Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Rodeo Drive retailers come out in support of Beverly Hills subway stop

Trying to dispel a wave of negative publicity, Rodeo Drive retailers say they don't care if shoppers arrive by Rolls-Royce or subway.   Rodeo

A group made up of merchants, landowners and hotel operators from the famous shopping destination has come out in favor of a proposed subway station near the famous shopping street in Beverly Hills.

Rodeo Drive Committee President Jim Jahant said Wednesday that the association had voted its support for the station and believed it would increase tourism and shopping with less traffic in the area. 

"Simply put, the vast majority of merchants and landowners are not against a subway station and, in fact, welcome the concept," he said. 

That's a change from earlier news reports, which said many retailers were worried that the proposed station at Wilshire Boulevard and Beverly Drive would cause a construction nightmare and bring the wrong kind of crowd to the ultra-high-end area.

The long-awaited, 9-mile Westside subway extension is projected to cost $5.34 billion if completed by 2022.

RELATED:

School officials oppose subway extension under Beverly Hills High

Luxury shoppers are making a comeback

-- Andrea Chang

Photo: Shoppers pose with a Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG sports car on Rodeo Drive.

Credit: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times

 

Pending cuts in Pentagon budget have investors wary

Ngc

Seeing the call from Congress for steep cuts in the Pentagon budget, investors have grown wary of defense stocks in recent weeks.

The dollar amount has yet to be decided, but few dispute that the cuts will amount to hundreds of billions of dollars over the next decade. That translates into fewer sales of military hardware for the nation’s largest defense contractors.

Investors have taken notice. While the Standard & Poor’s 500 index hit its summer high on July 7, it has fallen 7.2% since, through midday Wednesday. However, since July 7 the S&P's aerospace-stock group is down 12.4%.

The nation’s three largest aerospace companies -- Century City-based Northrop Grumman Corp., Boeing Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp. -- are all down in trading since the beginning of this week. And Motley Fool recently reported that hedge funds have begun dumping defense stocks.

Wall Street isn’t alone its concern. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta wrote a memo Wednesday to Pentagon personnel addressing the pitfalls of budget cuts:

Spending choices must be based on sound strategy and policy. In the past, such as after the Vietnam War, our government applied cuts to defense across the board, resulting in a force that was undersized and underfunded relative to its missions and responsibilities. This process has historically led to outcomes that weaken rather than strengthen our national security -- and which ultimately cost our nation more when it must quickly rearm to confront new threats.

I am determined not to repeat the mistakes of the past.

RELATED:

Op-ed: What about a war ceiling?

Aerospace suppliers brace for defense cuts

Boeing earnings rise, Northrop's fall in second quarter

-- W.J. Hennigan

twitter.com/wjhenn

Photo: Northrop Grumman Corp.'s headquarters in Century City. Credit: Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times

Money market funds see $103-billion outflow amid debt drama

Big investors' fears over the federal debt-ceiling drama triggered a near-record outflow of cash from money market mutual funds over the last week.

Apparently worried that some money funds could suffer losses if the Treasury defaulted on some of its debts, investors yanked a net $103.2 billion from the funds in the seven days ended Tuesday, data tracker iMoneyNet Inc. said.

That was close to the record $120.4 billion that exited the funds in the week ended Sept. 23, 2008, amid the financial system collapse.

On a percentage basis, this week’s decline was larger -- amounting to 3.9% of total fund assets of $2.63 trillion. The 2008 outflow was 3.5% of assets at the time.

Almost all of the money that left the funds this week was pulled by institutional investors, not individuals, iMoneyNet data show.

“It was a direct result of the debt ceiling debate and fear of default,” said Pete Crane, head of money-fund research firm Crane Data in Westborough, Mass.

But with the debt ceiling lifted after an 11th-hour compromise in Congress, cash began to flow back into money funds on Tuesday, Crane said.

Where did the money go when it left the funds? “Banks no doubt were the main beneficiaries,” Crane said.

Because banks can offer unlimited federal deposit insurance on non-interest-paying business accounts, institutional investors could easily park cash in those accounts with no risk of principal loss.

