columnist falls somewhere in there as well.

-- David Lazarus

Photo: Your BofA debit card may soon cost you $5 a month. Credit: Peter Foley / EPA

 

Wall Street: Stocks and gold bounce

Wall Street
Gold: Trading now at $1,622 an ounce, up 0.3% from Wednesday. Dow Jones industrial average: Trading now at 11,178.20, up 1.5% from Wednesday.

Good morning. Investors are feeling hopeful this morning after a vote in Germany and new data in the U.S. on unemployment and economic growth.

HP turns to Goldman. To deal with potentially hostile activist investors, Hewlett-Packard has hired a company that has experience with hostile activist investors, Goldman Sachs. 

Disappointed by banks. Investor Stephen Ross collected money to invest in banks, but his analysis of banks has disappointed him so much that he has given the money back.

Lewis on California. After providing probing analysis of what is wrong with the economies of Iceland and Greece, Michael Lewis now turns his attention to California.

A picture of protesters. Can't make it to the Wall Street protests yourself -- here is a photo gallery of 50 of the protesters camped in lower Manhattan.

-- Nathaniel Popper in New York
Twitter.com/nathanielpopper

Photo credit: Stan Honda / Getty Images

Second quarter economic growth revised up as jobless claims fall

Boeing Chief Executive Jim McNerney The economy grew at an annual rate of 1.3% from April through June, an anemic but slightly better pace than the most recent estimate of 1%, federal officials said Thursday.

The revised data on total economic output, also known as gross domestic product, narrowly beat expectations and came as the Labor Department reported another hopeful signal -- weekly claims for unemployment insurance dropped by 37,000 last week to 391,000, the lowest figure since early April.

Economists say claims below 400,000 are a positive sign for job growth. The unemployment rate was 9.1% in August after the economy failed to add any new jobs.

The two government reports indicate fears of another recession are unwarranted right now, said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist for the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi in New York.

"The economy is not teetering on the edge of a cliff, getting ready to fall over into a recession," he said.

The definition of a recession is two straight quarters of negative growth. In the first three months of the year, the economy barely grew, expanding at an annual rate of just 0.4%, leading to fears of double-dip recession as the economy struggled to recover from the deep downturn that technically ended in June 2009.

The Commerce Department originally had estimated second-quarter economic growth at 1.3% in July, but revised the figure down to 1% last month.

Despite the somewhat improving outlook, major corporate chief executives aren't very optimistic about the direction of the economy. Their expectations for sales, capital expenditures and adding U.S. jobs dropped significantly in the third quarter, according to findings released Thursday from the Business Roundtable's CEO Economic Outlook Survey.

"While we still see strong business fundamentals in America, the quarterly survey results reflect increased uncertainty among CEOs concerning the economic climate and business environment, said Boeing Co. Chief Executive Jim McNerney, chairman of the group.

For example, the survey found that 36% of CEOs expected to add employees in the U.S. in the next six months, down from 51% in the second-quarter survey; 24% expected to lay off workers over the same period, up from 11%.

McNerney and the group's president, John Engler, said that although the outlook by corporate leaders was down, they were not anticipating a recession. The survey's overall index showed expectations of positive growth.

"We’re still in the expansion category, albeit at a slower anticipated rate than the last quarter," McNerney said.

The CEOs survey estimated that GDP would grow by 1.8% in 2011, down from a projection of 2.8% in the second quarter survey.

 RELATED:

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 -- Jim Puzzanghera

 Photo: Boeing Co. Chief Executive Jim McNerney. Credit: Bloomberg.

 

Typical 30-year mortgage in U.S. back above 4%, Freddie Mac says

Freddie sign - AP - Pablo Martinez MonsivaisBlink and you may have missed it -- the average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage rate has crept higher since plunging to a record low of less than 4% late last week.

