Wednesday 31 March 2010

Greece Heads Back To Square One As EU's Bazooka Was Nothing More Than A Water Pistol

Europe's rescue plan for Greece is now back at square one. The reason the plan failed is there never really was a plan to begin with, just bazooka talk.

Please consider Greece May Be Heading Back to �Square One� on Aid as Bonds Fall
Europe�s week-old rescue plan for Greece has so far failed to do what its leaders predicted: reduce borrowing costs for the region�s most indebted country.

The yield on 10-year Greek government bonds has increased 24 basis points to 6.522 percent since EU leaders agreed to the aid blueprint on March 25. That�s the highest in a month and more than double the rate paid by Germany. Seven-year bonds sold by Greece on March 29 fell for a second day yesterday.

�What they were hoping for was to set up some sort of arrangement that never has to be used,� said Phyllis Reed, head of bond research in London at Kleinwort Benson, which manages about $32 billion. �The markets have sniffed that out and it seems like we�re heading back to square one.�

IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said on March 30 the lender would set the terms of any loans to Greece just as it does with other countries. Trichet said before the summit that ceding control to the IMF would be �very, very bad.� He later changed his tone to say he was �pleased� with the outcome.

�It�s supposed to be a joint EU-IMF thing, but it sounds like the IMF have plans of their own,� said Reed. �There are still a lot of question marks.�

With investors keeping up the pressure, Greek opposition politicians are criticizing the EU plan. Coalition of the Left deputy Dimitris Papadimoulis yesterday mocked Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou for comparing aid to a �loaded gun� that would threaten markets.

�The gun,� he said, �has proved to be a water-pistol.�
Waterless Water Pistol

Rising Greek bond yields suggest that the EU's loaded gun was not a bazooka but a water pistol without water.

That will remain the case as long as Germany and France argue about what needs to happen.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel even asked for EU treaty changes so that serial violators of EMU rules could be expelled from the euro. For details, please see Battle in EU Erupts Between Germany and France Over the "Club Med" Nations and Germany's Export Policy

Few seem to believe Greece can carry out the necessary budget reductions. The situation is further complicated by the fact that France does not want any major role for the IMF, and preferably, no role at all.

The crucial question however, is "How much longer will it be before the market starts focusing on Spain as an even bigger problem?"

Flashback March 13, 2010: The Wall Street Journal is reporting No Need for Greek Bailout Now, France's Lagarde Says
Credible efforts by Greece's government to clean up its finances have so far negated the need for any bailout from the European Union, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said Friday.

Ms. Lagarde said that "technical experts" at the EU have been working on a contingency plan, so that if the need arose, "all we would have to do is press the button."
Show Me The Button

Ms. Lagarde said that if the need arose, "all we would have to do is press the button." That is the "I have a bazooka in my pocket" ploy.

The need has now arisen, and the market says "show me me the button." So where is it? It's pretty hard to press a button when it does not even exist.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Time To Take Back The Country; Congressional Candidates Deserving Your Support: Ron Paul, John Dennis, BJ Lawson, Rand Paul

It's time to take back our country. You can help. Moreover, you must help or it will not get done. There is a long list of politicians who need to be booted and some excellent choices for their replacements.

Here is a partial list of candidates I openly endorse. More names will follow later.

BJ Lawson For North Carolina 4th District

I have high hopes for BJ Lawson.
He will win with your help.
Please support BJ Lawson District 4 North Carolina
Click here to Volunteer Services For BJ Lawson

John Dennis For California 8th District

John Dennis is running against Nancy Pelosi.
He has a genuine shot but he needs your help to pull off an upset.

Please support John Dennis for District 8 California
Click here to Volunteer Services For John Dennis

Ron Paul For Texas 14th District

Please support Ron Paul for District 14 Texas
Click here to Volunteer Services For Ron Paul

Rand Paul For US Senate Kentucky

Rand Paul is ahead in some polls.
He needs your help to stay that way.

Please support Rand Paul For US Senate.
Click here to Volunteer Services For Rand Paul

Deserving Of Your Support

The above list is by no means complete.
I will add more names later.

All of the above are sound money constitutionalists who believe you know what to do with your money better than big government does. Every one of them deserves your support.

Their need for help goes far beyond cash contributions. Please, volunteer some time and sponsor signs, especially if you live in their district.

Things You Can Do

  • Host a Private Gathering
  • Phone Banking
  • Door-to-Door Canvassing
  • Be a Precinct Leader
  • Staff Events
  • Fund Raising
  • Stuff Envelopes
  • Write Letters to the Editor
  • Display a Yard Sign
  • Display a Bumper Sticker

For readers who own printing businesses, please volunteer to print yard signs or brochures for these candidates.

Every candidate on the above list is in favor of less government not more. All will support policies that will lead to business formation and more jobs.

Please do what you can to help.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

BLS Live Question and Answer Session on Friday, April 2nd

The BLS has a Live Question and Answer session this Friday between 9:30 and 10:30 EST.

Requirements

1. Access to http://www.coveritlive.com
2. Version 10 or later of the Adobe Flash Player

You can submit questions in advance via Question and Answer Feedback Form

Please save your question in case something goes wrong with the form or you need to resubmit it.

Seasonal Adjustment Amplitude

My question is on the the increasing amplitude of BLS seasonal adjustments as noted in BLS Seasonal Adjustments Gone Haywire; 11% Unemployment Coming by May?
Seasonally Unadjusted Unemployment vs. Unadjusted Unemployment



click on chart for sharper image

The above chart shows how the BLS smoothes the unemployment rate to account for seasonal trends. It also give as hint as to an increasing magnitude of that smoothing.

To highlight the month to month variances, I added a column to show the amplitude of the seasonal adjustments. The result is this chart.

Unadjusted Unemployment Minus Seasonally Adjusted Unemployment



click on chart for sharper image

Seasonal Adjustment Highlights

  • There is always a big BLS adjustment in January
  • There is always a reversion to the mean that overshoots to the downside between March and April
  • There is always a secondary rebound back above the 0.0% line in July, followed by a smaller overshoot to the downside in October.

The problem is in the increasing amplitude of these swings, in both directions.

The BLS attempts to smooth trends in unemployment with seasonal adjustments but those swings have increasing amplitude for the last two years. One explanation I have heard is the BLS is assuming a normal population basis and applies seasonality to that.

If so, I believe their methodology is distorted by the fact there are now 14.9 million unemployed. One should not assume the same seasonal bounce with so many out of work.

Without an explanation from the BLS though, we are guessing at the cause. If the BLS has an explanation, I will post it.

Addendum:

Here is the exact question I submitted. ....
I understand the point of seasonal adjustment to smooth out seasonal hiring variances. And for 6-8 straight years the "adjustment" in January as calculated by the difference between the seasonal and unadjusted unemployment was about .4% to .5%

However, the last two years it was a full 1%.
I have a chart that shows this:
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgJkeCpI1PSIqIpl9M2nBvGmXWDq751Is2RCmGB10_KZLwShOvZJSBcAF9gv7qe1Zm_RShuv726DHN4fhH6tiomB6J1cx9btxXyRebmbh4_Ab1aWfclbhSW8u__5_M0LDzsad69T9s9QTRP/s1600-h/seasonally+Adjusted+vs+unadjusted+unemployment2.png

I discuss in more detail here:
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2010/03/bls-live-question-and-answer-session-on.html

How do you account for these big out of the norm by .5% or so adjustments in January for the last two years?

My expectation is this year will be revised away later just as happened in 2009 with the result being January 2010 unemployment is understated by .5% minimum.

Of course the census hiring this year will add to the problem of figuring out exactly what is going on.

Mish
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Irish Banks Need $43 Billion in New Capital as "Worst Fears Have Been Surpassed�

Inquiring minds note Ireland's finance minister is shocked to discover Irish Banks Need $43 Billion in New Capital on account of �Appalling� Lending.
Ireland�s banks need $43 billion in new capital after �appalling� lending decisions left the country�s financial system on the brink of collapse.