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Investors fear new economic downturn

Moody's and Fitch keep U.S. credit rating at AAA for now

Gold soars to yet another record high as investors seek a haven

-- Tom Petruno

Good news for Californians with preexisting medical conditions

Doctor Image New Californians who rely on safety-net health insurance are getting an unexpected break on their rates.

The lucky recipients get their coverage through a little-known public program, started last fall, for people with preexisting medical conditions.

The federal government foots most of the bill and recently gave the state, which runs the program, permission to lower rates.

And so starting this month, the 3,500 subscribers will see their monthly insurance bills fall an average of 18%. Some will get the maximum 24% break.

And thousands more may be eligible for the lower-cost insurance offered through California’s Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan, created by the national healthcare overhaul that took effect last year.

For Kristian Magnani, an unemployed graduate student from Duarte, the rate cut will pare $70 from his monthly insurance bill, dropping it from $288 to $218. Magnani, 33, has a congenital back disorder and went without insurance for more than a year before he discovered the insurance program when it debuted in October 2010.

"I'm just trying to get by," he said. “For me, $70 a month in my pocket is huge."

The insurance plan targets individuals like Magnani who have been unable to find or afford health insurance in the individual market because of their medical conditions.

Insurers in that market can reject subscribers or charge high rates to those with even minor medical problems such as hay fever or back pain.

The new program is viewed as a temporary solution for such people until 2014, when insurers can no longer reject policyholders or charge more for those who are sick. 

"The whole purpose is to help people get out of a cycle of being uninsured," said Jeanie Esajian, a spokeswoman for the state agency that runs the program. "It keeps money in their pocket."

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U.S. employers expand health benefits coverage under reform

Paying medical bills a steep challenge for senior citizens on Medicare

Blue Shield of California to give $167 million back to some customers

-- Duke Helfand

Gender gap in science and technology jobs persists, report says

Google The deficit of women in science and technology endures, even though they tend to earn far more than their counterparts in other fields, according to the Commerce Department.

The fact that female scientists, engineers, mathematicians and technology honchos have been sorely lacking for the past decade is no surprise. Researchers from the Commerce Department’s Economics and Statistics Administration point to pervasive gender stereotyping, the absence of role models and the rarity of positions with flexibility for families as potential causes.

Although 48% of the country’s workforce is female, just 24% of women go into science and technology industries. The gender represents 40% of science employees, but makes up just 14% of workers in engineering, which has 330,000 women and more than 2 million men.

But those female employees earned about $31 an hour compared with the $19 an hour earned by women in other sectors. Men in science and technology fields draw about $36 an hour.

The percentage of college-educated women in the workforce has increased over the past decade, but they are severely underrepresented among degree-holders in science, math, technology and especially engineering. The few who do earn such degrees tend to enter unrelated industries such as education or healthcare.

“We haven’t done as well as we could to encourage young people to go into [science and technology] jobs –- particularly women –- which inhibits American innovation,” Rebecca Blank, acting Secretary of Commerce, said in a statement.

RELATED:

Female teachers may pass on math anxiety to girls, study finds

Wanted: Women as technology entrepreneurs

At Utah technology college, women are finding better-paying jobs than men

-- Tiffany Hsu

Photo: Google employees have lunch at the technology company's Irvine office. Credit: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times

Revenue rises but losses widen at Tesla electric car company

Electric car company Tesla Motors Inc. posted a loss of $58.9 million in the second quarter as it sunk money into developing its Model S sedan and a crossover that it is calling Model X.

Tesla, based in Palo Alto, is refurbishing an old Toyota factory in Fremont, where it plans to build the cars. The Model S, an all-electric luxury sedan, is expected to go on sale next year. Tesla Roadster

The loss was 53% larger than the $38.5 million the company lost in the same period a year earlier. Revenue, however, grew 105% to $58.2 million.

The gain was powered by more sales of Tesla’s Roadster sports car. The company has sold 1,840 and plans to build fewer than 700 more before the program ends next year.

Tesla’s revenue also was helped by development deals with other automakers. The company is developing the power train for the electric version of Toyota’s RAV4, which will go on sale next year.  It is also building electric drive components for a Mercedes-Benz model and the Smart fortwo.