Freddie Mac, which polls lenders across the nation each Monday through Wednesday about rates, said Thursday that the 30-year loan was being offered at 4.01% on average for solid borrowers who paid 0.7% of the loan balance upfront in lender fees and points.

In the Western U.S., including California, the typical rate was lower at 3.95% early this week. Both figures are records for the survey, which was started in 1971.

Well-qualified borrowers who shop around often find slightly better rates and it's also an option to reduce the interest rate on a loan by paying more upfront points.

Freddie pegged the average rate at 4.09% in its releases for Sept. 15 and Sept 22. Those surveys missed the record low set when the yield on the 10-year Treasury  note, a benchmark for fixed mortgage rates,  dropped to 1.72% Sept. 22.

That same day, many gauges showed the average rate for a 30-year fixed-rate loan well under 4% on average. The direction of both mortgage rates and Treasury yields has been up ever since, with the 10-year Treasury yield back above 2% this Tuesday and Wednesday, and edging higher still early Thursday.

John West, a senior loan officer at Catalyst Lending in Tustin, said he spent last weekend on the phone explaining to clients that rates already had risen again. One factor was "pipeline management," he said: lenders quoting higher rates because they already were overwhelmed with applications to refinance.

"We’re all issuing a collective sigh of relief that rates have, at least temporarily, gone back up this week," West said. "We all need time to regroup and get caught up."

There was no respite, however, in jumbo mortgages, the home loans banks keep on their books because they are too large to be sold to or guaranteed by government-controlled mortgage firms like Freddie Mac.

While jumbo rates were, as always, higher than those for smaller mortgages, they continued to fall this week, West said.

"I have a stack of jumbo loan applications from borrowers who had been sitting on the sidelines and balking at refinancing until now," he said.

RELATED:

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Home prices, steady over summer, may resume descent

-- E. Scott Reckard

Photo: Monument sign at Freddie Mac's McLean, Va., headquarters. Credit: Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press

German vote and economic data send stocks up

Stocks shot up this morning after investors got a number of encouraging signals about the European financial crisis and the U.S. economy.

The Dow Jones industrial average was up 219.98 points, or 2%, to 11,230.88 in early trading.

The German parliament voted overwhelmingly today to strengthen a European bailout fund for some of the European Union's weaker members, despite popular opposition to the plan. Investors had worried that a German rejection would scuttle hopes for a solution to the continent's debt crisis.

Leading indexes were recently up 1.8% in Germany and 1.6% in France.

Meanwhile, in the United States, the Commerce Department announced that the economy had grown faster than previously estimated in the second quarter of this year -- at a rate of 1.3%. This was also faster than economists had predicted.

A separate report showed that the number of people filing for unemployment benefits last week dropped by 37,000 from the previous week, to the lowest level since April.

Economists were cautious in taking too much hope from the new data. The data about economic growth are from the second quarter and much of the concern now is on falling economic activity in the current third quarter and moving forward. The Labor Department warned that the unemployment figures out today were likely skewed by a quirk of the calendar.

"Nothing in the data suggests that the economy has deviated much from [a] shallow growth trajectory," Steve Ricchiuto, the chief economist at Mizuho Securities, wrote in a note to clients this morning.

The rising stock prices this morning came after two down days in the markets.

RELATED:

German media mock U.S. advice on debt crisis

Smart money is a rare positive for the stock market

-- Nathaniel Popper in New York
Twitter.com/nathanielpopper


Smart money is a rare positive for the stock market

WallSt2-GettyImages
 
Looking for a silver lining amid the stock market's recent travails?

One Wall Street veteran offers this: An index measuring the trading patterns of institutional investors paints a rather bullish picture of the market going forward.

The smart money index -- so called because it measures the trading of supposedly in-the-know institutional investors, such as hedge funds -- indicates that the Standard & Poor's 500 index could reach roughly 1,325. That would be a 15% advance from the 1,151.06 at which it closed Wednesday.

The smart money index bottomed in mid-August, along with the S&P 500, but has rallied since then while the actual index has stagnated.