�Our worst fears have been surpassed,� Finance Minister Brian Lenihan said in the parliament in Dublin yesterday. �Irish banking made appalling lending decisions that will cost the taxpayer dearly for years to come.�

The agency aims to cleanse banks of toxic loans, the legacy of plunging real-estate prices and the country�s deepest ever recession. In all, it will buy loans with a book value of 80 billion euros ($107 billion), about half the size of the economy.

�The information that has emerged from the banks in the course of the NAMA process is truly shocking,� Lenihan said.

Dublin-based Allied Irish needs to raise 7.4 billion euros to meet the capital targets, while cross-town rival Bank of Ireland will need 2.66 billion euros. Anglo Irish Bank Corp., nationalized last year, may need as much 18.3 billion euros. Customer-owned lenders Irish Nationwide and EBS will need 2.6 billion euros and 875 million euros, respectively.

�The regulator is taking the bank system by the scruff of the neck,� said James Forbes, senior equity strategist at Irish Life Investment Managers in Dublin. �Allied Irish has a lot of work to do to avoid majority state ownership, Bank of Ireland less so.�

Ireland may not be able to afford to pump more money into the banks. The budget deficit widened to 11.7 percent of gross domestic product last year, almost four times the European Union limit, and the government spent the past year trying to convince investors the state is in control of its finances.

�The bank losses, awful as they are, represent a one-off hit. It�s water under the bridge,� said Ciaran O�Hagan, a Paris-based fixed-income strategist at Societe Generale SA. �What�s of more concern for investors in government bonds is the budget deficit. Slashing the chronic overspending and raising taxation by the Irish state is vital.�
Economic Hit Parade

US: States have $5.17 Trillion in Pension Obligations, Gap is $3.23 Trillion; State Debt as Share of GDP

China: 10 Signs of Speculative Mania

Spain, UK, Japan, Greece: Eurozone Structural Problems; Spain's Economic Woes; Pain In Britain; Deflation Persists In Japan

US, Canada: California USA vs. Ontario Canada - Which State (Province) Is In Worse Shape? Canadian Banks vs. US Banks Comparison

Australia: Money Madness In Oz

Is any major country in good shape?

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Tuesday 30 March 2010

States have $5.17 Trillion in Pension Obligations, Gap is $3.23 Trillion; State Debt as Share of GDP

As the jobless yet supposedly nascent recovery plods on, states are finding it increasingly difficult to ignore their fiscal woes and pension deficits. The New York Times has some details in State Debt Woes Grow Too Big to Camouflage.
California, New York and other states are showing many of the same signs of debt overload that recently took Greece to the brink � budgets that will not balance, accounting that masks debt, the use of derivatives to plug holes, and armies of retired public workers who are counting on benefits that are proving harder and harder to pay.

California�s stated debt � the value of all its bonds outstanding � looks manageable, at just 8 percent of its total economy. But California has big unstated debts, too. If the fair value of the shortfall in California�s big pension fund is counted, for instance, the state�s debt burden more than quadruples, to 37 percent of its economic output, according to one calculation.

Unstated debts pose a bigger problem to states with smaller economies. If Rhode Island were a country, the fair value of its pension debt would push it outside the maximum permitted by the euro zone, which tries to limit government debt to 60 percent of gross domestic product, according to Andrew Biggs, an economist with the American Enterprise Institute who has been analyzing state debt. Alaska would not qualify either.

Professor Rogoff, who has spent most of his career studying global debt crises, has combed through several centuries� worth of records with a fellow economist, Carmen M. Reinhart of the University of Maryland, looking for signs that a country was about to default.

�When an accident is waiting to happen, it eventually does,� the two economists wrote in their book, titled �This Time Is Different� � the words often on the lips of policy makers just before a debt bomb exploded. �But the exact timing can be very difficult to guess, and a crisis that seems imminent can sometimes take years to ignite.�

Some economists think the last straw for states and cities will be debt hidden in their pension obligations.

Joshua Rauh, an economist at Northwestern University, and Robert Novy-Marx of the University of Chicago, recently recalculated the value of the 50 states� pension obligations the way the bond markets value debt. They put the number at $5.17 trillion.

After the $1.94 trillion set aside in state pension funds was subtracted, there was a gap of $3.23 trillion � more than three times the amount the states owe their bondholders.

In Illinois, the state comptroller recently said the state was nearly $9 billion behind on its bills to vendors, which he called an �ongoing fiscal disaster.� On Monday, Fitch Ratings downgraded several categories of Illinois�s debt, citing the state�s accounts payable backlog. California had to pay its vendors with i.o.u.�s last year.

�These are the things that can precipitate a crisis,� Mr. Rauh said.
Creative Ways Of Hiding Debt

  • New Hampshire took $110 million from a medical malpractice insurance pool to "balance its budget". The State Supreme Court said put it back.
  • Colorado tried to grab a $500 million surplus from Pinnacol Assurance, a state workers� compensation insurer that was privatized in 2002.
  • Hawaii went to a four-day school week.
  • Connecticut tried to issue its own accounting rules.
  • California is making companies pay 70 percent of their 2010 taxes by June 15.
  • New Jersey and other states make their budgets look balanced by pushing debts into the future. While Greece used a type of foreign-exchange trade to hide debt, the derivatives popular with states and cities have been interest-rate swaps, contracts to hedge against changing rates.

The above points summarized from the article.

Debt as Share of GDP



Fictitious Accounting

Fictitious accounting allows states to pretend their pension plans are in better shape than they really are. Hawaii, Montana, New Jersey, Illinois, Mississippi, Ohio, New Mexico, Rhode Island, and Alaska all have unfunded liabilities of 50% or greater. 20 states have unfunded pension liabilities of 40% or greater.

Most states have pension plan assumptions that assume a 7% rate of return or higher. Such returns simply will not happen. Worse yet, another downturn will cripple states.

$5.17 trillion in pension obligations is a hell of a lot of money. How will it be paid? The answer is it won't.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

10 Signs of Speculative Mania in China

Inquiring minds are reading a GMO white paper on China�s Red Flags
In the aftermath of the credit crunch, the outlook for most developed economies appears pretty bleak. Households need to deleverage. Western governments will have to tighten their purse strings. Faced with such grim prospects at home, many investors are turning their attention toward China. It�s easy to see why they are excited. China combines size � 1.3 billion inhabitants � with tremendous growth prospects. Current income per capita is roughly one-tenth of U.S. levels. The People�s Republic also has a great track record. Over the past thirty years, China�s Gross Domestic Product has increased sixteen-fold.

So what�s the catch? The trouble is that China today exhibits many of the characteristics of great speculative manias. The aim of this paper is to describe the common features of some of the great historical bubbles and outline China�s current vulnerability.

Past manias and financial crises have shared many common characteristics. Below is an attempt to list ten aspects of great bubbles over the past three centuries.

1. Great investment debacles generally start out with a compelling growth story. This may be attached to some revolutionary new technology, such as railways in the nineteenth century, radio in the 1920s, or more recently the Internet. Even when the new technology is for real, prospective rates of growth may beexaggerated. Early growth spurts are commonly extrapolated into the distant future. ....

2. A blind faith in the competence of the authorities is another typical feature of a classic mania. In the 1920s, investors believed that the recently established Federal Reserve had brought an end to �boom and bust.� A similar argument was trotted out in the mid-1990s when it was widely believed that the Greenspan Fed had succeeded in taming the business cycle. The �New Paradigm� disappeared in the bear market of the new millennium. It was soon replaced with the �Great Moderation� thesis of Ben Bernanke, which suggested that high levels of mortgage debt made sense because monetary policymaking was so vastly improved. ...

3. A general increase in investment is another leading indicator of financial distress. Capital is generally misspent during periods of euphoria. Only during the bust does the extent of the misallocation become clear. As the nineteenth century economist John Mills observed: �Panics do not destroy capital; they merely reveal the extent to which it has been previously destroyed by its betrayal in hopelessly unproductive works.� ...

4. Great booms are invariably accompanied by a surge in corruption. ...

5. Strong growth in the money supply is another robust leading indicator of financial fragility. Easy money lies behind all great episodes of speculation from the Tulip Mania of the 1630s � which was funded with IOUs � onward. ...