The company said it now expects revenue to hit the $180-million to $190-million range for the year, up from previous estimates of $170 million to $185 million.

Tesla shares fell 14 cents to $27.20 on Wednesday. The stock is up 2% year-to-date.

ALSO:

A sneak peek at a prototype of Tesla's Model S

Consumer Reports rips new Civic 

Fuel economy ratings come up short 

-- Jerry Hirsch

Twitter.com/LATimesJerry

Photo: Tesla Roadster. Credit: Tesla Motors

The Truth About Fundamentals

Herewith I offer a fundamental law about fundamentals:

If a government feels a need to proclaim that its economic fundamentals are strong, they are not.

FLOYD NORRIS
FLOYD NORRIS

Notions on high and low finance.

As you may recall, we heard a lot about fundamentals when the American economy was sliding into recession in 2007 and early 2008. But the immediate impetus for formulating the law comes from Rachel Donadio’s article on Wednesday:

Notions on high and low finance.

ROME — As markets continued to hammer Italy, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi on Wednesday rebutted calls for his resignation, saying Italy’s economic fundamentals were strong and pledging that his government was “up to the task” of fostering economic growth.

Mr. Berlusconi went on to declare: “Our economy is healthy. The country is economically and financially solid.”

Stock market avoids the worst with slight rise

NYSE1-Reuters All bad things must come to an end.

That could have been the stock market’s mantra Wednesday, as share prices eked out moderate gains that helped the Dow Jones industrial average avoid its longest losing streak in more than three decades.

The Dow rose 29.82 points, or 0.3%, to 11,896.44, although that was better than met the eye because the blue-chip average overcame a 165-point sell-off early in the day. The gain put an end to the Dow’s eight-day losing streak.

Technology stocks led the advance, with the Nasdaq composite index climbing 23.83 points, or 0.9%, to 2,693.07. Bargain hunting among brand-name stocks also played a role.

MasterCard Inc. jumped 13% after the credit-card processing company's second-quarter earnings topped estimates, a sign that consumers may not be reining in spending quite as much as feared.

Economic data were mixed and did little to allay investor fears about the economy.

A private report showed service industries growing at their softest rate in July since early last year, although another report indicated that the economy added a slightly better-than-expected 114,000 private-sector jobs in June.

The market's uptick had little significance given that stocks often bounce after a protracted sell-off, and many investors are bracing for the July unemployment report, which comes out Friday.

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Job growth slows and layoffs rise to 16-month high, reports say

Money market funds see $103-billion outflow amid debt drama

Gold surges past $1,670 toward new record amid economic worries

-- Walter Hamilton

Small banks get U.S. funds to back business loans

Some federal funds aimed at encouraging community banks to step up their lending to small businesses have started flowing from Washington.

U.S. Treasury building The U.S. Treasury said Wednesday that its Small Business Lending Fund would invest $7.3 million in Redwood Capital Bank, a community bank in Eureka, Calif.

The Treasury also said it would invest $12 million in Pacific Coast Bankers' Bank, a San Francisco specialty bank that supports community banks across the country by providing services such as cash management and processing of international payments.

The Small Business Lending Fund has $30 billion to buy preferred stock in banks with less than $10 billion in assets. The more the banks lend to businesses, the lower their dividend payments to Uncle Sam will drop.

In a victory for the Obama administration, Congress created the fund last September but probably would not do so today. The vote split along party lines, with Democrats prevailing. Republicans, who since have taken control of the House of Representatives, compared the program to the 2008 bank bailout that provided $700 billion to create the Troubled Asset Relief Program. 

There are 121 banks and savings associations based in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties that have less than $10 billion in assets, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

Some of the larger ones include Koreatown's Nara, Hanmi and Wilshire State banks, Community Bank of Pasadena and Citizens Business Bank of Ontario.

RELATED:

Money flowing into California's small-business loan programs

Do your homework before applying for SBA loans

-- E. Scott Reckard

Photo: Funds are flowing to community banks from the U.S. Treasury, pictured here on a $10 bill. Credit: U.S. Secret Service 

CoreLogic home price index shows U.S. prices up slightly in June

HomePriceDecline

U.S. home prices, including foreclosures and other distressed properties, rose 0.7% in June when compared to the prior month, according to a home price index released Wednesday, though some of that increase is probably due to seasonal variations.