"While the smart money index is not one of our primary metrics, it has been a useful guide in gauging bottoms," Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank, wrote in a note to clients.

The index places extra emphasis on trading patterns in the final half-hour of each day, which is dominated by institutional investors. (Big-money players often place their bets late in the day after assessing economic news and market developments.)

Conversely, the index de-emphasizes trading in the first 30 minutes of the day, when activity from small investors is heaviest. (That's when online brokerages execute orders that individual investors -- the so-called dumb money -- have placed the previous night.)

The logic is that the dumb money will eventually follow the smart money as soon as the trends that institutions saw early on become obvious to the hoi polloi.

Small investors can only hope things play out like they did two years ago, when the smart money index presaged the end of the bear market that was induced by the global financial crisis. The index rallied in advance of the March low, signaling that a sustainable advance was on the way.

"In a market with few technical positives, the smart money index is a standout," Ablin said.

RELATED:

Small investors feel -- what else? -- gloomy

Fed to monitor Facebook, Twitter to snoop on critics?

Reports of boom-era mortgage fraud on rise

-- Walter Hamilton

Photo: Getty Images

Argentina and a eurozone breakup


Sigh! Some readers, commenting on my column for this morning's Daily Telegraph on the eurozone crisis, say the arguments are right but I've reached the wrong conclusions in thinking that the best outcome for the UK is for Europe to move closer towards fiscal union.


Actually, I didn't really say that but what I did argue is that the consequences of a disorderly breakup or series of defaults would be economically catastrophic for both Europe and us here in Britain. There is good reason to doubt the legitimacy of the estimates recently produced by UBS. I too don't think the effect would be that large (up to 50pc of GDP for weaker countries. UBS says), but we are only arguing about differences of degree here.


Mass liquidation would be the order of the day, which might be OK if you don't work, own agricultural land and have all your savings under the bed in gold bars, but for everyone else would be an economic calamity to match that of the 1930s, and we all know what that led to.


As I say, once the omelette is made, it cannot be unscrambled without consequences. Comparisons with Argentina, which is now apparently booming again after abandoning its dollar peg, are invalid. For starters, the immediate consequences for Argentina were horrific – a collapse in GDP, the destruction of middle class savings and pensions, and so on.


But the real point is that Argentina was not in a currency union, which meant that the banking crisis associated with the collapse of the sovereign was largely confined to Argentina. So called "spill over" effects were limited. In Europe, the banking system is now so heavily integrated that for one part of it to go down imperils the rest. Credit across Europe would contract violently, causing a depression.


What is more, Argentina devalued and defaulted against a backdrop of relatively benign external conditions. The world economy was growing strongly, and a commodities boom came along to supercharge the recovery. None of that's likely to be true for the European periphery, which in any case, is in far worse shape in terms of the size of national debts and current account deficits than Argentina was back then.


I hope that answers some of my critics.



What Would It Take to Save Europe?

Simon Johnson, the former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, is the co-author of “13 Bankers.”

Official Washington was gripped last weekend by euphoria, at least briefly, as people attending the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund began to talk about how much money it would take to stabilize the situation in Europe. At least one éminence grise suggested that 1.5 trillion euros should do the trick; others were more inclined to err on the side of caution, and their estimates ran as high as four trillion euros.

Today’s Economist

Perspectives from expert contributors.

This is a lot of money. Germany’s annual gross domestic product is only about 2.5 trillion euros, and the combined G.D.P. of the entire euro zone is about 9.5 trillion euros. The idea is that providing a huge package of financial support would awe the markets into submission –- meaning that people would stop selling their holdings of Italian or Spanish debt, and thus stop pushing up interest rates.

Perspectives from expert contributors.

Ideally, investors would also give Greece and Portugal some time to find their way to back to growth.

