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To: Rock_nj who wrote (157333)1/3/2009 10:50:24 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362348
 
Innovation Should Mean More Jobs, Not Less
_______________________________________________________________

By JANET RAE-DUPREE
The New York Times
January 4, 2009

Creating new jobs is a good way to get America’s economy moving again. That’s not the controversial part of President-elect Barack Obama’s economic stimulus plans. As usual, the devil is in the details. And innovation advocates fear that if the devil runs amok, a short-sighted emphasis on jobs over long-term productivity may bog down the economic recovery.

The problem, as they see it, is a centuries-old misconception that innovation is synonymous with automation, which in turn leads to the elimination of jobs.

“If you invest in a technology that makes something more efficient, the fear is that people will be put out of work,” says Kevin Efrusy, the venture capitalist whose firm Accel Partners is the lead funder of several important Silicon Valley start-ups, including Facebook. “But it’s just the opposite. When anything becomes cheaper, we consume a lot more of it. The overall economic effect is, you create and expand entire new industries and employment goes up.”

According to a 1995 study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, periods of high productivity — often achieved through automation — were correlated with periods of high job growth throughout the last half of the 20th century. “Innovation leads to job growth directly and clearly,” says Robert D. Atkinson, president of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation. The data collected since that study was published continue to prove the point, he says, noting that even with the trend toward off-shoring earlier this decade, unemployment rates in the United States remained quite low until the recent economic downturn began.

While creating jobs by upgrading the nation’s physical infrastructure may help in the short term, Mr. Atkinson says, “there’s another category of stimulus you could call innovation or digital stimulus — ‘stimovation,’ as a colleague has referred to it.” Although many economists believe that a stimulus package must be timely, targeted and temporary, Mr. Atkinson’s organization argues that a fourth adjective — transformative — may be the most important. Transformative stimulus investments, he said, lead to economic growth that wouldn’t be there otherwise.

A new report by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation presents the case for investing $30 billion in the nation’s digital infrastructure, including health information technology, broadband Internet access and the so-called smart grid, an effort to infuse detailed digital intelligence into the electricity distribution grid.

The stimulus money, he says, is “a wonderful opportunity” to integrate innovative technologies at a far faster pace than would otherwise be possible. “You’d have an economy and society within three to four years that would be a lot better than we have today,” Mr. Atkinson says, “and you’d create a lot of jobs.”

Beyond direct stimulus investments, he supports an initiative being circulated in Silicon Valley that seeks an information technology investment tax credit to foster innovation through the downturn.

Citing an Op-Ed essay on Nov. 30 in The New York Times by the economist Joseph E. Stiglitz, the Silicon Valley petition calls for a tax credit for companies that spend more than 80 percent of what they had been spending annually on information technology like computers and software.

The petition’s creator is David Thompson, the chief executive of Genius.com. “I think it’s great that they want to build more highways and bridges,” Mr. Thompson says, “but if you really want to invest in long-term job viability you need to invest in the innovation economy.”

Various organizations have previously backed such a tax credit specifically for clean technologies, biotech and broadband development. But TechNet, an advocacy group for the technology industry, is pushing for a tax credit that would underwrite innovation more broadly.

“Innovation is the lifeblood of the American economy,” says Jim Hock, a spokesman for TechNet. “We’re only as good as our next innovation. TechNet believes we shouldn’t be picking and choosing technologies to back with a tax credit. We should be technology-neutral and create an atmosphere of innovation that will let a thousand flowers bloom.”

Mr. Stiglitz, who was chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers from 1995 to 1997, noted in an interview that there has been a slow divergence between traditional economics and what may be called innovation economics.

“I’ve been a bit astonished that all the discussion around the private-sector stimulus has centered on infrastructure,” he said. “Bailouts, too, are aimed at correcting mistakes of the past, so they are backward-looking. We would be much better off spending our money forward-looking. If we spend $700 billion on new technology and innovation, we’d have a stronger, new, real economy. Up to now, the discussion has focused on the sectors that have been mismanaged rather than the sectors that are creating our future.”

Geoffrey A. Moore, a partner with Mohr Davidow Ventures and author of five best-selling business books, says that whatever form the government stimulus takes, it must focus on the nation’s greatest strength.

“America is probably the best culture in the world at failing,” he said. “We’re willing to navigate in a fog and keep moving forward. Our competitive advantage tends to be at the fuzzy front end of things when you’re still finding your way. Once the way has been found, we’re back at a disadvantage. So, yes, investing in innovation is critical.”

*Janet Rae-Dupree writes about science and emerging technology in Silicon Valley.

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company



To: Rock_nj who wrote (157333)1/3/2009 11:27:45 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362348
 
The Great Crash, 2008: A Geopolitical Setback for the West

foreignaffairs.org

By Roger C. Altman

From Foreign Affairs , January/February 2009

Summary: The financial crisis has called into serious question the credibility of western governments and may precipitate an eastward shift of power.

ROGER C. ALTMAN is Chair and CEO of Evercore Partners. He was U.S. Deputy Treasury Secretary in 1993-94.

The financial and economic crash of 2008, the worst in over 75 years, is a major geopolitical setback for the United States and Europe. Over the medium term, Washington and European governments will have neither the resources nor the economic credibility to play the role in global affairs that they otherwise would have played. These weaknesses will eventually be repaired, but in the interim, they will accelerate trends that are shifting the world's center of gravity away from the United States.

A brutal recession is unfolding in the United States, Europe, and probably Japan -- a recession likely to be more harmful than the slump of 1981-82. The current financial crisis has deeply frightened consumers and businesses, and in response they have sharply retrenched. In addition, the usual recovery tools used by governments -- monetary and fiscal stimuli -- will be relatively ineffective under the circumstances.

This damage has put the American model of free-market capitalism under a cloud. The financial system is seen as having collapsed; and the regulatory framework, as having spectacularly failed to curb widespread abuses and corruption. Now, searching for stability, the U.S. government and some European governments have nationalized their financial sectors to a degree that contradicts the tenets of modern capitalism. Much of the world is turning a historic corner and heading into a period in which the role of the state will be larger and that of the private sector will be smaller. As it does, the United States' global power, as well as the appeal of U.S.-style democracy, is eroding. Although the United States is fortunate that this crisis coincides with the promise inherent in the election of Barack Obama as president, historical forces -- and the crash of 2008 -- will carry the world away from a unipolar system regardless.

Indeed, rising economic powers are gaining new influence. No country will benefit economically from the financial crisis over the coming year, but a few states -- most notably China -- will achieve a stronger relative global position. China is experiencing its own real estate slowdown, its export markets are weak, and its overall growth rate is set to slow. But the country is still relatively insulated from the global crisis. Its foreign exchange reserves are approaching $2 trillion, making it the world's strongest country in terms of liquidity. China's financial system is not exposed, and the country's growth, which is now driven by domestic activity, will continue at solid, if diminished, rates.

This relatively unscathed position gives China the opportunity to solidify its strategic advantages as the United States and Europe struggle to recover. Beijing will be in a position to assist other nations financially and make key investments in, for example, natural resources at a time when the West cannot. At the same time, this crisis may lead to a closer relationship between the United States and China. Trade-related flashpoints are diminishing, which may soften protectionist stances in the U.S. Congress. And it is likely that, with Washington less distracted by the war in Iraq, the new administration of President Obama will see more clearly than its predecessor that the U.S.-Chinese relationship is becoming the United States' most important bilateral relationship. The Obama administration could lead efforts to bring China into the G-8 (the group of highly industrialized states) and expand China's shareholding position in the International Monetary Fund. China, in turn, could lead an effort to enlarge the capital base of the IMF.

AT BOTTOM

Conventional wisdom attributes the crisis to the collapse of housing prices and the subprime mortgage market in the United States. This is not correct; these were themselves the consequence of another problem. The crisis' underlying cause was the (invariably lethal) combination of very low interest rates and unprecedented levels of liquidity. The low interest rates reflected the U.S. government's overly accommodating monetary policy after 9/11. (The U.S. Federal Reserve lowered the federal funds rate to nearly one percent in late 2001 and maintained it near that very low level for three years.) The liquidity reflected, among other factors, what Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke has called "the global savings glut": the enormous financial surpluses realized by certain countries, particularly China, Singapore, and the oil-producing states of the Persian Gulf. Until the mid-1990s, most emerging economies ran balance-of-payments deficits as they imported capital to finance their growth. But the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98, among other things, changed this in much of Asia. After that, surpluses grew throughout the region and then were consistently recycled back to the West in the form of portfolio investments.