But the home price index, which includes foreclosures and other so-called distressed properties, fell by 6.8% in June when compared to the same month a year earlier, according to Santa Ana research firm CoreLogic

Excluding foreclosures and other distressed properties, prices were up 1.5% from May to June. They fell 1.1% when compared to the same month a year prior. Distressed sales include foreclosure properties, as well as short sales, a transaction for which the bank allows a property to be sold for less than the outstanding debt on the property.

"While there is a consistent and sustained seasonal improvement in prices over the last three months, prices are lower than a year ago due to the decline in prices after the expiration of the tax credit last year," CoreLogic chief economist Mark Fleming said in a statement. "Price declines are more concentrated in the distressed sales market."

While the Case-Shiller index is the most widely followed home price gauge, many economists and analysts also look to the CoreLogic home price index as a read to where the housing market is headed.

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Mortgage rates plunge: For a few borrowers, 30-year fixed loans under 4%

Anna's Linens warehouse in Fontana is sold

Home prices rise again, but experts are unimpressed

-- Alejandro Lazo

Twitter: @AlejandroLazo

Photo: A recently sold home in Springfield, Ill. Credit: Seth Perlman / Associated Press

Still Playing Catch-Up, Across the Economy

Given that the downturn began nearly four years ago, and that the population has grown significantly since then, the economy should instead be bigger than it was before the financial crisis. But Calculated Risk, a finance blog, makes a good observation: On most major measures of economic health, the economy is still worse today than it was before the recession began.

CATHERINE RAMPELL
CATHERINE RAMPELL

Dollars to doughnuts.

Here’s a chart I’ve put together showing the percentage changes in several important economic indicators since the start of the recession in December 2007. The categories are: overall economic growth (gross domestic product), jobs (nonfarm payrolls), personal income (without transfer payments from the government, like unemployment benefits), the length of the workweek, personal spending, and industrial production.

Dollars to doughnuts.

As you can see, all of these categories but one are still below where they were when the recession began. Industrial production is by far the worst off, since an index of this activity is nearly 8 percent below its level in December 2007. Second-worst is employment; today there are 5 percent — or about seven million — fewer payroll jobs than there were when the recession began.

Inflation-adjusted personal income and gross domestic product are still below the last business cycle peak, as is the average work week.

The one major indicator shown that is (barely) above its level at the start of the recession is inflation-adjusted consumer spending. Much of that growth has been subsidized by government transfer payments, however. And to further rain on this parade, remember that if the economy were healthy, consumer spending would probably be much higher today than it was before the recent recession. Just take a look at the longer-term trend:

Stocks extend losing streak

Wall Street's worst losing streak since the peak of the financial crisis in October 2008 is showing no Exchange flag  stan honda getty signs of relenting.

The Dow Jones industrial average dropped in erratic trading Wednesday, putting the blue-chip index on track for its ninth-consecutive losing session, the longest streak since 1978. More than $250 billion has been wiped from the Dow’s market value since investors began the sell-off on July 22.

Investors remained wary about another stream of weak economic reports and continued concerns about the fiscal future in the U.S. and Europe.

The declines came after reports showed that the U.S. services sector weakened in July and factory orders fell in June. The data offset one positive report during morning trading: Private-sector hiring in July came in slightly better than expected. Investors are also positioning themselves ahead of closely watched employment data due out this week: weekly jobless claims on Thursday and Friday's nonfarm payrolls report for July.

Stocks spent most of the morning session in choppy trading. The Dow was recently down 82.46 points, or 0.7%, to 11,784.16, after losing more than 150 points earlier in the session. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index shed 7.84 points, or 0.6%, to 1,246.21. The technology-heavy Nasdaq composite dropped 4.88 points, or 0.2%, to 2,664.36.

