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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rock_nj who wrote (142919)9/4/2008 7:10:49 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 362366
 
Actually, she used some of that money for a road on Nowhere Island....


Outcry against the bridge prompted Congress to later remove the earmark designation, but the state still got the same amount of cash to be used at their discretion for transportation. And the Palin administration has spent "tens of millions of dollars" of that money on a road on Gravina Island ... that is meant to link up to the bridge, which still doesn't exist.

Message 24900049



To: Rock_nj who wrote (142919)9/4/2008 10:19:42 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362366
 
Does McCain Need Independent and Moderate Voters?

blogs.tnr.com.

[Alan Brinkley--who is the provost and a professor of history at Columbia University, as well as a National Book Award-winning author--will be writing for us throughout the Republican convention.]

03.09.2008

I guess the Democrats can't count on Sarah Palin to torpedo McCain's candidacy. If there is a danger, it is that her speech will overshadow his. After the really dreary and depressing session of yesterday, tonight was very successful, with two good speeches--the other by Giuliani. And I think they made the case that the Republican faithful wanted to hear, and they beat up on Obama in ways that will resonate with the GOP.

But what I think this convention is really trying to do is to change the subject. Most Americans, it's clear, think this election is about the economy. In all the many speeches of this week in St. Paul, virtually none of them have had much to say about the really serious economic problems that are affecting the very Americans that the GOP has tried to enlist--middle class and lower middle class families. Instead, they are falling back on old favorites--the mess in Washington (and who has made that over the last eight years?), the political establishment (likewise), and of course the reliable whipping boy--the liberal media. This convention did not, I think, set up McCain to reach out to the independents and moderates he will need to get elected. Instead, he seems on course to try to turn out the right-wing evangelical vote in the way Bush did in 2004. But he will have a much harder time bringing out the vast number of evangelicals that Bush attracted. It will be very interesting tomorrow night to see whether McCain's speech veers away at all from the reliably conservative message of the first few days of the convention and returns to the more centrist image he was trying to project over the summer.

--Alan Brinkley



To: Rock_nj who wrote (142919)9/4/2008 11:22:51 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362366
 
U.S. Must Buy Assets to Prevent 'Tsunami,' Gross Says (Update2)

By Jody Shenn

Sept. 4 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. government needs to start using more of its money to support markets to stem a burgeoning ``financial tsunami,'' according to Bill Gross, manager of the world's biggest bond fund.

Banks, securities firms and hedge funds are dumping assets, driving down prices of bonds, real estate, stocks and commodities, Gross, co-chief investment officer of Newport Beach, California-based Pacific Investment Management Co., said in commentary posted on the firm's Web site today. Since financial markets seized up a year ago as the subprime-mortgage market collapsed, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index has fallen 13 percent and home prices are down more than 15 percent.

``Unchecked, it can turn a campfire into a forest fire, a mild asset bear market into a destructive financial tsunami,'' Gross said. ``If we are to prevent a continuing asset and debt liquidation of near historic proportions, we will require policies that open up the balance sheet of the U.S. Treasury.''

The government needs to replace private investors who either don't have the money to buy new assets or have been burned by losses, Gross said. Pimco, sovereign wealth funds and central banks are growing reluctant to fund financial firms after losses on investments they made to support the companies, Gross said. The world's biggest banks and brokers are retreating after more than $500 billion in writedowns and credit losses since the start of 2007 and have raised $364.4 billion in new capital.

Yields on investment-grade corporate bonds, debt backed by commercial mortgages as well as credit cards reached record highs last month relative to benchmark rates.

`Mom and Pop'

Treasury should support not only mortgage finance providers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but also ``Mom and Pop on Main Street U.S.A.,'' by subsidizing rates on home loans guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administration and other government institutions, Gross said. A new version of the Resolution Trust Corp., which bought assets from failing institutions during the savings-and-loan crisis of the 1980s, may also work, he said.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson arranged a rescue package for Washington-based Fannie and Freddie of McLean, Virginia as concern escalated the government-chartered companies didn't have capital to withstand the housing slump. Treasury pledged to pump unlimited debt or equity into the companies should they need it.

`Anorexic' Appetite

As Fannie and Freddie, banks, securities firms and hedge funds shrink, yields on all debt assets will rise compared with benchmark rates and volatility will increase, Gross said. The declines will end once sellers have depleted their assets and sufficient capital has been raised, Gross said. Unless ``new balance sheets'' emerge, prices of almost all assets will drop, even those of ``impeccable'' quality, he said.