Facing low yields, this mountain of liquidity naturally sought higher ones. One basic law of finance is that yields on loans are inversely proportional to credit quality: the stronger the borrower, the lower the yield, and vice versa. Huge amounts of capital thus flowed into the subprime mortgage sector and toward weak borrowers of all types in the United States, in Europe, and, to a lesser extent, around the world. For example, the annual volume of U.S. subprime and other securitized mortgages rose from a long-term average of approximately $100 billion to over $600 billion in 2005 and 2006. As with all financial bubbles, the lessons of history, including about long-term default rates on such poor credits, were ignored.

This flood of mortgage money caused residential and commercial real estate prices to rise at unprecedented rates. Whereas the average U.S. home had appreciated at 1.4 percent annually over the 30 years before 2000, the appreciation rate roared forward at 7.6 percent annually from 2000 through mid-2006. From mid-2005 to mid-2006, amid rampant speculation in the housing market, it was 11 percent.

But like most spikes in commodity prices, this one eventually reversed itself -- and with a vengeance. Housing prices have been falling sharply for over two years, and so far there is no sign that they will bottom out. Futures markets are signaling that, from peak to trough, the drop in the value of the nation's housing stock could reach 30-35 percent. This would be an astonishing fall for a pool of assets once valued at $13 trillion.

This collapse in housing prices undermined the value of the multitrillion-dollar pool of lower-value mortgages that had been created over the 2003-6 period. In addition, countless subprime mortgages that were structured to be artificially cheap at the outset began to convert to more expensive terms. Innumerable borrowers could not afford the adjusted terms, and delinquencies became more frequent. Losses on these loans began to emerge in mid-2007 and quickly grew to staggering levels. And with prices in real estate and other asset values still dropping, the value of these loans is continuing to deteriorate. The larger financial institutions are reporting continuous losses. They mark down the value of a loan or similar asset in one quarter, only to mark it down again in the next. This self-reinforcing downward cycle has caused markets to plunge across the globe.

The damage is most visible at the household level. Americans have lost one-quarter of their net worth in just a year and a half, since June 30, 2007, and the trend continues. Americans' largest single asset is the equity in their homes. Total home equity in the United States, which was valued at $13 trillion at its peak in 2006, had dropped to $8.8 trillion by mid-2008 and was still falling in late 2008. Total retirement assets, Americans' second-largest household asset, dropped by 22 percent, from $10.3 trillion in 2006 to $8 trillion in mid-2008. During the same period, savings and investment assets (apart from retirement savings) lost $1.2 trillion and pension assets lost $1.3 trillion. Taken together, these losses total a staggering $8.3 trillion.

Such large and sudden hits have shocked U.S. families. And because these have occurred amid headlines reporting failing financial institutions and huge bailouts, Americans' fears over the safety and accessibility of their deposits are now more pervasive than they have been since 1933. This is why Americans withdrew $150 billion from money-market funds over a two-day period in September (average weekly outflows are just $5 billion). It is also why the Federal Reserve established a special $540 billion facility to help these funds meet continuing redemptions.

ROUGH-AND-TUMBLE

It is increasingly evident that the severe recession unfolding in the United States and Europe will be the deepest slump in the world economy since the 1930s. The United States' GDP fell in the third quarter of 2008 and was forecast to drop precipitously, by nearly four percent, in the fourth quarter. Of 52 economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal throughout last year, a majority expected the U.S. economy to contract for at least three consecutive quarters, which it has not done in 50 years. At least for the medium term, the global roles of the United States and European states will shrink along with those countries' economies.

Stock markets in the United States and globally are signaling a brutal economic period ahead. By early November 2008, the broadest of the U.S. market indices, the S and P 500, was down 45 percent from its 2007 high. That is a considerably steeper fall than occurred in 1981-82, which, until now, was the worst recession period since the 1930s. The only logical explanation for the plunge is that the market is anticipating an even worse drop in corporate profits for 2009 than occurred almost three decades ago.

Such a major drop in corporate profits might occur because U.S. consumers are deeply frightened and have stopped spending on discretionary items. Shocked by the financial crisis, fearful about the security of their bank and money-market deposits, and rocked by the sense of doom pervading Washington and the U.S. media, they have quickly raised their savings by curtailing spending and paying down debt. The result last September was the biggest monthly drop ever recorded in the widely followed Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index. That month also saw the sharpest monthly drop in consumer spending since 1980 -- and the drop in October was even worse. The chief executive officer of Caterpillar and other business leaders have described these conditions as the worst they have ever seen and are cutting back severely on capital spending.

As former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers has observed, this recession will be prolonged partly because of the unusual nature of this downward financial spiral. As the value of financial assets fall, margin calls are triggered, forcing the sale of those and other assets, which further depresses their value. This means larger losses for households and financial institutions, and these in turn discourage spending and lending. The end result is an even weaker economy, characterized by less spending, lower incomes, and more unemployment.

This recession also will be prolonged because the usual government tools for stimulating recovery are either unavailable or unlikely to work. The most basic way to revitalize an ailing economy is to ease monetary policy, as the U.S. Federal Reserve did in the fall. But interest rates in the United States and Europe are already extremely low, and central banks have already injected unprecedented amounts of liquidity into the credit markets. Thus, the impact of any further easing will probably be small.

Another tool, fiscal stimulus, will also likely be used in the United States, Europe, and Japan -- but to modest effect. Even the $300 billion package of spending increases and tax rebates currently under discussion in the U.S. Congress would be small in relation to the United States' $15 trillion economy. And judging from the past, another round of stimuli will be only partially effective: the $168 billion package enacted last February improved the United States' GDP by only half that amount.

The slowdown in Europe is expected to be every bit as severe. European consumers are spending less for the same reasons American consumers are. The financial sectors of European countries, relative to those countries' GDPs, have suffered even more damage than that of the United States. The British government reported a contraction of its economy last fall, and the eurozone countries are now officially in recession.

The international financial system has also been devastated. The IMF estimates that loan losses for global financial institutions will eventually reach $1.5 trillion. Some $750 billion in such losses had been reported as of last November. These losses have wiped out much of the capital in the banking system and caused flows of credit to shut down. Starting in late 2007, institutions became so concerned about the creditworthiness of borrowers, including one another, that they would no longer lend. This was evidenced by the spread between three-month U.S. Treasury bills and the three-month LIBOR borrowing rate, the benchmark for interbank lending, which quadrupled within a month of the collapse of the investment bank Lehman Brothers in September 2008.

This credit freeze has brought the global financial system to the brink of collapse. The IMF's managing director, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, spoke of an imminent "systemic meltdown" in October. As a result, the U.S. Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, and other central banks injected a total of $2.5 trillion of liquidity into the credit markets, by far the biggest monetary intervention in world history. And the U.S. government and European governments took the previously unthinkable step of committing another $1.5 trillion to direct equity investments in their local financial institutions.

THE ROAD TO RECOVERY

As of this writing, there has been a modest thaw in credit-market conditions. But a return to normalcy is not even on the distant horizon. The West's financial system is already a shadow of its former self. Given ongoing losses, Western financial institutions must reduce their leverage much more just to keep balance sheets stable. In other words, they will have to withdraw credit from the world for at least three or four years.

In a classic pattern of overshooting, markets are swinging from euphoria to despair. Now, the psychology of financial institutions has swung to a conservative extreme. They are overhauling their credit-approval and risk-management systems, as well as their leverage and liquidity ratios. Stricter lending standards will prevail for the foreseeable future.

These new lending patterns will be further constrained by sharply tightened regulation. It is widely acknowledged that this crisis reflects the greatest regulatory failure in modern history -- a failure that extended from bank supervision to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission disclosures to credit-rating oversight. The recriminations, let alone the criminal prosecutions, are just beginning. There is unanimity that broad regulatory reform is necessary. Obama and the new U.S. Congress will surely pursue legislation to implement reform this year. European authorities will undoubtedly take similar steps. Minimum capital and liquidity standards for regulated institutions will likely be tightened, among other measures.

If history is any guide, however, financial reform will go too far. The Sarbanes-Oxley legislation that followed the collapse of Enron and WorldCom is an example of such an overreaction. Should something like this occur again, tighter restrictions on the U.S. and European banking systems could delay their return to robust financing activity.