The drop in U.S. stocks follows a cascade of selling overseas. European stocks fell sharply, with London's  FTSE 100 falling 2.7%. Markets in Asia also fell overnight, with Japan's Nikkei stock average falling 2.1%

Meanwhile, investors rushed into traditional haven bets. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to another low for the year: 2.57%, from 2.62 % Tuesday. Gold rose nearly 2% to $1,671 an ounce.

The Swiss franc, which had been serving as a haven, dropped in value after the central bank there announced an interest rate cut.

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Investors fear new economic downturn

Debt ceiling deal ignores real driver of deficits: healthcare costs

Moody's and Fitch keep U.S. triple-A credit rating, but say outlook is negative

-- Joe Bel Bruno

Photo: Getty Images/Stan Honda.

Pending cuts in Pentagon budget has investors wary

Ngc

Seeing the call from Congress for steep cuts in the Pentagon budget, investors have grown wary of defense stocks in recent weeks.

The dollar amount has yet to be decided, but few dispute that the cuts will amount to hundreds of billions of dollars over the next decade. That translates into fewer sales of military hardware for the nation’s largest defense contractors.

Investors have taken notice. While the Standard & Poor’s 500 index hit its summer high on July 7, it has been down 7.2% since -- through midday Wednesday. However, since July 7 the S&P's aerospace group is down 12.4%.

The nation’s three largest aerospace companies -- Century City-based Northrop Grumman Corp., Boeing Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp. -- are all down in trading since the beginning of this week. And Motley Fool recently reported that hedge funds have begun dumping defense stocks.

Wall Street isn’t alone its concern. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta wrote a memo Wednesday to Pentagon personnel addressing the pitfalls of budget cuts:

Spending choices must be based on sound strategy and policy. In the past, such as after the Vietnam War, our government applied cuts to defense across the board, resulting in a force that was undersized and underfunded relative to its missions and responsibilities. This process has historically led to outcomes that weaken rather than strengthen our national security -- and which ultimately cost our nation more when it must quickly rearm to confront new threats.

I am determined not to repeat the mistakes of the past.

RELATED:

Op-ed: What about a war ceiling?

Aerospace suppliers brace for defense cuts

Boeing earnings rise, Northrop's fall in second quarter

-- W.J. Hennigan

twitter.com/wjhenn

Photo: Northrop Grumman Corp.'s headquarters in Century City. Credit: Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times

TrueCar adds AutoNation executive to board of directors

Auto pricing information company TrueCar Inc. has snared a big fish for its board of directors.

TrueCar said Mike Maroone, president and chief operating officer of Fort Lauderdale-based AutoNation, the country’s largest automotive retailer, has agreed to join the board of directors of the Santa Monica company. AutoNation has 254 new car franchises in 15 states. Mike Maroone of AutoNation

“More than ever, the consumer wants to be informed and empowered -– and dealers must embrace transparency and clarity in pricing in order to thrive. I believe TrueCar is playing a crucial role in changing the marketplace,” Maroone said.

Through its TrueCar.com website, TrueCar offers consumers information that can be handy for negotiating car purchases, including data on completed sales sorted by model and trim level, invoice pricing and retail pricing. It also operated a car sales referral business.

“We are now living in an intelligent, data-driven automotive marketplace,” said Scott Painter, TrueCar’s founder and chief executive. “Mike Maroone joining our board of directors reflects a true inflection point –- a key illustration that we have moved from start-up to impactful profitable growth company changing the way cars are sold.”

ALSO:

Consumer Reports rips new Civic 

Fuel economy ratings come up short 

A sneak peek at a prototype of Tesla's Model S

-- Jerry Hirsch

Twitter.com/LATimesJerry

Photo: Mike Maroone. Credit: TrueCar Inc.

 

Ex-Obama aide Lawrence Summers sees 33% chance of new recession

Lawrence Summers, Former White House economic advisor Joining a growing chorus of economists raising alarms about a double-dip recession. former top White House economic advisor Lawrence Summers said there's at least a 33% chance the faltering economy will slip into another economic downturn.

Summers, who stepped down at the end of last year to return to Harvard University, also predicted that the unemployment rate would be above 8.5% at the end of next year. The rate was 9.2% in June, with July numbers coming Friday.