``There is an increasing reluctance on the part of the private market to risk any more of its own capital,'' Gross said. ``Liquidity is drying up; risk appetites are anorexic; asset prices, despite a temporarily resurgent stock market, are mainly going down; now even oil and commodity prices are drowning.''

The extra yield demanded on Ginnie Mae's 30-year, current- coupon mortgage-backed securities over 10-year Treasuries has climbed to 1.75 percentage points, from 0.87 percentage points at the start of last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Bonds guaranteed by the U.S. agency are backed by the U.S. government. Spreads on 2-year AAA rated bonds composed of federally backed student loans have climbed to 0.95 percentage points over benchmark rates, from 0.01 percentage points below, Deutsche Bank AG data show.

Home Prices

Pimco, a unit of Munich-based Allianz SE, is seeking to take advantage of declines in home-loan bonds. The firm is raising as much as $5 billion to buy mortgage-backed debt that has plunged in value, according to two investors with knowledge of the matter. The Distressed Senior Credit Opportunities Fund will invest in securities backed by commercial and residential mortgages, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the fund is private.

The decline in home prices hasn't been seen since the Great Depression, Gross said. That drop translates to an even bigger decline in overall wealth as the effects ripple through markets, Gross said. Home prices in 20 of the largest U.S. metropolitan areas fell 15.9 percent in June from a year earlier, according to an S&P/Case-Shiller index.

`Rare Diamonds'

Fannie and Freddie 30-year fixed-rate mortgage bond yields, which influence the rates on most new home loans, have probably risen 75 basis points because of the waning demand, Gross said. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

About 61 percent of the holdings of Gross's Pimco Total Return Fund were mortgage-backed securities as of June 30, mostly debt guaranteed by Fannie, Freddie or Ginnie Mae, according to data on Pimco's Web site.

The fund returned 9.8 percent in the past 12 months, beating 97 percent of its peers in the government and corporate bond fund category as of Sept. 3, according to Bloomberg data. The returns are 5.76 percent annually over five years. Pimco has about $830 billion of assets under management.

``In a global financial marketplace in the process of delevering, assets that go up in price are rare diamonds as opposed to grains of sand,'' Gross said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jody Shenn in New York at jshenn@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: September 4, 2008 10:22 EDT



To: Rock_nj who wrote (142919)9/4/2008 12:16:13 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362366
 
Ross Says He May Invest in Refiners as Oil Declines (Update1)

By Jordan Burke and Erik Schatzker

Sept. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Billionaire investor Wilbur Ross said he may invest in oil refiners on expectations that crude prices will fall below $100 a barrel, benefiting processors.

``We have taken the position since oil was $140 that it would go down below $100 a barrel,'' Ross, chief executive officer of WL Ross & Co. in New York, said today in an interview on Bloomberg Television. ``We're trying to figure out whether they will be killed on the way down with oil prices, the same way they got killed on the way up, or whether this will work to their advantage.''

Valero Energy Corp. and other independent U.S. refiners reported declines in second-quarter profit after gasoline and diesel prices failed to keep pace with a surge in New York oil futures to a record. The Standard & Poor's Oil & Gas Marketing Index, comprising Valero, Sunoco Inc. and Tesoro Corp., has tumbled 50 percent this year.

The margin for processing three barrels of crude oil into two barrels of gasoline and one barrel of heating oil, known as the crack spread, was $14.44 a barrel in the second quarter, based on New York futures prices, down from $23.68 a year earlier. The crack spread, which reached a five-month low of $7.83 a barrel on Aug. 22, has since strengthened to $11.30.

Record Oil Prices

Refining margins narrowed as oil futures soared to a record $147.27 a barrel on July 11. The futures have dropped 26 percent since then, trading at $109.34 a barrel at 9:30 a.m. today on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

In May, Valero, the largest U.S. refiner, agreed to sell its Krotz Springs, Louisiana, refinery to Alon USA Energy Inc. for about $433 million and said it may also seek to sell its plants in Memphis, Tennessee; Ardmore, Oklahoma, and Aruba.

Two months later, Chief Executive Officer Bill Klesse told investors on an earnings conference call that no acceptable offers for those plants had been received.

Independent refiners are fuel processors that don't also produce crude oil or chemicals.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jordan Burke in New York at jburke29@bloomberg.net; Erik Schatzker in New York at eschatzker@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: September 4, 2008 10:29 EDT