The United States will be further constrained by gigantic budget deficits, the product of sudden government spending designed to fight the financial crisis and of the sharp drop in revenues caused by the recession. It now appears that the United States' deficit for the fiscal year that began in October 2008 will approach $1 trillion, more than double the $450 billion for the year before. This would be by far the largest nominal deficit ever incurred by any nation and would represent 7.5 percent of U.S. GDP, a level previously seen only during the world wars.

THE IMPACT

There could hardly be more constraining conditions for the United States and Europe. First, the severe recession will prompt governments there to focus inward as their citizens demand that national resources be concentrated on domestic recovery. The priorities of Obama, as expressed in his campaign, fit this mold. If the matter has not already been handled in the lame-duck session of Congress in late 2008, Obama's first major act as president will be to introduce economic-stimulus legislation. He is also likely to take steps to further alleviate the financial crisis, address the plight of U.S. automakers, and begin the complex task of reforming health care and energy policy.

European leaders will also be focusing on the home front. They, too, will be implementing stimulus programs and trying to manage the financial damage. This past fall, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi were already making fiery speeches about protecting their domestic companies from being acquired by foreign interests -- hardly a message consistent with modern economics.

Second, unprecedented fiscal deficits and difficulties in the financial systems will also preclude the West from embarking on major international initiatives. If Obama inherits a $1 trillion deficit, and temporarily enlarges it to $1.3 trillion with a stimulus program, there will not be much of a constituency calling for increased U.S. spending on endeavors abroad. Indeed, the country may be entering a period of forced restraint not seen since the 1930s. Should a crisis like the 1994 collapse of the Mexican economy present itself again, it is doubtful that the United States would intervene. And even in the event of economic crises in strategically important areas, such as Pakistan, major economic assistance from the United States or key European nations is unlikely. Instead, the IMF will have to be the primary intervenor.

On the private side, Western capital markets will not return to full health for years. For the indefinite future, large financial institutions will shrink as losses continue and as they reduce their leverage further. The overshooting pattern that occurs after crises will also make markets averse to risk and leverage for the foreseeable future.

Historically, U.S. capital markets were far deeper and more liquid than any others in the world. They were in a league of their own for decades, until European markets also started developing rapidly over the past 10-15 years. The rest of the world was dependent on them for capital, and this relationship reinforced the United States' global influence. They will now be supplying proportionately far less capital for years to come.

Third, the economic credibility of the West has been undermined by the crisis. This is important because for decades much of the United States' influence and soft power reflected the intellectual strength of the Anglo-Saxon brand of market-based capitalism. But now, the model that helped push back socialism and promoted deregulation over regulation -- prompting the remaking of the British Labour Party, economic reforms in eastern Europe, and the opening up of Vietnam in the 1990s -- is under a cloud. The U.S. financial system is seen as having failed.

Furthermore, the United States and countries in the eurozone have resorted to large-scale nationalist economic interventions that undermine free-market doctrines. The U.S. government has taken equity stakes in more than 20 large financial institutions and, according to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, may eventually invest in "thousands" of them. In addition, it has temporarily guaranteed the key debt of its entire banking system. France, Germany, and the United Kingdom have intervened even more extensively, each in a slightly different way, with Germany, for example, backing the full amount of all private deposits. The British government's banking interventions, when measured in relation to the country's GDP, are even larger than those of the U.S. government relative to U.S. GDP.

All these interventions will stop the global shift toward economic deregulation. As President Sarkozy put it, "Le laisser-faire, c'est fini." Or, as Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan said more diplomatically, "The teachers now have some problems." This coincides with the natural and very long-term movement away from the U.S.-centric world that started after the fall of the Berlin Wall two decades ago.

CHINA'S GAIN

This movement also reflects the rapid rise of other economies, especially China and India. The U.S. share of world GDP had been declining for seven years before the financial crisis hit. And it looks increasingly likely that China's GDP will surpass the United States' at some point during the next 25-30 years. The rising nations' growing economic strength brings increased global influence and competition with it. The result, in the words of Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, is the emergence of a "nonpolar world."

China, for example, will suffer a lesser blow from the global crisis. It is experiencing some economic pain. Its export markets, led by the United States and Europe, are slowing dramatically. China is also suffering from price declines in certain urban real estate markets. Its growth slowed to nine percent during the third quarter of 2008 -- a rate that other nations would envy but was China's slowest in five years. These factors explain why the Chinese leadership is implementing a multiyear economic stimulus plan worth over $500 billion, or approximately 15 percent of GDP. Still, the IMF is projecting that the country's economy will grow by 8.5 percent in 2009.

In financial terms, China is little affected by the crisis in the West. Its entire financial system plays a relatively small role in its economy, and it apparently has no exposure to the toxic assets that have brought the U.S. and European banking systems to their knees. China also runs a budget surplus and a very large current account surplus, and it carries little government debt. Chinese households save an astonishing 40 percent of their incomes. And China's $2 trillion portfolio of foreign exchange reserves grew by $700 billion last year, thanks to the country's current account surplus and foreign direct investment.

This means that although China, too, has been hurt by the crisis, its economic and financial power have been strengthened relative to those of the West. China's global influence will thus increase, and Beijing will be able to undertake political and economic initiatives to increase it further. China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations are just concluding an agreement that would create the world's largest free-trade area, and Beijing could take additional steps toward Asian interdependence and play a stronger leadership role within the region.

China could also expand its diplomatic presence in the developing world, in order to further its model of capitalism and, in places such as Angola, Kazakhstan, and Sudan, satisfy its thirst for natural resources. In the midst of this crisis, it might also help finance emergency loans, either directly, through bilateral financing arrangements, or indirectly, by creating an additional facility at the IMF that could expand the organization's available credit beyond what current quotas allow. China should also be expected to make strategic investments through its sovereign wealth funds. Given China's appetite for natural resources, this is one likely area of interest; its relatively underdeveloped financial-services infrastructure is another.

THE FALL OF THE REST

India may also survive the crisis relatively unhurt. There, as in China, the financial system plays a small role in the overall economy. India also remains a fairly closed economy in terms of foreign investment, and so it is less dependent on external capital. Close observers expect India's growth to continue, perhaps at an annual rate of 6.5-7 percent. But India does not have nearly the wealth or the internal cohesion of China. This past fall, the government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh narrowly avoided losing a parliamentary vote of no confidence and having to dissolve itself over opposition to the nuclear agreement it signed with the United States in 2005. The overall result is that India is inwardly focused and not particularly equipped to advance its geopolitical standing.

Much of the rest of the world, however, has been hit hard by the crisis. The damaged Western banks, which had consistently supplied credit to businesses in the developing world, have abruptly stopped providing it. As foreign capital has been withdrawn, currencies, local banking systems, and stock markets in already poor states have weakened sharply. Eastern European countries that had been running exceptionally large current account deficits and had built up substantial foreign debts are particularly hurting. Hungary, Latvia, and Ukraine are prominent examples, and Hungary and Ukraine have already secured emergency loans from the IMF.

In Russia, the plunge in oil and other commodity prices has caused a near collapse of the ruble and of local share prices. The government of President Dmitry Medvedev has been spending huge amounts, perhaps $200 billion so far, to prop up the currency, Russia's financial system, and several highly leveraged state-controlled enterprises. With $500 billion in foreign exchange reserves, Russia remains in a strong financial condition even after these rescue efforts. Yet these sobering events will make some of its renewed geopolitical ambitions harder to achieve. In theory, this could permit a thaw in U.S.-Russian relations if Obama were to make an overture. Before that happens, however, Moscow might try the "get tough" approach that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev used with U.S. President John F. Kennedy in Vienna in 1961.

The outcome of the crisis will be more serious for Iran and Venezuela, which, like Russia, have suffered from the fall in oil prices but, unlike Russia, have limited foreign exchange reserves. Iran's economy was already rickety, and internal pressures are now likely to grow. Venezuela, which has been spending freely to advance President Hugo Chávez's international agenda, is facing an even more severe problem.

A SCALPEL, NOT A HATCHET

This historic crisis raises the question of whether a new global approach to controlling currencies and banking and financial systems is needed. Many economists and leaders are advocating such a reordering and calling for a Bretton Woods II. But creating a wholly new global financial order would be unworkable. Financial and currency markets are too large and too powerful to be contained; the days of managed exchange rates are over. Global financial regulation would probably cause more problems than it would solve, if only because the reforms needed in the West differ too much from those required elsewhere.