6. Fixed currency regimes often produce inappropriately low interest rates, which are liable to feed booms and end in busts. This lesson was ignored by the creators
of the European Monetary Union, which brought low rates and real estate booms to its smaller members, Spain and Ireland. ....

7. Crises generally follow a period of rampant credit growth. In the boom, liabilities are contracted that cannot subsequently be repaid. ...

8. Moral hazard is another common feature of great speculative manias. Credit booms are often taken to extremes due to a prevailing belief that the authorities won�t let bad things happen to the financial system. ...

9. A rising stock of debt is not the only cause for concern. The economist Hyman Minsky observed that during periods of prosperity, financial structures become
precarious. Investments financed with borrowed money don�t generate enough income to either service or repay the loan (what Minsky called �Ponzi finance�). ...

10. Dodgy loans are generally secured against collateral, most commonly real estate. Thus, a combination of strong credit growth and rapidly rising property prices are a reliable leading indicator of very painful busts. ...
The GMO article looks at each of the above points through the eyes of China.
1. The China Dream. For centuries, foreigners have pondered how to make money from China�s vast population. Today, the China Dream is more vivid than ever. The People�s Republic has more than 1.3 billion citizens, making it the world�s most populous nation. China�s rural population is gradually moving into its cities. A further 300 million country-dwellers � that�s roughly the same size as the U.S. population � are expected to head toward towns and cities over the next decade. It is generally assumed that the Chinese economy will continue to grow by around 8% annually in the coming years. ...

2.In the Communist Party of China We Trust.

Twenty years ago, it was argued that �Japan is different� and that Tokyo�s economic policies were better than the West�s. A number of best-selling books lauded the land of the rising sun. One bore the infamous title, Japan as Number One.

Today, similar claims are made about the singularity of the Chinese economy and the superiority of Beijing�s policies. And similar expectations are entertained about China�s inexorable march to economic primacy.



3. Investment Boom. In a market-oriented economy, investment might be expected to fall during a period of uncertainty and economic turbulence. Yet in 2009, Chinese fixed asset investment climbed by 30% and contributed 90% of last year�s economic growth. Investment rose to a record 58% of GDP. These are remarkable figures. The key question is: how well was this money spent? ....

4. Corruption. All great speculative manias have been accompanied by rising levels of fraud. Only in the bust do we get to see the full extent of the �bezzle,� as the Enrons, WorldComs, and Madoffs come to light. The upturn in China�s property and infrastructure spending, however, provides a cyclical spur to malfeasance. The People�s Republic recently slipped to 79th place in Transparency International�s 2009 Corruption Perceptions Index, just below Burkina Faso. ....

5. Easy Money. Nobel laureate Friedrich Hayek differed from his great rival J.M. Keynes. While the latter argued that bubbles were the result of turbulent �animal spirits,� Hayek claimed that asset price inflation followed from excessively low interest rates. Easy money, said Hayek, fed through to monetary and credit expansion, leading to inflation, either in the general price level or in asset prices. ...

6. The Fixed Exchange Rate and Capital Inflows. The Chinese currency, the renminbi, is pegged to the U.S. dollar. An undervalued exchange rate has boosted exports and kept interest rates low. It has also encouraged massive capital inflows, mostly in the form of foreign direct investment. Capital controls have limited inflows of hot money, although speculative inflows have picked up recently. ...

7. The Credit Boom. In response to the global financial crisis and the collapse of export orders, Beijing ordered its banks to go out and lend. Last year, new bank lending increased by nearly RMB 10 trillion, a sum equivalent to 29% of GDP. These loans largely went to fund infrastructure projects, property developments, and state-owned enterprises in a number of industries. It was as if the economy had received an enormous adrenaline shot. What most analysts fail to consider is the hangover that generally follows a credit binge.



8. Moral Hazard. The major Chinese banks are controlled by the state. They have a history of poor lending decisions. ...

9. Risky Lending Practices. .... No one can gauge the robustness of the credit system since Chinese banks appear particularly reluctant to report problematic loans. Ernst & Young published a 2006 report that estimated non-performing loans (NPLs) at $900 billion. This report was subsequently withdrawn. NPLs continued to decline in 2008 even as the stock market imploded and exports crashed. Fitch has suggested Chinese banks have been rolling over, or �ever-greening,� problematic loans. Bank employees have their own reasons for burying bad loans. A loan officer who reports problem debts is liable to have his salary reduced to below that of a migrant worker. Few seem to care about the practice of concealing nonperforming loans since it�s generally assumed that so long as the economy continues growing quickly, bad credits will turn good over time.

10. The Bubble. Surging credit has revived the animal spirits of Chinese investors. The Shanghai stock market recovered sharply in the first half of last year. On a single day in late July, turnover of �A-shares� in Shanghai exceeded the combined trading of the New York, London, and Tokyo stock exchanges. Chinese IPOs accounted for nearly two-thirds of global issuance by market value in the third quarter of last year. Chinese companies accounted for seven of the ten largest IPOs in the world. New issues were often massively oversubscribed and saw huge first day �pops.�
The Field of Dreams
Three years ago, Premier Wen described China�s economy as �unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable.� The Great Recession hasn�t cured these imbalances. Rather, China�s ensuing investment and credit booms exacerbated them. The real estate market displays the classic symptoms of a bubble � stretched valuations, rampant speculation, and frenzied new construction. Sooner or later, this
bubble will burst.

In the past, whenever an economy has exhibited the 10 red flags listed in this paper there has been an unpleasant outcome. Forecasting the end game is no easy task since speculative bubbles can run to extremes. It�s made more difficult in this case by the fact that China is not a pure market economy. Stateowned enterprises can be called upon to prop up markets. Losses may be concealed or shuffled around like a shell game, as has happened in the past. Such measures, however, won�t cure China�s problems. They only delay the d�nouement. ...
There is much more in the article worth reading. Investigative minds will want to take a closer look.

Global Imbalances

In case you missed them, please consider the following articles on the ever growing global imbalances...

Spain, UK, Japan, Greece: Eurozone Structural Problems; Spain's Economic Woes; Pain In Britain; Deflation Persists In Japan

US, Canada: California USA vs. Ontario Canada - Which State (Province) Is In Worse Shape? Canadian Banks vs. US Banks Comparison

Australia: Money Madness In Oz

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Monday 29 March 2010

Eurozone Structural Problems; Spain's Economic Woes; Pain In Britain; Deflation Persists In Japan

Edward Hugh at Euro Watch is asking From A Greek Debt Crisis To A Eurozone Structural One?
When we look back five years from now, will we see this week as marking a turning point in the short, but far from uneventful, ten year history of Europe�s common currency?

Simon Derrick, chief currency strategist at Bank of New York Mellon even went so far as to say the trauma of recent days might well signal the point that we stop talking about a �Greek debt crisis� and start talking about a �Eurozone structural crisis� .

Basically it is important to recognise that the current crisis has placed the spotlight on the severe institutional weaknesses which lie underpin the common currency, and it is just these weaknesses which are leading so many commentators to now ask themselves whether it might not have been easier to implement political union in Europe before embarking on such an ambitious monetary experiment.

These weaknesses became even more clear on Thursday when Jean Claude Trichet went very public in making clear that he personally is totally opposed to IMF participation in any Greece "rescue".

The Economist magazine have done their own calculation on this, and they estimate that a loan of �75 billion rather than the currently rumoured �25 billion will be needed and that the country is likely to need five years (rather than three) to get its deficit down below 3% of GDP. They also assume that Greek GDP will be 5% below its current level by 2014. Obviously the output you get in these sort of calculations rather depend on the expectations you put in, but these are not unrealistic expectations.