"With growth at less than 1% in the first half of this year, the economy is effectively at a stall and facing the prospects of shocks from a European financial crisis that is decidedly not under control, spikes in oil prices and declines in business and household confidence," Summers wrote in an opinion article in Wednesday's Washington Post. "The indicators suggest that the economy has at least a 1-in-3 chance of falling back into recession if nothing new is done to raise demand and spur growth."

Summers' projection is in line with other economists. Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight, last week put the odds of a double-dip at 30% after the government reported dramatically slower growth in the first half of the year.

And Summers' fellow Harvard economist, Martin Feldstein, told Bloomberg TV on Monday that the odds of another recession were at 50%. Feldstein serves on the committee that officially dates business cycles for the nonprofit National Bureau of Economic Research.

White House officials have said they don't think the economy will slip back into recession -- technically defined as two consecutive quarters of negative growth. The economy grew at a rate of 0.4% in the first three months of the year and 1.3% from April through June. The severe recession that began in late 2007 ended in June 2009 when the economy started growing again, according to the bureau.

"We do not believe that there is a threat there of a double-dip recession," White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said Wednesday. "We believe that the economy will continue to grow."

Obama administration officials hoped the resolution of the recent debt-ceiling crisis would remove additional uncertainty about the economy, but some economists worry that the modest initial spending cuts in the deal will only worsen the slow economic growth.

Summers said the post-deal relief that "there will be no default; no economy-damaging short-run austerity" will be short-lived given the faltering economy.

"Soon, relief will give way to alarm about the United States' economic future," he wrote.

RELATED:

Economic recovery falters dramatically in first half of year

Lawrence Summers to leave post as one of Obama's top economic advisors

Gene Sperling likely to become Obama's top economic aide

-- Jim Puzzanghera in Washington

Photo: Former White House economics advisor Lawrence Summers at a financial forum in China in May. Credit: Bloomberg

States make big cuts to unemployment benefits

Jobs The economy is struggling, people are still losing their jobs and some are getting desperate. Seems like a bad time to cut back unemployment benefits, but that's what several states have done, according to a new report from the National Employment Law Project.

As states' insurance funds become insolvent, six states even decreased the amount of benefits available for the unemployed, to 20 weeks from the traditional 26. The biggest cuts came in the following states:

The cuts come as states' unemployment insurance funds face insolvency, and many are forced to borrow more and more money from the federal government. Still, they take away an important lifeline for unemployed workers, the law project says.

"It’s disconcerting that these lawmakers would expend so much energy making cuts to state unemployment insurance programs when more people are out of work for longer than any other period on record," said Christine Owens, executive director of the National Employment Law Project.

Some economists have argued that cutting off benefits motivates the unemployed to find work. But in many fields, there are dozens of applicants for each job.

As of the end of July, 30 states are borrowing $40 billion from the federal government to pay for unemployment insurance benefits, and must begin to pay interest on those loans beginning Sept. 30. California's loan balance stands at $8.6 billion. Only Colorado and Rhode Island have adopted measures to add funding to their programs to keep them solvent in the long run.

In June, California had 2.2 million unemployed workers, 728,000 of whom have been out of work for a year or more. In June 2010, 579,000 workers had been out of work for a year or more. The California Employment Development Department has paid $10.5 billion in benefits this year, and pays about $350 million a week. There are nearly half a million Californians who have run out of benefits completely.

-- Alana Semuels

RELATED:

California job market is rebounding, but unevenly

Veterans face high employment after military service

State spent $90 million a day on unemployment benefits

Photo: Rosemead job search center. Credit: Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times

Gold surges past $1,670 toward new record amid economic worries

gold prices
Gold prices are surging along with concerns about the state of the global economy, rushing to a high of $1,675.90 an ounce in New York on Wednesday, up from $1,641.90 on Tuesday.

Investors, spooked by a raft of discouraging reports about slowing job growth, have been pulling out of stocks and retreating into the safety of the precious metal.

Even as the government cobbled together a deal on the debt ceiling, Wall Street was stumbling. The turbulence has helped gold continue its decade-long upward march.