A better approach is to focus on a few key measures. First, the crisis is an opportunity to strengthen and reshape the IMF. The organization has $250 billion in unused lending capacity, but this capital base has not been adjusted since 1997 and may not be large enough to help the many developing nations currently suffering balance-of-payments and liquidity crises. (Hungary, Iceland, Pakistan, Ukraine, and six other countries have negotiated or are currently negotiating emergency-financing packages with the IMF.) This should be remedied. The IMF can also be made more flexible. Historically, it has conditioned its assistance to borrowing countries on their tightening their belts, by, for instance, reducing their budget deficits. Conditionality remains necessary over the long term, but with this crisis still unfolding, the IMF is rightly moving toward temporarily suspending it. Furthermore, high-surplus countries, such as China and the oil-producing states in the Persian Gulf, should be made larger shareholders in the IMF. It would be logical, for example, for these nations to lead any new and separate lending facility established by the IMF.

Second, the G-8 framework is increasingly obsolete. The economic power and wealth of China mandate that it, at a minimum, be included in the group. Because it is more representative, the G-20 framework (19 of the world's largest national economies plus the European Union) should be used more often, and the G-8 less so.

Third, the Basel II guidelines regulating the capitalization of banks should be revised. They proved severely inadequate at protecting banks against the balance-sheet crises that have befallen them. A better approach would be to build capital cushions for banks during prosperous times that could be depleted during crises.

The United States will remain the most powerful nation on earth for a while longer. Its military strength alone ensures this. But the crash of 2008 has inflicted profound damage on its financial system, its economy, and its standing in the world; the crisis is an important geopolitical setback. The international acclaim that greeted Obama's presidential victory may soften its effects, but even this enthusiasm cannot wipe those away. This is partly because the crisis has coincided with historical forces that were already shifting the world's focus away from the United States. Over the medium term, the United States will have to operate from a smaller global platform -- while others, especially China, will have a chance to rise faster.



To: Rock_nj who wrote (157333)1/4/2009 11:23:11 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362348
 
Credit Card Companies Willing to Deal Over Debt
______________________________________________________________

By ERIC DASH
The New York Times
January 3, 2009

Hard times are usually good times for debt collectors, who make their money morning and night with the incessant ring of a phone.

But in this recession, perhaps the deepest in decades, the unthinkable is happening: collectors, who usually do the squeezing, are getting squeezed a bit themselves.

After helping to foster the explosive growth of consumer debt in recent years, credit card companies are realizing that some hard-pressed Americans will not be able to pay their bills as the economy deteriorates.

So lenders and their collectors are rushing to round up what money they can before things get worse, even if that means forgiving part of some borrowers’ debts. Increasingly, they are stretching out payments and accepting dimes, if not pennies, on the dollar as payment in full.

“You can’t squeeze blood out of a turnip,” said Don Siler, the chief marketing officer at MRS Associates, a big collection company that works with seven of the 10 largest credit card companies. “The big settlements just aren’t there anymore.”

Lenders are not being charitable. They are simply trying to protect themselves.

Banks and card companies are bracing for a wave of defaults on credit card debt in early 2009, and they are vying with each other to get paid first. Besides, the sooner people get their financial houses in order, the sooner they can start borrowing again.

So even as many banks cut consumers’ credit lines, raise card fees and generally pull back on lending, some lenders are trying to give customers a little wiggle room. Bank of America, for instance, says it has waived late fees, lowered interest charges and, in some cases, reduced loan balances for more than 700,000 credit card holders in 2008.

American Express and Chase Card Services say they are taking similar actions as more customers fall behind on their bills. Every major credit card lender is giving its collection agents more leeway to make adjustments for consumers in financial distress.

Debt collectors, who are typically paid based on the amount of money they recover, report that the number of troubled borrowers getting payment extensions has at least doubled in the last six months. In other cases, borrowers who appear to be pushed to the brink are being offered deals that forgive 20 to 70 percent of credit card debt.

“Consumers have never been in a better position to negotiate a partial payment,” said Robert D. Manning, the author of “Credit Card Nation” and a longtime critic of the credit card industry. “It’s like that old movie ‘Rosalie Goes Shopping.’ When it’s $100,000 of debt, it’s your problem. When it’s a million dollars of debt, it’s the bank’s problem.”

The recent wave of debt concessions is a reversal from only a few years ago, when consumers usually lost battles with their credit card companies. Now, as bad debts soar, it is the lenders who are crying mercy.

Credit card lenders expect to write off an unprecedented $395 billion of soured loans over the next five years, according to projections from The Nilson Report, an industry newsletter. That compares with a total of about $275 billion in the last five years.

All that bad debt is getting harder to collect. In the past, troubled borrowers might have been able to pay down card loans by tapping the equity in their homes, drawing on retirement savings, taking out a debt consolidation loan, or even calling a relative for help. But with credit tight, consumers are maxed out.

“Knowing that the sources of funding have dried up, having someone pay the balance in full isn’t a viable strategy,” said Tim Smith, a senior executive at Firstsource, one of the biggest debt collection companies.

Lenders are reluctant to admit they will accept less than full payment, lest they encourage good customers to stop paying what they can. Industrywide data is scarce.

Unlike the huge mortgage loan modification programs that are taking place, which address thousands of mortgages at once, workouts for credit card customers are still being handled on a case-by-case basis.

In addition to debt forgiveness, debt collectors are allowing many delinquent borrowers to pay down their debt over the course of a year rather than the standard six months.

Paul Hunziker, the chairman of Capital Management Services, said that before this downturn, his firm put only about a quarter of all borrowers into longer-term repayment plans. Now, it puts about half on such plans.

Some lenders are also reaching out to borrowers shortly after they fall behind on their payments to try to avoid having to write off the account. Others are reaching out to customers who seem likely to fall behind. Just as lenders competed for years to be the first card to be taken out of the wallet, they are now competing to be the first ones paid back.

And realizing that millions more consumers are likely to default on their credit card bills in the coming months, the banking industry has started lobbying regulators to make it more advantageous to lenders to extend payment terms or forgive debt.

In an unusual alliance, the Financial Services Roundtable, one of the industry’s biggest lobbyists, and the Consumer Federation of America recently proposed a credit card loan modification program, which was rejected by regulators.

Under the plan, lenders would have forgiven about 40 percent of what was owed by individual borrowers over five years. Lenders could report the loss once whatever part of the debt was repaid, instead of shortly after default, as current accounting rules require. That would allow them to write off less later. Borrowers would have been allowed to defer any tax payments owed on the forgiven debt.

Landmark changes to bankruptcy legislation passed in 2005, for which the industry aggressively lobbied, seem to have hurt card debt collections. Credit card industry data indicate the average debt discharged in Chapter 7 bankruptcy has nearly tripled since 2004. And in Chapter 13 bankruptcies, secured lenders like auto finance companies routinely elbow out unsecured lenders like card companies, trends that have contributed to the card lenders’ willingness to settle.

Borrowers should not expect sweetheart deals. Card companies will offer loan modifications only to people who meet certain criteria. Most customers must be delinquent for 90 days or longer. Other considerations include the borrower’s income, existing bank relationships and a credit record that suggests missing a payment is an exception rather than the rule.

While a deal may help avoid credit card cancellation or bankruptcy, it will also lead to a sharp drop in the borrower’s credit score for as long as seven years, making it far more difficult and expensive to obtain new loans. The average consumer’s score will fall 70 to 130 points, on a scale where the strongest borrowers register 700 or more.

For the moment, it may be easier for troubled borrowers to start negotiating a modification by contacting the card company or collection agency directly. Credit counselors can help borrowers consolidate their debts and get card companies to lower their interest payments and other fees, but they currently cannot get the loan principal reduced.

Another option is for a borrower to sign up a debt settlement company to negotiate on her behalf. But regulation of this business is loose, and consumer advocacy groups warn that some firms prey on troubled borrowers with aggressive marketing tactics and exorbitant upfront fees.

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company



To: Rock_nj who wrote (157333)1/5/2009 5:57:19 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362348
 
Strategists See 17% S&P 500 Rise on Fed Cuts After Saying ‘Buy’

By Lynn Thomasson

Jan. 5 (Bloomberg) -- The same Wall Street strategists who told investors to buy stocks in the worst year since 1937 are even more bullish than a year ago, predicting the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index will rise 17 percent.