The bottom line is that there is no easy answer here, and Europe is struggling to convince the rest of the world that it has both the will and the instruments to effectively tackle the problem of maintaining a single currency in a diverse group of countries. Herman Van Rompuy said on Friday there was no danger of Portugal being sucked into the same sort of debt whirlpool as Greece, and that Portugal would not be the next country to be sent over to Washington in search of a helping technical hand from the IMF. Which raises the question: if it won't be Portugal, who will it be?
Spain's Economic Woes

The Economist is discussing Spain and The Ma�ana Syndrome
The list of things that need repair is extensive. Spain�s structural faults were long hidden by a housing bubble and have been glaringly exposed now that it has burst. From unemployment and low productivity growth, and from troubled savings banks to creaky public finances, the problems are piling up. With the government unwilling to apply radical surgery, there are fears that Spain will fall further behind its neighbours. �The risk is that we will have a lost decade, like Portugal or Japan,� says Lorenzo Bernaldo de Quir�s, an economist at Freemarket International Consulting in Madrid.

Unemployment tops most people�s worries. Faster growth is needed to bring it down. Yet Spain has been in recession for seven quarters; the government expects GDP to shrink again this year; and the IMF forecasts growth of less than 1% in 2011.

The public finances must also be fixed. Last year�s deficit ballooned to over 11% of GDP. In January Elena Salgado, the finance minister, produced an outline of austerity measures that calmed market fears about Spanish debt. But two months later the plan still lacks detail�and has an obvious flaw. An optimistic Ms Salgado predicted growth of 3% in both 2012 and 2013, bringing added revenues to cut the deficit. Spain�s European commissioner, Joaqu�n Almunia, has warned against the sin of over-optimism. Growth will not go over 2% until 2014, says �ngel Laborda, an economist at FUNCAS, the savings banks� foundation. He reckons that more tax rises and spending cuts are inevitable if the government is to hit its 3% deficit target by 2013.

The Bank of Spain�s governor, Miguel �ngel Fern�ndez Ord��ez, is calling for reform of a rigid labour market that makes most employees too costly to fire but condemns a third of workers to unstable, unprotected temporary jobs. Yet the government has repeatedly delayed pension and labour reforms. Mr Zapatero�s great goal is to conserve social peace. That means keeping trade unions happy, even if reforms (and growth) have to wait.

Some detect a whiff of cowardice. Mr Zapatero�s determination to avoid general strikes is proof that he will never take a difficult decision, says Artur Mas, head of the Catalan Convergence and Union coalition. And because broad agreements on public-spending cuts lack detail, they also lack urgency.

The delay in sorting out the cajas adds to the sense of drift. Most Spaniards do not see the economy improving any time soon. Faith in the political class is at rock bottom. The Spanish now rate politicians as a bigger problem than their old bugbear, terrorism. Mr Zapatero�s Socialists are trailing in the polls�but an election is not due for two more years.
UK Pain To Come

The British Economy has Pain To Come.
As Britain prepares to go to the polls, its sick economy is uppermost in voters� minds. With good reason. There are fundamental doubts that it can ever recover fully from a banking crisis and recession that laid Britain lower than many other rich countries. In the short term, the worry is whether a feeble recovery reliant on fiscal and monetary life-support can develop its own driving force.

The economy shrank by 5% last year, the biggest fall since the Great Depression. The contraction over the six quarters of the recession was 6.2%. That peak-to-trough decline was less severe than in Japan, Germany and Italy, but the recession lasted longer than in any other G7 economy.

The public finances look even worse. Not only is the budget deficit the highest, as a proportion of GDP, since the second world war, but this year�s will be the biggest of any G7 (and even G20) economy, according to the IMF. The build-up in government debt between 2007 and 2014 will be second only to Japan�s (see chart 1).



Recent disappointing export performance has dimmed hopes that Britain can trade its way out of the quagmire.

As one reverse has followed another, Britain�s economic reputation has nosedived. So has sterling. Its trade-weighted value has fallen by around a quarter since mid-2007, a bigger decline even than after the pound was turfed out of the European exchange-rate mechanism in 1992. For some, Britain now vies with the distressed likes of Greece and Spain for the title of sick man of Europe.

There is also more than a passing resemblance to Japan, which never regained its economic stride after its banking crisis of the 1990s. Could Britain now follow suit, given that its financial system came so close to collapse in October 2008? Those inclined to think so find worrying confirmation in a report by McKinsey, a management consultancy, which shows that total indebtedness in the British economy was the highest as a share of GDP among ten advanced countries in 2008, narrowly beating Japan�s.

Britain�s political economy is on trial as much as its economy. The government is currently spending four pounds for every three it receives in revenues. This reflects not just the severity of the recession but misjudgments during the good years. It was a mistake to be borrowing at all, let alone over 2% of GDP, in 2006 and 2007 when the economy was strong. Moreover, that deficit would have been even higher but for inflated receipts from ebullient property markets and financial firms.

Mr Darling�s budget is the last breath of a dying government. What will really count is the first one of the next parliament. That budget will have to do what the chancellor failed to do: set out a credible plan for reducing the deficit, grounded in sober rather than wishful forecasts for growth, decide where spending cuts will actually be made, and also�in all probability�announce additional tax increases.

The country�s economic future may be less dazzling than before but that glitter turned out to be fool�s gold. After those excesses, a period of private sobriety and public austerity may prove to be no bad thing.
There is much more to see in Economist articles on Spain and the UK. Please give them a look.

Deflation Persists In Japan

Bloomberg is reporting Japan Deflation Persists as Consumer Prices Fall 1.2%
Japan�s consumer prices fell for a 12th month in February, adding pressure on the central bank to eradicate deflation that is hampering the economic recovery.

Prices excluding fresh food slid 1.2 percent from a year earlier, after dropping a 1.3 percent in each of the preceding two months, the statistics bureau said today in Tokyo.

Finance Minister Naoto Kan said the report shows more efforts are needed to overcome deflation even as price declines ease.

Because of Japan�s record public debt, �the scope for fiscal stimulus is very, very limited to non-existent, but there�s probably more scope on the monetary side,� said John Praveen, chief investment strategist at Prudential International Investments Advisers LLC, a unit of Prudential Financial Inc., which manages $667 billion. BOJ liquidity injections will support the economy and stock market even as deflation persists, he said on Bloomberg Television.
What does Japan have to show for two years of fighting deflation?

This:



With credit once again to the Economist.

Japan's 2014 estimated 246% ratio of debt to GDP exceeds every other G7 country by a mile.

Take a look at the problems in Spain, Japan, Greece, Italy, and the UK. Even Canada does not look so hot as noted in California USA vs. Ontario Canada - Which State (Province) Is In Worse Shape?

Moreover, Canada, Australia, the UK, and China all have huge property bubbles that have yet to pop, but they will.

The US is certainly not alone in fiscal problems. Indeed, global imbalances mount as governments all over the globe sing the praises of the nascent recovery. Unfortunately there is no recovery, only a mirage of ever mounting debt.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Objection from Australia in Regards to California vs. Ontario "bush-league" Comparison

In response to California USA vs. Ontario Canada - Which State (Province) Is In Worse Shape? a reader from Queensland says North America is the bush-league compared to Australia.

Luke writes ....
You North Americans are simply not doing debt slavery quite right. I am obliged to point out Queensland, Australia is a clear winner. ...
Addendum
I took Luke's figures as fact before running off to an appointment.
They were not.
Leaving this stub up.


Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Searching For Jobs - Just How Bad Is It?

Want a job scooping poop? 260 people do. They applied for a job opening on Craigslist posted by Guy Palumbo, owner of Roscoe's Ranch, a 24-kennel outfit. Please consider Recession's untold story
You want to be the kennel helper? You're on the hook for the poop. You'll spend part of every day scooping it up (if all digestive systems work as designed) or mopping it (when they don't).

"Usually I get high-school kids applying. Or maybe a college kid for the summer. I've never seen anything like this." says Palumbo.

Who now wants to be a dog-kennel assistant?

  • A laid-off graphic designer
  • A freelance photographer.
  • Two out-of-work teachers sent r�sum�s.
  • Someone in their mid-40s who had worked as a financial controller at an environmental services company.
  • Past customer-service reps from WaMu, AT&T, J.C. Penney and Sprint.
  • Retail clerks and cashiers.
  • Out-of-work waiters.

They may say the recession's over, on paper or on the nightly news. Palumbo's electronic stack of r�sum�s says otherwise.