But this is the wrong way to think about the problem. The issue is not money in the form of external financial support, whether provided by the I.M.F. or other countries to parts of the European Union. The real questions are whether Italy will get complete and unfettered access to the European Central Bank, and when we will know.

The big-package approach to economic stabilization was most famously demonstrated in the 1994-95 Mexican crisis. With Mexico’s currency under great pressure, President Ernesto Zedillo and Finance Minister Guillermo Ortiz arranged a $45 billion loan, a large part of which came from the United States.

This may look small today, but it was then seen as a large amount of support. President Zedillo famously remarked that when markets overreact, policy should in turn overreact — meaning, in this context, put more money on the table than is needed. When the financial firepower made available is overwhelming, as it was in the Mexican case, it does not have to be used — in fact, the Mexican loan was repaid in about a year.

But this version of Mexican events skips an important detail. While the external financial support helped prevent the complete collapse of the currency, the Mexican peso did depreciate significantly, which helped immensely. Before the crisis, Mexico had a large current account deficit: it was importing more than it was exporting, and the difference was covered by capital inflows (mostly foreigners willing to lend to the Mexican government).

When the peso fell in value, exporting from Mexico became much more attractive; an export boom of this kind always helps close the current account deficit and stimulate the economy in a sensible manner.

Important parts of the euro zone, like Portugal, Greece and perhaps Italy, badly need a reduction in their real costs of production. If their currencies were independent, this could be achieved by a depreciation of their market value. But this is not an option within the euro zone, and it is within the zone that they need to become more competitive.

These countries could cut nominal wages — a course of action being pursued, for example, in Latvia. But Latvia is a special case for many reasons, including its desire to become much closer with the euro zone, which it aspires to join. It is unlikely that any Western European government making such a proposal would last long.

Unable to move the exchange rate and unwilling to cut wages, the Portuguese government is embarked on an innovative course of “fiscal devaluation,” meaning it will cut payroll taxes, to reduce the cost of labor, while increasing the value added tax, or VAT (a tax on consumption), as a way to maintain fiscal revenues.

Unfortunately, “innovative” in the context of stabilization policies often means “unlikely to succeed” — and the precise implementation of this plan, with some very complex details, seems fraught with danger.

Europe needs a new fiscal governance mechanism, to be sure. Why would Germany — or anyone else — trust Italy under Silvio Berlusconi with a big loan or unlimited access to credit at the European Central Bank?

Greece and some other countries have serious budget difficulties. Most of the European periphery also faces a current account crisis, and something must be done to increase exports or reduce imports, or both.

If the exchange rate can’t depreciate, wages won’t be cut and “fiscal devaluation” proves unworkable, activity in these economies will need to slow a great deal in order to reduce imports and bring the current account closer to balance – unless you (or the Germans) are willing to extend these countries large amounts of unconditional credit for the indefinite future.

And if these economies slow, their ability to pay their government debts will increasingly be called into question. Last week the I.M.F. cut the growth forecast for Italy in 2012 to 0.3 percent. With interest rates rising toward 6 percent, it is easy to imagine Italy’s debt relative to G.D.P. climbing even further than in the still-benign official projections.

If Italy or any other euro-zone country were in good shape and could pay its debts, the European Central Bank could provide ample short-term support, through buying up bonds to prevent interest rates from reaching unreasonable levels.

The euro is a reserve currency — meaning investors around the world hold it as part of their rainy-day funds — and all European debt is denominated in euros. In Mexico in 1994, for example, much of its debt was in dollars; in such a situation, a foreign loan can help stabilize a crisis, because it provides reserves to the central bank, and this removes the fear that the exchange rate will depreciate excessively. But even in such a case the right policies have to be put in place.”

If Italy cannot pay its debt, then the European Central Bank has no business lending to it. The Europeans have to decide for themselves: Is Italy’s fiscal policy reasonable and responsible? If yes, provide full support as needed — from within the euro zone. If not, then find another way forward.

But please get a move on with this decision.

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