UBS AG, JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Deutsche Bank AG say the Federal Reserve’s decision to cut interest rates to as low as zero percent will help revive the U.S. economy and drive investors back to equities. Cheaper fuel prices and more than $850 billion in spending on roads, bridges and health care will send stocks higher, the strategists said.

Even if they’re right, the S&P 500 would end 2009 at 1,056, 28 percent below where the benchmark index for American equities started in 2008 and 35 percent lower than where the analysts said it would be now, based on the consensus of 11 strategists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Some of the biggest investors are growing more optimistic as the S&P 500 advanced 24 percent since reaching an 11-year low on Nov. 20.

“Equities usually find a bottom about halfway through a recession,” said Binky Chadha, the New York-based chief U.S. equity strategist at Deutsche Bank who predicted the S&P 500 would climb 12 percent in 2008 and expects a 26 percent surge this year. “If policy gets it right, we should find a bottom and start to turn around. And if that happens, then it’s time to buy stocks.”

$29 Trillion

Wall Street analysts lost credibility in 2008 when none predicted a down year and the average forecast was for a gain of 11 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Instead, the S&P 500 tumbled 38 percent to 903.25 and $29 trillion was erased from global markets. The projections for this year would represent the best annual performance since 2003, when the S&P 500 climbed 26 percent.

Concern that losses will deepen remains elevated even after falling from record levels in October and November.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, which measures price swings, ended 2008 at 40, up 78 percent from a year ago and more than triple the level at the start of 2007.

The Libor-OIS spread, a measure of cash scarcity, closed 2008 at 121 basis points after averaging about nine basis points in the year before credit markets started freezing up in August 2007. The difference between what the U.S. government and banks pay to borrow for three months, the so-called TED Spread, is about three times higher than before the credit crisis started, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Treasuries returned 14 percent last year, the most since 1995, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes. Investors sought the relative safety of government debt as losses and writedowns at the world’s biggest financial companies rose toward $1 trillion and the economies of the U.S., Europe and Japan fell into the first simultaneous recessions since World War II.

Bad Advice

“People have been telling the investing public for the past six months to stay the course or buy this great opportunity, and it’s turned out to be a liability,” said Randy Bateman, who oversees $15 billion as chief investment officer of the asset management unit of Huntington Bancshares Inc. in Columbus, Ohio. “Any outlook right now is subject to a great deal of skepticism.”

Stocks rallied at the end of the year as the Fed said it will “employ all available tools” to revive the economy and President-elect Barack Obama pledged to boost growth through the biggest infrastructure investment since the 1950s.

The combination of government stimulus and oil’s 69 percent drop from its July record of $147.27 a barrel may pop the “bubble of pessimism” toward stocks, according to David Bianco of UBS, Wall Street’s biggest bull.

‘Year of Gloom’

“The consensus outlook for 2009 is a full year of gloom,” Bianco, 33, wrote in his annual market outlook last month. “We believe 2009 will bring signs of a dawn in confidence with the first faint light appearing earlier than most investors expect.”

The S&P 500 began recovering an average five months before recessions ended in 1975, 1982, and 1991, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Bianco predicted 12 months ago that the S&P 500 would climb 16 percent in 2008, and stayed bullish after the subprime mortgage meltdown spurred the collapse of Bear Stearns Cos., then the fifth-largest U.S. securities firm, in March. He said in a July interview with Bloomberg News that the rebound in stocks during the second half of 2008 would be the “one of the greatest roars we’ve seen.”

UBS’s New York-based equity strategist now expects the S&P 500 to reach 1,300 this year as share prices cheap relative to earnings become irresistible. Last year’s slump left S&P 500 companies valued at an average 12.9 times operating profit, near the lowest since at least 1998, monthly data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Dividend Yields

The S&P 500’s dividend yield may be the “most compelling” signal that stocks are inexpensive, Abhijit Chakrabortti, Morgan Stanley’s New York-based head of global equity strategy, wrote Nov. 25. He expects the index to advance 7.9 percent this year.

The dividend payout for companies in the index climbed above the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note for the first time in 50 years in November and is now 3 percent. That’s 0.67 percentage point more than the yield on 10-year notes, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

JPMorgan’s Thomas Lee says the 47 percent drop in gasoline prices last year to an average $1.62 a gallon, according to AAA, combined with Obama’s plan for stimulating growth may revive consumer spending in the second half of 2009. Retailers are among the New York-based bank’s “top picks” for 2009. The S&P 500 Retailing Index trades at 12.5 times the earnings of its 27 companies, about half the average ratio this decade.

‘Staging a Recovery’

“Every year’s a new year,” said Lee, 39, who expects the S&P 500 to rise to 1,100. “One of the big hurdles is obviously going to be coaxing investors back. As we exit ‘09 we think the economy is staging a recovery,” he said in a telephone interview.

Economic statistics give little indication that a recovery is imminent. Consumer confidence sank in December to the lowest since records began in 1967, raising the risk that spending will weaken in 2009, data from the New York-based Conference Board showed last week.

Gross domestic product will contract in the first half of this year, while household spending is expected to fall 1 percent in 2009, the biggest drop since the aftermath of the attack on Pearl Harbor, according to Bloomberg surveys of economists.

Corporate profits have fallen for seven quarters, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. Should earnings drop through the first half of 2009, as analysts surveyed by Bloomberg project, it will be the longest stretch of decreases since the government started tracking quarterly data in 1947.

‘Bit Early’

The decline in corporate profits will probably push the S&P 500 back to its 11-year low of 752.44, according to Barclays Plc’s Barry Knapp, the only forecaster calling for the index to drop. He says the index will fall 3.2 percent.

“We do think there will be an economic recovery in the back half of the year,” Barclays’ New York-based chief U.S. equity strategist said in a telephone interview. “You can do OK with the equity market this year, it’s just a question of when you commit. Right now, it’s a little bit early.”

The biggest bears at the start of last year, Morgan Stanley’s Chakrabortti and Merrill Lynch & Co.’s Richard Bernstein, had called for the S&P 500 to climb 3.9 percent to 1,525.

The index ended the year 41 percent below their estimate, data compiled by Bloomberg show. More than half of the S&P 500’s decline for 2008 came after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., once the fourth-largest U.S. securities firm, filed the biggest bankruptcy in history on Sept. 15.

‘Devastating Effects’

“The thing we all got wrong was that there would be a safety net to catch any and all large financial institutions,” Deutsche Bank’s Chadha said. “Letting Lehman go has had devastating effects.”

Merrill’s Bernstein forecasts a bigger advance for the S&P 500 this year than his 2008 prediction, saying the index will climb 7.9 percent to 975. With global growth likely to “negatively surprise,” the New York-based strategist recommended utilities and makers of household products and drugs in a Dec. 9 note.

The MSCI World Consumer Staples Index, which includes makers of food, beverages and consumer goods, is valued at 15.2 times earnings, the cheapest since at least 1995, monthly data compiled by Bloomberg show. The MSCI World Health-Care Index ended 2008 valued at 16 times profit after trading at a ratio of 15.1 in November, the cheapest in at least 13 years.

The MSCI World Utilities Index ended 2008 with a dividend yield of 4.4 percent, about twice that of 10-year Treasuries. The ratio was the highest since at least 1995, monthly Bloomberg data show.

“Looking at the textbook and history of the market, it looks like there’s potential for a rally,” said John Carey, the Boston-based investor who runs the $4.64 billion Pioneer Fund that beat 74 percent of its peers last year. “It would be risky to be out of the market right now.”

Firm Strategist Target %Change
Barclays Plc Barry Knapp 874 -3.2%
Citigroup Inc. Tobias Levkovich 1,000 11%
Credit Suisse Andrew Garthwaite 1,050 16%
Deutsche Bank Binky Chadha 1,140 26%
Goldman Sachs David Kostin 1,100 22%
HSBC Holdings Kevin Gardiner 1,000 11%
JPMorgan Chase Thomas Lee 1,100 22%
Merrill Lynch Richard Bernstein 975 7.9%
Morgan Stanley Abhijit Chakrabortti 975 7.9%
Strategas Research Jason Trennert 1,100 22%
UBS AG David Bianco 1,300 44%

Last Updated: January 4, 2009 19:00 EST



To: Rock_nj who wrote (157333)1/5/2009 6:51:15 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362348
 
Pellegrini to Leave Paulson & Co. to Start His Own Hedge Fund
______________________________________________________________

By GREGORY ZUCKERMAN
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
JANUARY 5, 2009

The man who helped John Paulson pull off one of the greatest trades of this decade is leaving his side.