"It's simply amazing to me, and I still can't believe it," he said, "that from age 14 up into their 60s this many people are dying to be a minimum-wage dog-kennel assistant."
In a spoof response "Cat" says ...
We are forming dog kennel poop scrapers union #223. It's quite obvious that Palumbo's kennel is in need of 2 poop scooper and a fair wage of $65k/year plus full benefits. Of course we require enough fees out of those paychecks to pay my salary as well. I will be in touch.
Why stop there?

Cat pooper scoopers must have a union as well. And what about hampster sitting?

Think of the things dogs eat, cats too. Especially the latter. Cat handlers might pick up bird flue because cats chase and eat birds.

Some sort of pay scale parity between cat and dog scoopers needs to be finalized.

Moreover, it should be crystal clear these workers need training in hazardous waste handling. Because of likely accidents, it goes to reason that pooper scoopers need to retire at age 45 with full benefits to account for shortened lifespans.

And what about mandatory shower systems? Every hazardous waste site should have showers and proper disposal of wastewater, all handled by properly trained union workers of course.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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What's On The Worry List?

Today's Breakfast with Dave is a long one, easily packing three days of work in a 19 page PDF as Rosenberg will not be writing the next two days. Here is a snip from Rosenberg called What's On The Worry List?
� Last week�s bond auctions did not go well. It seems that Japan and China did not show much interest. The lack of bids was no better underscored than in the 7-year Treasury note auction where the median yield was 3.29% versus 3.05% a month earlier. April is a cruel month for the U.S. Treasury market, with 10-year yields rising in each of the past 4 Aprils and in 6 of the past 7, and by an average of 25 basis points.

� That, in turn, could spook the equity market since another 25bps of upside pressure could then generate a fund-flow spiral as was the case in the summer of 2007 � 3.85% (where we are now) ostensibly is a trigger point for selling of mortgage bonds. As rates rise, homeowners are less likely to pay their mortgages early, which extends the life of the mortgage and that in turn encourages mortgage investors to neutralize the duration of their portfolios by selling T-bonds and notes. We have seen this happen before and while it will likely provide a nice buying opportunity given the deflationary headwinds the economy now faces, the prospect of a spasm in the Treasury market is worth considering. Every equity market correction in the past � 1987, 1994, 1998, 2000, and 2007 � was preceded by what turned out to be a brief but significant runup in yields. See Stock Rally at Mercy of Rising Rates on page C1 of today�s WSJ). And, the more overvalued the equity market is, the more the downside risks if bonds begin to provide greater yield competition in the near-term. Jeffery Hirsch over at the Stock Trader�s Almanac is in today�s NYT predicting a 20-30% correction ahead (see Stocks Soar, But Many Ask Why on page B1) � he notes the modest number of stocks hitting new 52-week highs with every new interim peak being reached by the overall market.

� The leading indicators are all pointing to a slowdown, and this could show up in a critical data-release week in mid-April with retail sales on the 14th, industrial production on the 15th, and housing starts, as well as consumer sentiment, on the 16th. The broad money supply measures are contracting again as the Fed is no longer boosting its balance sheet at a time when both the money multiplier and money velocity are showing no signs of turning higher.

� Greece will be put to the test in April when �15 billion of bonds have to be rolled over (through the end of May).

� The Fed ceases to buy mortgage securities on Wednesday and this is happening at a time when mortgage rates have already climbed back above 5% and the housing market is showing signs of rolling over again. See Spike in Treasury Yields Jolts Mortgages on page C2 of today�s WSJ. There is also pressure from within the Fed (Plosser the latest) to soon begin to sell securities outright. One thing that is very likely on its way again is another 50bps hike on the discount rate � has anyone noticed the TED spread beginning to widen ahead of this? The banks, going forward, will not have easy access to the window and will have to rely on each other for funding.

� April 15 looms as a critical day from a geopolitical standpoint. It is the day that the Treasury Department will issue its report concluding whether or not China is a currency manipulator. If it is viewed as such then trade sanctions are likely to ensue and very likely some bilateral tensions. This could be very good news for the bullion market (as well as the Bloomberg News report today stating that gold imports in India are surging right now � up six-fold from a year ago � as there are an expected 1 million marriages planned for April and May). Sentiment is so negative on the U.S. Treasury market it�s not even funny. Everyone seems to focus strictly on supply without realizing that the only way to predict a price is by forecasting both supply and demand

� Speaking of geopolitical risks, President Obama has allowed U.S. relations with Israel to deteriorate to such an extent, and is handling the Iran nuclear situation with such a kid-gloves approach, that disturbing columns like this are now popping up in newspapers like the NYT (Rift Exposes Larger Split In Views On Mideast � page A4), the National Post (Iran Preparing to Build Two More Secret Nuclear Sites in Mountains, Experts Say � page A8), and the WSJ (How the Next Middle East War Could Start � page A23). Even the prospect is enough to underpin the energy stocks, which are currently priced for $69/bbl on WTI.
Fear Of Missing More Rally

Although that is an impressive looking worry list, it is important to understand those are things that very few are really worried about.

For example, with mutual fund cash levels at all time record lows, it is difficult to place any credence in the widespread thesis "the market is climbing a wall of worry".

Indeed, there is no general worry, unless you mean fear of missing more of the rally in equities. The only other widespread worry is fear of massive inflation or fear the dollar will collapse. From where I sit, neither seems very likely.

For all this talk about worries, the one thing not on anyone's worry list is a huge market decline and the distinct possibility the market bottom is not even in. No one is worried about that. However, they should be.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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California USA vs. Ontario Canada - Which State (Province) Is In Worse Shape? Canadian Banks vs. US Banks Comparison

Inquiring minds are interested in a comparison between the state of California and Ontario, a province of Canada. "Firefiend" Writes:
Hi Mish

Love your blog. Read it on a daily basis.

Heard on the radio today that Ontario, Canada budget deficit is going to be around $21 billion and thought I do some quick comparisons.

State/ProvincePopulationDeficitPer Capita Deficit
Ontario 11,410,046$21 Billion$1,840
California36,961,664$20 Billion$ 541


Hate to say it, but by this simple comparison California is looking pretty good.
Ontario's Record Debt Level

Please consider Ontario�s Record Debt Level May Pressure Spreads
Record debt levels in Ontario may translate into higher borrowing costs for Canada�s largest province relative to other regional governments.

The province�s net debt will rise to C$220 billion ($216 billion) in 2010-11, or a record 37 percent of gross domestic product, according to budget documents released yesterday. That�s almost twice as high as the debt-to-GDP ratio in British Columbia.

The province, home to 13.1 million people who account for more than a third of Canada�s economy, outlined plans to balance its budget in eight years. Standard & Poor�s last year cut the province�s credit rating on concern over escalating debt as the global recession buffeted the manufacturing industry, which accounts for almost a fifth of output.

�The government�s challenges remain formidable,� Mary Webb, a senior economist at Bank of Nova Scotia in Toronto, said in a note to clients. �Over the next eight years it must accomplish substantial fiscal repair.�
Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan Unveils 8-Year Plan

Inquiring minds are investigating Ontario's 8-Year Deficit Reduction Plan
Finance Minister Dwight Duncan tabled a $125.9 billion budget that had little in the way of new spending or direct cuts to programs but promised to reduce the deficit by half in five years and eliminate it completely in eight.

The finance minister called the budget "realistic and responsible" and said it represents a balance between economic responsibility and encouraging a healthy economy.

Savings

  • Two-year wage freezes for about 350,000 non-unionized public sector workers and a two-year extension of a pay freeze for MPPs introduced last year. Combined, the moves will save $750 million.
  • Slowing the pace of Toronto's Metrolinx transit projects, resulting in savings of about $4 billion over the next five years. Transit lines needed for the 2015 Pan American Games remain on schedule.
  • Slowing long-term infrastructure investments for a savings of more than $1.4 billion over the next five years.
  • Canceling the $174 million bus replacement program for municipalities.