The country's credit rating could still take a hit down the line, threatening the value of the dollar, said Marin Aleksov, chief executive of precious metals broker Rosland Capital in Santa Monica. But the potential for more borrowing does the same, he said.

"The economy's stalling, you have the possibility of a downgrade and a debt deal that's just not enough in the long term," he said. "If you don't trust currency, you don't trust the markets and you don't trust your leaders, where else can you go but gold?"

Prices hit a then-record high of $1,641.90 an ounce Tuesday amid news that the Bank of Korea bought its first batch of gold in more than a dozen years. Analysts said they expect more central banks looking to limit their exposure to a weakening dollar to follow suit.

By the end of the year, the price could meet -– or exceed -- $1,800, they said.

RELATED:

Gold soars to high on South Korea purchase, economic jitters

Silver rallies closer to $50, gold gains as buyers keep coming

-- Tiffany Hsu

Photo: Gold souvenirs are displayed at jewelery shop in Amman. Credit: Majed Jaber / Reuters

Job growth slows and layoffs rise to 16-month high, reports say

Jobs Looking for work? Might want to try smaller businesses, which are doing the heavy lifting when it comes to job growth, according to a new report from payroll processor ADP.

Companies with fewer than 50 employees added 58,000 jobs nationwide last month, while businesses with 50 to 500 workers hired 47,000 people, according to the study. Only 9,000 new positions were at large firms with more than 500 staffers.

Small businesses have been amping up hiring for nearly two years, according to ADP.

Though 114,000 jobs were created, July’s numbers lag behind the 145,000 hires made in June. An employment report coming Friday from the Labor Department, which is expected to show even more modest figures, could throw the slowdown into sharper relief.

The service sector, including education and healthcare, grew by 121,000 jobs, according to ADP. But employment in the construction and manufacturing industries slipped.

And the stink of a sour economy loomed over layoff numbers that were also announced Wednesday. Job cuts surged to a 16-month high in July as 66,414 employees found themselves out of work, according to consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc.

Big auto repairs put drivers at financial risk

One in four American drivers could not pay for a significant car repair, according to a survey by the American Automobile Assn.

Mechanic “Many Americans rely on their cars for their livelihood and losing access to them could be financially devastating during an already troubling economic time,” said Marshall L. Doney, AAA vice president of automotive and financial services. 

“It’s important for drivers to not only continue to maintain their vehicles, but also have a financial emergency plan in place should they be faced with a sudden unexpected auto repair bill,” Doney said.

AAA judged a significant automobile repair bill as one reaching $2,000 or more. The survey also found one in eight motorists would be unable to pay for a repair bill of $1,000. And, 25% of those surveyed also admitted to neglecting repairs and maintenance on their vehicles in the last year because of the economic climate. 

That’s a bad move, AAA automotive experts said, because it can greatly increase the likelihood of the need for a costly, major repair later.

While repair costs can vary greatly by make, model and type of repair, a transmission repair can be $2,000 to $4,000, while an engine repair can exceed $5,000. Major brake repairs may range from $350 to $1,000, and a new set of tires can run from $300 to more than $1,000, the association said.

RELATED: 

Consumer Reports rips new Civic 

Fuel economy ratings come up short 

A sneak peek at a prototype of Tesla's Model S

-- Jerry Hirsch

Twitter.com/LATimesJerry

Photo: John Kalleen replaces a gasket at Accurate Autoworks in Pasadena. Credit: Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times

 

Senate delays hearing for consumer agency nominee Richard Cordray

Richard Cordray, nominee to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
This week's scheduled confirmation hearing for Richard Cordray, the nominee to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, has been delayed until September as senators left early for their August recess.

The Senate Banking Committee had planned to hold the hearing Thursday in hopes of advancing the nomination to head the controversial new agency. But the hearing for Cordray, a former Ohio attorney general who has been working as head of enforcement for the CFPB, has been rescheduled for Sept. 6, the committee announced.

The Senate began its break after Tuesday's session in which it approved an increase in the nation's debt ceiling.

The one-month delay in the confirmation hearing will have little effect. Cordray's nomination faces strong resistance from nearly all Senate Republicans, who have promised to block any nominee to head the agency unless President Obama agrees to weaken its power. Obama strongly opposes their demands, which include replacing the powerful director with a bipartisan five-member commission.