Paolo Pellegrini, who played a crucial role in helping to implement bets against subprime mortgages that netted Paulson & Co. about $15 billion in 2007, resigned from the $36 billion hedge-fund firm Dec. 31.

While Mr. Paulson is the visionary within the firm who drives its general direction, Mr. Pellegrini and a few others helped find the riskiest subprime-mortgage securities to bet against, and figured out the best way to capitalize on their expected falls in value.

Mr. Pellegrini put together data showing that even stabilizing home prices would lead to huge losses in the subprime market, a possibility that other investors scoffed at when the trades were made in 2005 and 2006.

Mr. Pellegrini, who had a background in derivatives before joining Paulson in 2004, helped his boss use credit-default swaps, or insurance-like contracts that provided protection against various slices of mortgage-backed securities.

The move paid off when the housing market began to crumble in early 2007.

A former banker and native of Italy, Mr. Pellegrini, 52 years old, was the co-portfolio manager of the two Paulson Credit Opportunities funds, along with Mr. Paulson.

Mr. Pellegrini is expected to start his own hedge fund.

The departure was amicable, according to people close to the matter.

The departure is a loss for Paulson, but the firm boasts a team of senior analysts and hasn't lost other professionals on its investment team in the past year.

Mr. Paulson's two credit funds rose about 15% in 2008 through the middle of December. Other Paulson funds rose between 7% and 38% in that period, thanks to wagers against financial firms and general cautiousness about the economy.

By contrast, the average hedge fund lost more than 20% for 2008, while the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index lost 38%, including dividends.

In recent weeks, Mr. Paulson has been one of the few buyers of top-rated mortgage-backed securities, a move that is paying off as credit markets have rallied.

He also is part of a team of investors that have reached an agreement to purchase IndyMac Bank, which last year became one of the biggest bank failures in U.S. history. Some investors who were outbid for IndyMac say the deal will bring profits to Mr. Paulson and the other victors in the competition.

But Mr. Paulson's original focus, the merger-arbitrage world, has proven trickier lately.

Paulson was, according to public filings, the largest holder of Rohm & Haas Co. as of Sept. 30; the company tumbled last week on worries about an acquisition. It also held 5.5 million shares of telecom-provider BCE Inc., which has fallen, too. It isn't clear whether Paulson still holds shares or how much of any positions were hedged. A spokesman declined to comment.



To: Rock_nj who wrote (157333)1/5/2009 7:06:53 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362348
 
Hedge fund IT spending to plummet

finextra.com

Source: Celent, 31 December 2008

As the world's largest financial institutions are whipsawed by an unparalleled series of shocks and traumas, the hedge fund industry has taken its own beating.

Celent estimates that global information technology spending by hedge funds will reach US$1.35 billion by year-end 2009, representing a decrease of 20.5% year-over-year.

In the wake of an unprecedented series of events, most of which occurred at a remarkable speed within the past few months, Wall Street has become a meaningfully different place for hedge funds. In a new report, Hedge Fund IT Spending: The Inevitable Contraction, Celent assesses the consequences of the financial crisis and the resulting reorganization of capital markets on the hedge fund industry, hedge fund IT spending and technology priorities.

With uncertainty surrounding capital markets and the scarcity of credit likely to spill into 2009, a substantial contraction in IT spending is inevitable.Growth rates will drop across all regions and contribute to lower total spending. However, cuts will be more pronounced in Europe and Asia, given the particularly dire performance of both regions' hedge funds.

The overarching theme of IT strategies in 2009 will be a focus on realizing efficiency wins from existing applications infrastructure while lowering maintenance costs or at least keeping the status quo. Spending on new technology will take a back seat. Unless faced with a collapsing platform, large scale system acquisitions or replacements are expected to be postponed.

Celent's projections are tempered by trends in some specific areas where increased spending on either new or upgraded applications is expected. High priority items in 2009 include risk analytics, risk monitoring and control, legal and compliance, (risk) reporting, pricing and valuation, collateral management, liquidity risk management, performance measurement and attribution and front-end growth investments (i.e. algorithmic trading and SOR). Large scale system acquisitions, such as OMS/EMS and accounting systems, are considered secondary in an environment where many firms are in acute survival and 'debacle avoidance' mode.

"Approaches to thinking about and using technology will be transformed. Many of these changes will be transitory, some permanent. For the time being, cost-minimization and operational efficiency are at the top of the operational agenda,'" says Isabel Schauerte, an analyst with Celent's Securities and Investments Group and author of the report.

"Yet, retrenchment is certain to be followed by reinvigorated spending. Today, generating alpha is, to some extent, a function of generating 'operational alpha'," she adds.



To: Rock_nj who wrote (157333)1/5/2009 11:46:32 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362348
 
Four Stocks for 2009

seekingalpha.com



To: Rock_nj who wrote (157333)1/6/2009 1:20:35 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362348
 
Hedge Funds Will Be Ruined by Withdrawal Limits:

Commentary by Matthew Lynn

Jan. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Looking for a new definition of a hedge fund? How about an organization that takes 20 percent of the profits on your money in the good times, then refuses to let you have it back when the weather turns rough?

We all know the hedge-fund industry had a terrible 2008. With a few honorable exceptions, its promises of being able to deliver steady, positive returns in either a rising or falling market turned out to be empty.

Yet, in many cases, the industry has taken a bad situation and made it worse. Many funds have placed limits on withdrawals that investors can make. In effect, people are locked into a falling asset.

That is a big mistake. In any investment business, the return of capital is far more important than the return on capital. By forcing investors to keep their money tied up during a bad year, the hedge funds are damaging their own reputation, and it may well never recover.

There are numerous examples of funds limiting withdrawals.

Citadel Investment Group LLC said last month it was stopping year-end withdrawals from its two biggest funds after investors sought to take out $1.2 billion, or 12 percent of assets.

Magnetar Capital LLC took similar action after its largest fund lost 30 percent of its value in the year through November.

Cerberus Capital Management LP last month limited redemptions from a hedge fund that lost 16 percent of its value.

Paulson’s Warning

Shutting the gates on a hedge fund is now commonplace. As of October, 18 percent of the industry’s assets, or about $300 billion, was subject to withdrawal restrictions, according to Peter Douglas, principal of Singapore-based hedge-fund consulting firm GFIA Pte. With plenty of announcements since then, the total now is likely to be far higher.

Not everyone is happy with that turn of events. John Paulson, who runs the $36 billion hedge-fund firm Paulson & Co., reckons his colleagues in the industry are making an error.

“We think it’s a mistake for managers to use gates and other tools to limit investor access to their funds,” Paulson wrote in his 2009 outlook to investors. “While we recognize the difficulties of the current environment, we think it is a manager’s responsibility to raise liquidity to meet the redemption needs of their investors.”

There may well be something self-serving to Paulson’s remarks. As one of the few hedge-fund managers to call the markets right in the past year, he could easily pick up bargains for his own fund if his rivals were forced to liquidate their positions in a hurry. Even so, he’s making a valid point.

Two Arguments

There are two main arguments used to lock investors into the funds they have put money into.

First, hedge funds are meant to be long-term investments. They invest in esoteric instruments that can be virtually impossible to sell in a collapsing market. And if there are too many withdrawals, managers won’t be able to take advantage of all the “opportunities” suddenly available.

Next, if funds are forced to sell off their holdings, prices will collapse even further. Managers aim to maintain an orderly market and to make sure all their investors are treated equally. The investors who don’t sell will be the ones who suffer if half the fund is redeemed at fire-sale prices.

The trouble is, both justifications are nonsense.

Whether a hedge fund is a long-term investment or not is for the investor to decide, not the money manager. Maybe investors want to hold it for a couple of generations, or maybe until Tuesday of next week. It’s their choice.

Empty Claims

A few months ago, hedge funds were claiming that the liquidity they provided in different markets was one of the main justifications for their existence. If the funds haven’t created a liquid market in the instruments they invest in, there isn’t much point to them.

Even worse is the pretence that they are protecting the remaining investors. Sure, if a fund suddenly sells half its assets, that will drive prices down. Yet investors in hedge funds are sophisticated, wealthy people (or at least they are meant to be). They are well aware that this is a bad time to be selling any asset, whether it is factories, property, crude oil or repackaged bonds with funny-sounding names. Then again, perhaps they really need the money. Or maybe they think that while this is a bad time to sell, tomorrow will be even worse.