Investments

  • $63.5 million to make up a gap in federal investment in child care, which will preserve 8,500 child care spaces.
  • $150 million a year over three years to help industries in Northern Ontario reduce energy costs.
  • $45 million over the next three years for skills training to help aboriginal residents and northern Ontarians find work.
  • A permanent energy tax credit to help residents of Northern Ontario with high energy bills.
  • The introduction of full-day kindergarten for four- and five-year-olds, beginning in September 2010 with up to 35,000 children and across the province by 2015-16.
Unrealistic and Irresponsible

Minister Dwight Duncan called the budget 'realistic and responsible'.

Cower in fear when you hear talk like that from any politician. The savings total is $6.324 billion. A mere $750 million comes from wage "freezes".

On the investment side notice how Duncan does not put a cost on energy tax credits or the introduction of full-day kindergarten for four and five-year-olds. I guess those services pay for themselves.

Duncan does itemize $0.259 billion in other investments.

Thus Duncan proposes to plug a $21 billion shortfall with a net total of about $6 billion in savings. He has the gall to call this 'realistic and responsible'.

Ontario's Anemic Effort To Clamp Down On Wages

Public unions are clearly a huge problem in Canada as in the US. Please consider Will cities freeze wages as well?
Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan is calling on municipal governments to follow the province's lead and clamp down on wages. In Thursday's budget presentation, Duncan announced a freeze for some provincial workers. On Friday, he strongly hinted that he expects municipalities to follow suit.

�We will not be funding increases in overall compensation,� Duncan said.

�Is it cynical or is it shrewdness? Pick your descriptor,� David Docherty, a Wilfrid Laurier University political scientist, said Friday. �There is a lot of politics in this, there are a lot of optics in this,� Docherty said.

For most provincial employees the wage freeze does not kick in for years. About 750,000 provincial workers will not be affected until after their contacts expire. About 310,000 non-union workers will face an immediate wage freeze.

The province gave the Ontario Provincial Police wage increases that totaled more than 12 per cent over three years. Registered nurses in hospitals will see their compensation package increase by 13.4 per cent over three years. Secondary school teachers signed a four-year contact that increases their pay by 12 per cent. College teachers got a three-year contract that increases salaries by nearly six per cent.

�What are they freezing?� Waterloo Mayor Brenda Halloran said.
What are they freezing?

Good question.

The answer is something like 1/10th of a portion of a portion of something, effective years from now, much like a budget freeze in US Congress.

Nonetheless union parasites in Canada are upset.

Unions angry over Ontario budget plans

Inquiring minds note that union parasites in Canada are every bit the problem in Canada as in the US. Please consider Unions angry over Ontario budget plans.
Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan tabled a budget on Thursday that mapped a slow road to balancing the province's books, projecting deficits until 2017-18 and offering little in the way of new spending or direct cuts to programs.

It froze wages for non-unionized public sector workers for two years, but also referred indirectly to unionized public sector workers when it based its deficit projections on no increases in future collective bargaining agreements.

Ontario Public Sector Employees Union president Warren (Smokey) Thomas said the plan sets up adversarial negotiations in the future, particularly in light of the province's plan to increase hospital budgets by only 1.5 per cent, or about half of what the Ontario Hospitals Association said was needed to maintain the status quo.

"We are disappointed that the government would declare, without consultation, that thousands of these workers will see their incomes go down for the foreseeable future, or lose their jobs," said Thomas.
Ontario's Plan To Eliminate The Deficit

Please consider this graph from 2010 Ontario's Economic Outlook and Fiscal Plan



Forgive me for being skeptical but does anyone in Canada believe that?

In addition to controls on spending (which are clearly anemic as noted above), deficit reduction is dependent on job growth, more specifically non-parasitic, non-public union job growth.

That in turn begs the question, does anyone believe this?



California Fiscal Outlook

For comparison purposes please consider these Fantasyland projections from The 2010-11 Budget: California's Fiscal Outlook



What are these people smoking?

There are many interesting charts in the above link. Please give it a look.

Will California Default?

Inquiring minds are reading California Watch: Will California Default on Bond Debt in 2010?
California had $83.5 billion in long-term bond debt, with most of the debt, $64 billion, in general obligation notes, which are financed by the state's general fund.

Bill Watkins, executive director the Center for Economic Research and Forecasting at California Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks, Calif., agreed and urged state officials to begin discussions with the Obama administration and the Federal Reserve in case California defaults on its debt.

"In my opinion, California is now more likely to default than it is to not default," Watkins wrote in an economic forecast released Dec. 16. "It is not a certainty, but it is a possibility that is increasingly likely."
Total Debt Comparison

Ontario's net debt is C$220 billion ($216 billion). California has $83.5 billion in long-term bond debt. Of course we probably need to factor in California's share of US national debt and the same for Ontario.

Regardless of how you slice it, both California and Ontario are fiscal disasters. A case can be made that Ontario is much worse than California. So when you hear all this talk about how much worse California is than Greece, just remember, so is Ontario.

Canadian Banks vs. US Banks Comparison

I continually hear a lot of hot air, mainly from hyperinflationists, about how safe Canada is, how sound its currency is, etc. For the best written rebuttal to date of such talk, please consider The Canadian Banking Fallacy on the Baseline Scenario blog.

Despite supposedly tougher regulation and similar leverage limits on paper, Canadian banks were actually significantly more leveraged � and therefore more risky � than well-run American commercial banks. For example JP Morgan was 13 times leveraged at the end of 2008, and Wells Fargo was 11 times leveraged. Canada�s five largest banks averaged 19 times leveraged, with the largest bank, Royal Bank of Canada, 23 times leveraged. It is a similar story for tier one capital (with a higher number being safer): JP Morgan had 10.9% percent at end 2008 while Royal Bank of Canada had just 9% percent. JP Morgan and other US banks also typically had more tangible common equity � another measure of the buffer against losses � than did Canadian Banks.

If Canadian banks were more leveraged and less capitalized, did something else make their assets safer? The answer is yes � guarantees provided by the government of Canada. Today over half of Canadian mortgages are effectively guaranteed by the government, with banks paying a low price to insure the mortgages. Virtually all mortgages where the loan to value ratio is greater than 80% are guaranteed indirectly or directly by the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation (i.e., the government takes the risk of the riskiest assets � nice deal if you can get it). The system works well for banks; they originate mortgages, then pass on the risk to government agencies. The US, of course, had Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but lending standards slipped and those agencies could not resist a plunge into assets more risky than prime mortgages. Let�s see how long Canada resists that temptation.

The other systemic strength of the Canadian system is camaraderie between the regulators, the Bank of Canada, and the individual banks. This oligopoly means banks can make profits in rough times � they can charge higher prices to customers and can raise funds more cheaply, in part due to the knowledge that no politician would dare bankrupt them. During the height of the crisis in February 2009, the CEO of Toronto Dominion Bank brazenly pitched investors: �Maybe not explicitly, but what are the chances that TD Bank is not going to be bailed out if it did something stupid?� In other words: don�t bother looking at how dumb or smart we are, the Canadian government is there to make sure creditors never lose a cent. With such ready access to taxpayer bailouts, Canadian banks need little capital, they naturally make large profit margins, and they can raise money even if they act badly.

Proposing a Canadian-type model to create stability in the U.S. is, to be blunt, nonsense.

There�s no doubt that during the coming months many people will advocate some form of a Canadian banking system in America. Our largest banks and their lobbyists on Capitol Hill will love the idea. For some desperate politicians it may become a miracle drug: a new �safer� system that will lend to homeowners and provide financing to Washington, while permitting politicians and regulators to avoid tough steps. Let�s hope this elixir doesn�t gain traction; smaller banks with a lot more capital � and able to fail when they act stupid � are what U.S. citizens and taxpayers really need.
Canada did not avoid a crisis because their banks were better or smarter or used less leverage. Canada avoided a crisis because for whatever reason, their housing bubble did not yet blow sky high. However it will, and Canada's banking crisis is yet to come.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Sunday 28 March 2010

Bid Rigging at JPM; Foreigners Flock To Munis; History Tax In Portland; 2000 Congressional Staffers Make Six Figures; Trade Wars With France

Here is a weekend wrapup of stories of interest over the past week or so that I was unable to comment on at the time in more detail.