And congressional Republicans have again blocked the Senate from going into a formal recess, which would have allowed Obama to temporarily appoint Cordray as agency director -- as well as make a host of other appointments -- without a confirmation vote.

Until the consumer agency has a Senate-confirmed director, or one put in place by a recess appointment, it cannot use some of the authority granted to it by last year's financial reform law.

Those delayed powers include regulation of mortgage brokers, payday lenders and other financial institutions outside the banking system.

The Treasury Department is running the agency until it has a director. Last week, Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner named Raj Date as a special advisor and put him in charge of the agency until a director is in place.

Date, a former financial industry executive who serves as the agency's associate director of research, markets, and regulations, replaces Harvard Law professor Elizabeth Warren.

Warren, who came up with the idea for the agency in 2007, had been working as an administration advisor since September to help launch the CFPB. Despite strong support from liberals, Warren was not nominated by Obama to be the agency's director. She left on Monday to return to teaching at Harvard.

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-- Jim Puzzanghera

Photo: President Obama announces the nomination of Richard Cordray, right, to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Credit: Associated Press.

More Evidence That Supply Matters

Casey B. Mulligan is an economics professor at the University of Chicago.

The supply of various types of workers has increased during the recession, continuing an earlier trend. That such trends continue to be associated with trends for employment contradicts the Keynesian claim that supply suddenly stops mattering during recessions and “liquidity traps.”

Today’s Economist

Perspectives from expert contributors.

A number of bloggers have pointed out that employment in Texas has been rising and has almost reached prerecession levels. Paul Krugman’s explanation is that the supply of people available and willing to work has been increasing in Texas, continuing a previous trend.

Perspectives from expert contributors.

One example of that supply is the inflow of immigrants from nearby Mexico; another is the migration of Americans seeking cheaper housing. I might quibble about the details, but I agree that supply trends are crucial for understanding what has happened in Texas.

In previous posts I have pointed out that national employment per capita actually increased among the elderly during the recession. I, and other researchers, concluded that elderly employment deviated so much from the general population because of changes in elderly labor supply.

In reaction to my post, Dean Baker attributed the elderly increase during the recession to a previous trend. Because the previous trend was itself the result of supply, Dr. Baker’s explanation of the recession is essentially a supply increase, too.

So we all agree that in at least two cases labor supply increased during the recession, and in each case the result was more jobs for the affected groups, or at least fewer job losses than in the general population.

Recession-era supply episodes like these are important to identify, because they can prove or reject Keynesians’ fundamental assertion (so far unproven) that supply does not matter during a recession or a “liquidity trap” such as we’ve experienced since the recession began.

Consider, hypothetically, an immigration trend that continued even after the recession. In my view, the market would create jobs for many, but not all, of the immigrants and would continue to do so after the recession.

In the Keynesian view, immigration might create jobs before the recession, but could not create them once the recession began because “what’s limiting employment now is lack of demand for the things workers produce,” Professor Krugman wrote. “Their incentives to seek work are, for now, irrelevant.”

In the Keynesian view, all that extra supply does during the recession is add to unemployment rather than adding to employment. In other words, supply trends normally affect employment, but Keynesians assert that they cease to affect employment during a recession or liquidity trap.

The chart below shows monthly employment (left scale) and unemployment (right scale) in Texas since 2007. Despite the fact that our nation is in a liquidity trap (near-zero interest rates on Treasury bills, the results of the extra supply in Texas since 2009 have been to increase employment much more than increase unemployment.

Or consider that more recent cohorts have found themselves in careers that involve less manual labor, producing a increasing number of people reaching age 65 and still willing and able to continue their work. In my view, elderly employment would rise and might even be rising enough to more than offset a demand reduction during a recession.

In the Keynesian view, all that extra supply does during the recession is add to unemployment rather than adding to employment.

When it comes to analyzing specific events during the recession, fiscal stimulus advocates often take the common sense approach that labor supply affects employment. But when it comes to making promises about the anticipated results of a large fiscal stimulus, they insist, without proof, that supply doesn’t matter.

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