Hedge funds can’t expect to treat their investors like this and survive. It would be reasonable to say something like this: “It’s a bad time to sell, guys. You will lose what little is left of your shirt, but if you stick with us, we believe we can turn this thing around.” Then the fund holders can make their own decisions.

Telling them they can’t have their money back will surely leave many investors wondering if hedge funds are an asset class they want to stay in or whether it’s better to get out forever -- as soon as that is possible.

(Matthew Lynn is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)

To contact the writer of this column: Matthew Lynn in London at matthewlynn@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: January 5, 2009 19:01 EST



To: Rock_nj who wrote (157333)1/8/2009 3:49:26 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362348
 
Roubini forecast for 2009

forbes.com

2009 Will Be Very, Very Bleak

By Nouriel Roubini, 01.08.09, 12:01 AM ET

It is clear that 2008 was not a very good year, and it is official that the current recession started in December 2007. So how far are we into this recession that has already lasted longer than the previous two (the 1990 and 2001 recessions lasted eight months each)? I believe the U.S. economy is only half way through a recession that will be the longest and most severe in the post-war period. U.S. gross domestic product will continue to contract throughout 2009 for a cumulative output loss of 5% and a recession that will last close to two years.

Let us look at the picture in detail:

Personal Consumption
The resilient U.S. consumer started to give up the ghost in the third quarter of 2008, when for the first time in almost two decades, personal consumption contracted. With personal consumption making up over two-thirds of aggregate demand, the outlook for the U.S. consumer is at the center of the dynamics that will play out in the real economy in 2009.

In my view, personal consumption will continue to contract quite sharply throughout 2009 as a result of negative wealth effects from housing and equity market losses, the disappearance of home equity withdrawal from the second half of 2008, mounting job losses, tighter credit conditions and high debt servicing ratios (the debt to income ratio went from 70% in the 90s, to 100% in 2000, to 140% now). This retrenchment of the U.S. consumer will result in a painful rebalancing in the economy that will eventually restore the savings rate of a decade ago.

The wealth losses for households related to the fall in home prices are roughly $4 trillion so far, and are clearly bound to increase further as home prices continue to fall--eventually reaching the $6-8 trillion range (compatible with a 30-40% fall in home prices peak to trough). With a negative wealth effect of 6 cents on the dollar, the reduction in personal consumption could amount to a whopping $500 billion. And negative wealth effect from fall in equity prices--on the wake of a bleak 2009 for corporate profits--will also contribute to the contraction in personal consumption by an estimated $100 billion (compatible with a 25% contraction in the stock markets).

Housing Sector
The fourth year of housing recession is well on course.

Total housing starts have plunged from the 2.3 million seasonally adjusted annual rate peak of January 2006 all the way to the 625,000 SAAR of November 2008 (the last data point available), an all-time low for the time-series that started in January 1959. Single-family starts built for sale are down 75% from their Q4 2005 peak.

On the demand side, new single-family home sales are down 65% from their July 2005 peak. Both demand and supply of homes are therefore still falling very sharply, which does not bode well for inventories. Inventories are the mortal enemy of prices for any goods-producing sector, including housing.

Starts need to fall substantially below sales so that the excess supply in the housing market is reabsorbed. Inventories persist at record highs and the gap between one-family starts (for sale) and one-family sales is at levels that cannot promote a fast work-off of inventories. To put these numbers in perspective, compare this with a measure of vacant homes for-sale-only. Vacant homes for-sale-only were at 2.2 million in Q3 2008, an all-time high. In the decade between 1985 and 1995, it oscillated around 1 million units on average and 1.3 million units between 2001 and 2005. This implies that we have to deal with an excess supply that ranges between 0.9 and 1.2 million units, of which roughly 85% are single-family structures.

The sharp and unprecedented fall of starts might not have reached a bottom yet. In this economy-wide recession, weakness on the demand side is bound to persist, and we believe that supply will have to fall further, given also the great wave of foreclosures that is adding to the excess of supply in the market. I see starts falling another 20% from current levels and believe that home prices will not bottom out until the middle of 2010.

Labor Markets
With the continued credit crunch and significant cut-down in consumer and business spending, the monthly job losses will continue in the 400,000 to 500,000 and 300,000 to 400,000 range during the first two quarters of 2009 respectively, bringing the unemployment rate to 8% by mid-2009. The severe contraction in private demand until early 2010 will keep layoffs high and the unemployment rate elevated over 8%.

Economy-wide job cuts are expected, with big corporations and small enterprises, residential and commercial construction, financial services and manufacturing continuing to shed jobs at a strong pace. Moreover, with structural shifts in the economy since the last recession, job losses this time will be more severe in the service sector, including retail, business and professional services and leisure and hospitality. Unless the fiscal stimulus addresses the deficit problem for state and local government, job losses at the government level will also gain pace. In turn, income and job losses will further push up default and delinquency rates on mortgages, consumer loans and credit cards. Moreover, the loss of high-paying corporate and financial sector jobs will be a big negative for tax revenues over the next two years.

Layoffs are bound to continue thereafter as cost-cutting gains pace with the beginning of the (sluggish) recovery period in early 2010. Even as consumer demand might show some signs of recovery, firms, as in the past, will begin by hiring only part-time and temporary workers initially. The unemployment rate might peak at close to 9% in Q1 2010, almost two years after the recession began. However, the hiring freeze across industries that began in late 2007 will continue at least until 2010, causing discouraged workers to leave the work force and containing the extent of the spike in the unemployment rate. Further, the decline in labor utilization will add to the deflationary pressure in the economy. An aging labor force, lower capital spending and potential growth over the next few years might also result in lower productivity growth and an increase in the natural rate of unemployment.

Capital Expenditure
Firms have been drawing down inventories beginning in Q4 2008. As the slump in domestic and foreign demand and difficulty in accessing short-term credit persist over the next four quarters, business investment is bound to contract in double-digits throughout 2009. Industrial production, spending on equipment and durable goods will also remain in the red through 2009. Moreover, with a sluggish recovery in private demand even during 2010, firms will start building inventories and contemplate capital expenditure plans only at a slower pace.

Trade
Exports contraction that began in late 2008 will gain pace in 2009 as more and more emerging economies slip into slowdown following the G-7 countries. On the other hand, easing oil prices and secular downward trends in consumer spending and business investment will help imports to shrink. In fact, this might cause the trade deficit to contract in 1H 2009 since the contraction in imports might well exceed the decline in exports, thus containing any negative contribution of trade to GDP growth.

Dollar Outlook
The fate of the dollar in 2009 rests on the global growth outlook. After profit-taking on long dollar positions ends, and trading volumes pick up as investors return from their holidays, the dollar may temporarily recover its relative safe-haven status in H1 2009. Since markets have yet to fully appreciate the impact of the commodity slump and financial crisis on the rest of the world, risk appetite may collapse again on signs of a deeper- or longer than expected recession outside the U.S. Further de-leveraging of dollar-denominated liabilities could provide an additional boost to the dollar as a funding currency.

The bond-yield outlook could be a further source of strength: While the Fed is already at a zero interest rate policy, other central banks will cut rates further to stimulate growth, putting downward pressure on currencies like the euro.

Alternating with these upside risks to the dollar may be downside risks from 1) a supply crunch in commodities that lifts commodity prices and producers' economies, and 2) the inability of the market to absorb increased Treasury supply at low yields.

Inflation/Deflation
Annual U.S. inflation, as measured by official producer and consumer price indexes, is likely to slow in 2009 and even fall into technical deflation despite increases in the monetary base and fiscal measures to boost spending power. Slumping commodity prices may drag down the average annual headline CPI inflation rate to around -2%--a technical deflation, which may morph into genuine deflation if falling prices generate expectations that they will continue to fall.

Meanwhile, the growing slack in product and labor markets will keep core consumer inflation subdued at an average year-over-year rate of 1% to 2%. Steep discounts to get rid of unsold retail inventory, rising job losses and lower wage growth will reinforce the trend of stagnant or falling prices. Loose labor markets and weak demand for commodities and goods/services will keep producer prices at bay. Risks to the outlook include 1) a commodity supply crunch or geopolitical shock that leads to a sustained rise in commodity prices and 2) an earlier than expected global economic recovery.