Bid Rigging Conspiracy at JPMorgan

JPMorgan, Lehman, UBS Named in Bid-Rigging Conspiracy
March 26 (Bloomberg) -- JPMorgan Chase & Co., Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and UBS AG were among more than a dozen Wall Street firms involved in a conspiracy to pay below-market interest rates to U.S. state and local governments on investments, according to documents filed in a U.S. Justice Department criminal antitrust case.

A government list of previously unidentified �co- conspirators� contains more than two dozen bankers at firms also including Bank of America Corp., Bear Stearns Cos., Societe Generale, two of General Electric Co.�s financial businesses and Salomon Smith Barney, the former unit of Citigroup Inc., according to documents filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan on March 24.

The court records mark the first time these companies have been identified as co-conspirators. They provide the broadest look yet at alleged collusion in the $2.8 trillion municipal securities market that the government says delivered profits to Wall Street at taxpayers� expense.
The only way to stop this kind of bullsweet is to imprison those guilty, while also holding those at the top accountable for those underneath them. Make no mistake about this. Corporate culture from the top down encourages these kind of ripoffs.

76-story Columbia Center Misses Mortgage Payment

Columbia Center misses mortgage payment
The owner of the Northwest's tallest building, the 76-story Columbia Center, missed a mortgage payment this month, providing fresh evidence of the troubles facing downtown Seattle office landlords.

Boston-based Beacon Capital Partners failed to make a scheduled payment of $1.65 million on a $380 million loan it took out when it bought the tower three years ago, according to a recent report by Wells Fargo Bank, which administers the debt.

The loan faces "imminent default due to cash flow issues,"says a note in the report. A spokesman for Beacon, the Seattle area's largest office landlord, declined comment.

Downtown's overall vacancy rate is at or above 20 percent, according to brokerage reports. At the Columbia Center, however, almost 600,000 square feet � nearly 40 percent of the building � is listed as "available" on online commercial real-estate database Officespace.com.

That includes space that is vacant now and space expected to be emptied in the next year or so, including 177,000 square feet leased by Amazon.com, which is moving to a new headquarters complex now under construction in South Lake Union.
Beacon paid $621 million of which $480 million was financed. The assessed valuation is now $380 million.

Home Buying Frenzy in Erin Mills Canada

Homes create buying frenzy
At first glance, it looks like a mini tent city. But the shivering occupants aren�t refugees from an earthquake or some other calamity, nor are they lovers of the outdoors jumping the gun on camping season. Instead, they�re braving the weather and the curious stares of passersby to be first in line to buy a townhouse in Erin Mills.

The bravest � some might say craziest � is Baz Munshi, who showed up at the Daniels FirstHome site, near Winston Churchill Blvd. and Eglinton Ave., more than a week ago.

By the time the 130 fully-built condo units finally go on sale Saturday morning, Munshi will have been in front of the line nearly two weeks.
This is reminiscent and nearly as silly as standing in line in Florida to by condos five years ago. How well did that turn out?

History Tax In Portland

Cash-strapped society explores history tax

Do Portlanders really care about their history? More to the point, are they willing to pay for it? We may soon find out.

The Oregon Historical Society � bruised by multiple hits to its funding and slashed services � is exploring creation of a �heritage taxing district� empowered to collect a modest amount of property taxes, with voter approval, in Multnomah County.

If the taxing district or alternative fundraising ideas don�t pan out, the 112-year-old nonprofit, which operates the Oregon History Museum and research library in downtown Portland, expects to exhaust its cash reserves by late next year or early 2012, says George Vogt, the society�s executive director.

If the society�s board of trustees doesn�t see a path to stable funding by late June, Vogt says, �they�re likely to put the place in a phased shutdown.�

A fixture in the downtown cultural district, the museum attracts 45,000 tourists and other visitors annually, including thousands of students learning about Oregon history. The society owns 85,000 artifacts, many stored in a Gresham vault, including Native American baskets, Oregon Trail mementos and other material.

In response to pleas from the Southern Oregon Historical Society, which also is experiencing money woes, the Legislature passed a 2007 law enabling the formation of heritage districts to levy property taxes. The district would be similar to special taxing districts for soil and water conservation or library service. In each district, voters would elect a board of directors and must approve any property taxes the district levied.

A tentative proposal is to charge 5 cents in taxes for every $1,000 in assessed property value, or $10 a year for owners of a house with a $200,000 tax assessment.
Here's the simple solution. Raise fees to cover the cost. If no one is willing to pay, sell. I actually bet volunteer history buffs would step up with timely donations to keep the building running at minimal cost.

Staffed by volunteers, a simple entry fee of $2.50 should be more than sufficient, assuming the society can get 45,000 visitors. However a quick check shows admission is $11.00 for adults and $9.00 for students.

The Oregon Historical Society has a staff of 31. Good grief. The museum is only open 1 to 5 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday. It takes a staff of 31 for that?

2000 Congressional Staffers Make Six Figures

2,000 House staffers make six figures
Nearly 2,000 House of Representatives staffers pulled down six-figure salaries in 2009, including 43 staffers who earned the maximum $172,500 � or more than three times the median U.S. household income.

Starting salaries on Capitol Hill are still low � many entry-level congressional jobs pay less than $30,000 a year. And many of the most highly paid staffers could make several times the maximum by jumping to lobbying and consulting jobs in the private sector.

But the salary data, compiled for POLITICO by LegiStorm.com, show that it�s possible to make an enviable living in Congress, even without winning an election.

Ryan Ellis, tax policy director of Americans for Tax Reform, says that the sheer number of staffers who are earning the maximum amount of pay � or are creeping close � is troubling for taxpayers.
Trade Wars With France

France vows retaliation against US in air tanker dispute
France has vowed to retaliate against the United States for allegedly shutting Europe's aviation giant EADS out of a $50bn (�33.4bn) defence contract, warning of potential damage to the Atlantic alliance.

"This is a serious affair," said France's Europe minister Pierre Lellouche. "I can assure you that there will be consequences."

"You cannot expect Europeans to contribute to global defence if you deny their industries the right to work on both sides of the Atlantic," he said, adding that French president Nicolas Sarkozy would take action "at the appropriate time".

The escalating spat comes after EADS withdrew this week from a joint bid with Northrop Grumman to supply the Pentagon with A330 air refuelling tankers, alleging that the procurement terms had been rigged to favour Boeing.

Rainer Br�derle, Germany's economy minister, has also expressed outrage, alleging that the tender "had clearly been designed to favour Boeing under political pressure."

Joachim Pfeiffer, Bundestag spokesman for the Christian Democrats, said the Pentagon's conduct was "scandalous", a sentiment echoed by a string of politicians on Wednesday.
Foreigners Flock To Munis

Municipal Bond Yields Reach Four-Month High Amid Wave of Supply
Yields on top-rated tax-exempt municipal debt climbed to their highest level in four months as investors flocked to taxable Build America Bonds amid the biggest weekly issuance of state and local debt since Dec. 11.

While tax-exempt prices were crimped, California turned to overseas investors in selling $3.4 billion in taxable debt yesterday, including $2.5 billion of Build America Bonds. International investors put in orders for more than 35 percent of the state�s debt, Treasurer Bill Lockyer said in a statement.

�We have a lot of foreign investors looking at California debt as a place where other investors are scared off, perhaps irrationally,� said Guy LeBas, chief fixed-income strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott LLC in Philadelphia. �You hear a lot about California�s woes here, but maybe you don�t over at South Korea investment funds or places like that.�
In every cycle, foreign buyers rush in at the top.

For more on Munis see Wealthy Unload Munis; Junk, Corporates, Equities, All Overpriced; Take Some Chips Off The Table

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Vallejo's Inept City Council Blows It

I had high hope that a Vallejo bankruptcy would set the tone fore dealing with unions. Sadly, that is not the case. Please consider Vallejo's Painful Lessons in Municipal Bankruptcy by Steven Greenhut.
In 2008, Vallejo, Calif., was nearly broke. Faced with falling tax revenues, rising pension costs, and unmovable public-employee unions, the city was unable to pay its bills and declared bankruptcy. Now, as it prepares to emerge from Chapter 9, officials in Los Angeles, San Diego and other cities across the state are looking to see if Vallejo has blazed a trail for them to get out from under their own crushing pension costs. What they're finding is that even bankruptcy may not be enough to break the grip unions have on the public purse.

A report issued by the Cato Institute last September noted that 74% of the city's general budget was eaten up by police and firefighter salaries and overtime along with pension obligations.

The study also found that lavish pay and benefit packages were a root cause of the city's problems. In Vallejo compensation packages for police captains top $300,000 a year and average $171,000 a year for firefighters. Regular public employees in the city can retire at age 55 with 81% of their final year's pay guaranteed. Police and fire officials can retire at age 50 with a pension that pays them 90% of their final year's salary every year for life and the lives of their spouses.

To permanently bring its spending in line with its tax base, however, at some point Vallejo will have to do something about its pensions. U.S. bankruptcy judge Michael McManus, as the National law Journal reported last March, "held the city of Vallejo, Calif., has the authority to void its existing union contracts in its effort to reorganize."

But when it came to voiding those contracts on pensions�a major driver of public expenses�the city blinked. The "workout plan" the city approved in December calls for cuts in services, staff and even some benefits, such as health benefits for retirees. However, it does not touch public-employee pensions. Indeed, it increases the pension contributions the city pays.

This week, the city did approve a new firefighter contract that trims pension benefits for new hires and requires existing firefighters to pay more into their pensions. But that contract doesn't touch existing pensions. Nor does it affect police officers or other city workers. It also leaves the city with a $1.2 million shortfall. "The majority [of council members] did not have the political will to touch the pink elephant in the room�public safety influence, benefits and pay," Vice Mayor Stephanie Gomes told me.
Vallejo will eventually be back in bankruptcy court. Hopefully they will get it right next time.

In the meantime, if you live in Vallejo, I advise voting with your feet. Vallejo's mayor and city council are clearly inept, or alternatively bought and paid by the unions.

Steven Greenhut's Plunder!

I encourage you to read Plunder! How Public Employee Unions are Raiding Treasuries, Controlling Our Lives and Bankrupting the Nation by Steven Greenhut.

Plunder! is a fantastic book. I finished it weeks ago, but have not had time yet to do a review. I will. In the meantime I assure you it is well worth a read. It will open your eyes as to what is happening and why in regard to public unions.

Plunder! is now on my recommended reading list on the left.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Teacher Writes Mish, Wants To Expel Kids, Says "Give Us Back Our Classroom"

In response to Surprising Inability To Think Clearly About Privatization; Teachers Unions, The Child Molester�s Best Friend, please consider two emails.

The first is from a parent concerned about administrative overhead and other public school inefficiencies. The second is from a teacher who does not want to be held accountable for performance unless he can expel kids.

Terry Writes:
Mish,

Keep on hitting the education front. As you say, unions take care of their own.

A further point which I did not see mentioned, the non-teaching costs in government schools are extremely high. Check out the size of the buildings devoted to educational administration in your city, you will probably be shocked.

Japanese educators touring the Chicago Department of Education thought they were looking at the National Department of Education, it was so large.

A New York reporter had to make half a dozen phone calls to find someone who knew how many administrative staff were in the New York City Department of Education; it was about 5000.

The reporter called the Diocese of NYC, which has about 1/5 as many students, and asked the secretary "How many people administer the Diocese schools?" She replied "Hold a moment," and he thought he'd have to make several calls ... then he heard her counting. "1,2, 3, ... 22. We have 22 people."

I once had a son in Schenley High School in Pittsburgh, and a daughter in North Catholic High School. I asked for my children's attendance records. At Schenley, I spoke with five people before finally speaking to an attendance clerk, who finally released the information; this took about 30 minutes. At North Catholic, the secretary greeted me by name, I explained what I wanted, she reached behind for the attendance book, and had it in front of me in 60 seconds.

Government schools are extremely top-heavy. In addition, the entire idea that it takes 12 years times 180 days times 6 hours to teach children is absurdly inefficient.

My grandchildren are home schooled; they spend about an hour or two per day "in class", and their level of achievement is way beyond that of their peers. At the age of 7, the eldest tested at the 6th grade level in math.

Public schools cost far too much in both time and money, and deliver far too little.
Give Us Back Our Classroom

"Cloud 9" Writes
Mish

If you want to hold me accountable for what happens in my classroom, you need to give me control of what happens in my classroom. Let me expel the little ESE hellion that turns seventh period into absolute chaos. Let me expel the kid that comes to school five days out of the month. Let me expel the kid that refuses to work. Let me expel the kid whose only purpose for being on campus is to get a free breakfast and lunch, socialize and sell drugs.

You must decide whether we are a daycare facility or an educational institution. Give us back our classroom and you will get results.
No Inept Teacher/Administrator Left Behind

I would be quite happy to let you expel kids. Unfortunately that will not happen in public schools with public unions with administrators whose mission is to have a state of the art administration building instead of looking after the kids.

Expelling kids does happen in private schools, so does firing of inept teachers.

Parents should be given a choice where to send their kids instead of having to send them to a school based only on where they live.

Things are so bad in California that parents lie about their home address just to avoid bad teachers who cannot be fired. School administrators go around checking addresses making sure kids live where their parents say they do.

This is for the kids?

Unions are against magnet schools, home teaching, firing teachers, allowing parents to send their kids out of the district, vouchers, and merit pay.

Thus, public unions are the greatest threat to children's education. The irony in "No Child Left Behind" is that together with union rules, we have a system that would be better described as "No inept teacher/administrator left behind".

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Sunday Funnies 2010-03-28: Good News For College Grads

I have good news for those fresh out of college. New College Graduates To Be Cryogenically Frozen Until Job Market Improves
In a bold new measure intended to address unemployment among young professionals, lawmakers from across the political spectrum agreed on legislation Tuesday to subsidize the cryogenic freezing of recent college graduates until the job market recovers.

"Finding employment is extremely difficult for today's college graduate," Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) said. "Our current economy offers few options for the millions of young men and women desperate to join the workforce."

"Were we to freeze these graduates at the height of vigor and ambition, however, there's a chance we could revive them during a more prosperous time," Hutchinson continued. "When the economy finally bounces back�10, 20, even 30 years from now�we'll have an entire generation thawed out and ready to contribute."

The Frozen For Their Future Act reportedly calls for the installation of thousands of cryogenic tanks at college commencement ceremonies around the country. Upon receiving their diplomas, newly minted graduates will immediately make their way to preservation stations where their hearts will be artificially stopped using electroshock or a potassium-salt solution. Once a graduate's blood is drained and replenished with an anti-crystallizing fluid, they will be submerged in liquid nitrogen, a process that will, in effect, put them into suspended animation until key sectors of the American economy such as real estate and information technology have rebounded.

When reached for comment, a spokesman for loan provider Sallie Mae said that educational loans taken out by graduates in cryogenic storage would continue to accrue interest indefinitely at 6.5 percent.
Unemployment Higher In Some Parts Of The Country



Job Openings For Women With Natural Breasts

Here is more good news on the jobs front. Please consider Disney wants women with natural breasts for new 'Pirates' movie
Disney is searching for real treasure chests for its upcoming shoot of the next "Pirates of the Caribbean" swashbuckler -- that is, women with natural breasts.

The movie studio has banned actresses with artificial enhancements for the fourth installment, "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides," directed by Rob Marshall and starring Johnny Depp as the drunken buccaneer Jack Sparrow.

The filmmakers sent out a casting call last week seeking "beautiful female fit models. Must be 5ft7in-5ft8in, size 4 or 6, no bigger or smaller. Age 18-25. Must have a lean dancer body. Must have real breasts. Do not submit if you have implants."

To make sure LA talent scouts don't get caught in a "booby trap," potential lassies will have to undergo a Hollywood-style jiggle-your-jugs test and jog for judges. If there's nothing moving from the waist up, they're saying, it's a dead giveaway that you're not all flesh and bones -- and you're out.

Apparently, the bouncier the better, especially for sword-fighting action sequences, according to the Sunday Times of London.
This economy can use a big bounce.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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