Credit Losses Still Ahead
Back in February 2008, I warned that the credit losses of this financial crisis would amount to at least $1 trillion and most likely closer to $2 trillion. As of mid-November 2008, the threshold of $1 trillion in global financial write-downs was finally reached. Given that national house prices are expected to drop another 20%, we expect credit losses of $1.6 trillion.

The cycle has also turned in the commercial real estate arena with the traditional lag of around two years. Current serious delinquency plus default rates of 5.9% of CRE loans (net recovery, via Fed data) are projected to increase to up to 17% by Fitch, assuming a 25% fall in prices ($142 billion out of $2.4 trillion.) In the consumer loan area, we estimate the credit card charge-off rate could increase to 13% in the worst case scenario. Adding a typical 5% delinquency rate during recessions, the total loan losses on unsecuritized consumer loans are projected to increase to $252 billion out of $1.4 trillion.

Based on my calculations, I expect total loan losses to reach about $1.6 trillion out of $12.4 trillion of unsecuritized loans alone, implying an aggregate default rate of over 13%. The International Monetary Fund assumes that the U.S. banking system carries about 60% to 70% of unsecuritized loan losses (and about 30% of mark-to-market losses on securitizations). Even assuming that future loan losses are fully discounted at current market prices, deploying the remaining TARP funds towards recapitalizing the banking system would still be warranted.

The Disconnect Between Bond and Equity Markets
U.S. government bonds were on a tear in 2008, while equities plummeted in a nasty bear market. Bond yields at the long end hit all-time record lows, while the short end even dipped into negative territory. Only Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities suffered as deflation risks rose. Stocks, on the other hand, had their worst year since the Great Depressions: Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 34%, and S&P 500 was -38.5%. At its 2008 low on Nov. 20, the S&P 500 was down 49% for the year and 52% from its October 2007 peak. Stocks rallied in December, though, resulting in an apparent disagreement between the stock and bond markets over the outlook for the U.S. economy. Bond markets seemed to be discounting a recession in 2009, while stock markets have been gaining since late November. This disconnect may vanish in 2009, though, if the stock market rally was really just a bear market rally due to portfolio rebalancing and thin year-end trade volumes.

However, there have been intimations that the bond market is in a bubble about to burst in 2009. Indeed, with ultra-low bond yields, investors may be tempted to switch into higher-yielding equities--which are now considered by many to be undervalued. Valuation, however, is not the be-all and end-all of asset performance. The credit freeze needs to end before equities can see the end of the bear market. However, considering the likely economic stagnation ahead, bonds should be a better bet than equities for some time. I see meaningful downside risks to stock prices as bad macro news--worse than expected--continues to dominate in 2009. Using the S&P 500 as the benchmark, earnings per share will stay in the $50 to $60 range--and earnings will fall further. If--and it is not unusual during recessions--the price-to-earnings ratio falls in the 12 to 14 range, we could see another 25% slide in stock prices.

Fiscal and Monetary Policy

1. Fiscal Policy

A lot of hope is being placed on the expected fiscal stimulus package of around $750 billion spread over 2009-10, including 40% of the stimulus in tax cuts for households and firms. Around half of the stimulus is expected to kick in starting Q2 2009 and through 2010. But this will fall short of the pullback in private demand of close to $1 trillion during this period.

Infrastructure spending, in spite of being highly effective, might not be timely, stimulating the economy only in late-2009 and 2010 when it has well passed the severe recession phase only to exacerbate the ballooning fiscal deficit. Nonetheless, around $100 billion of infrastructure investment might be able to kick in during 2009. Moreover, job creation in infrastructure might be overestimated, given limitations in moving laid-off workers from other sectors to the infrastructure projects. As such, any job creation via government spending and tax incentives for firms will significantly fall short of the ongoing layoffs.

Given the drawback of the "spending" component of the stimulus, the government may be enticed to implement more tax cuts. While tax incentives for households like payroll and child tax credit might be well-targeted at the group with high propensity to spend, tax cuts in general will be less effective in stimulating demand, given a secular rise in the savings rate expected over the next few years. Likewise, tax breaks for firms hiring new workers or investing in new equipment will be rather ineffective, since businesses see little viability in doing so during a slump in domestic and export demand. At the most, a tax stimulus, in spite of being timely and well-targeted, will cause only a temporary rebound in the economy for a month or a quarter, merely shifting the spending-decision period just like tax rebates did in second-quarter 2008.

Expansion of unemployment benefits, food stamps and other incentives will have a high bang-for-buck effect in 2009 and will only assuage the impact of the recession. The stimulus will also include up to $100 billion for state and local governments to meet their severe budget shortfalls, including grants, Medicaid and unemployment insurance funds, preventing cutbacks in public services, and investment and jobs in several recession-hit states. But again, fiscal aid for states often suffers from time lags.

Fiscal stimulus, TARP spending, government-sponsored-enterprise-related expenditures, along with further slowdown in corporate and individual income tax revenues, will push the fiscal deficit to around $1.3 trillion in fiscal year 2009.

2. Monetary Policy

The Fed has enacted a wide and unprecedented range of measures to mitigate the credit crisis and stimulate the economy. It has already cut its target range for the Fed funds rate down to 0% to 0.25% but, more importantly, it has created currency swap lines and an alphabet soup of programs to provide liquidity to the financial system and clean out toxic financial assets. The Fed experimented with different forms of financing itself in order to enable a sharp expansion of its balance sheet to accommodate these liquidity facilities. In addition to rate cuts and quantitative easing, the Fed has directly aided failing financial institutions. Now, the Fed is considering issuing its own debt and/or purchasing long-dated Treasuries and Agency debt.

Will the monetary easing work? So far, the increase in money supply has not been accompanied by an increase in the velocity of money. In other words, credit growth remains stagnant as banks are reluctant to lend back out the money provided by the Fed and, at the same time, borrower demand has fallen.

*Nouriel Roubini, a professor at the Stern Business School at New York University and chairman of Roubini Global Economics, is a weekly columnist for Forbes.com. A number of analysts at Roubini Global Economics assisted in the writing of this week's column.



To: Rock_nj who wrote (157333)1/9/2009 1:42:02 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 362348
 
The Obama Gap
_______________________________________________________________

By PAUL KRUGMAN
Op-Ed Columnist
The New York Times
January 9, 2009

“I don’t believe it’s too late to change course, but it will be if we don’t take dramatic action as soon as possible. If nothing is done, this recession could linger for years.”

So declared President-elect Barack Obama on Thursday, explaining why the nation needs an extremely aggressive government response to the economic downturn. He’s right. This is the most dangerous economic crisis since the Great Depression, and it could all too easily turn into a prolonged slump.

But Mr. Obama’s prescription doesn’t live up to his diagnosis. The economic plan he’s offering isn’t as strong as his language about the economic threat. In fact, it falls well short of what’s needed.

Bear in mind just how big the U.S. economy is. Given sufficient demand for its output, America would produce more than $30 trillion worth of goods and services over the next two years. But with both consumer spending and business investment plunging, a huge gap is opening up between what the American economy can produce and what it’s able to sell.

And the Obama plan is nowhere near big enough to fill this “output gap.”

Earlier this week, the Congressional Budget Office came out with its latest analysis of the budget and economic outlook. The budget office says that in the absence of a stimulus plan, the unemployment rate would rise above 9 percent by early 2010, and stay high for years to come.

Grim as this projection is, by the way, it’s actually optimistic compared with some independent forecasts. Mr. Obama himself has been saying that without a stimulus plan, the unemployment rate could go into double digits.

Even the C.B.O. says, however, that “economic output over the next two years will average 6.8 percent below its potential.” This translates into $2.1 trillion of lost production. “Our economy could fall $1 trillion short of its full capacity,” declared Mr. Obama on Thursday. Well, he was actually understating things.

To close a gap of more than $2 trillion — possibly a lot more, if the budget office projections turn out to be too optimistic — Mr. Obama offers a $775 billion plan. And that’s not enough.

Now, fiscal stimulus can sometimes have a “multiplier” effect: In addition to the direct effects of, say, investment in infrastructure on demand, there can be a further indirect effect as higher incomes lead to higher consumer spending. Standard estimates suggest that a dollar of public spending raises G.D.P. by around $1.50.

But only about 60 percent of the Obama plan consists of public spending. The rest consists of tax cuts — and many economists are skeptical about how much these tax cuts, especially the tax breaks for business, will actually do to boost spending. (A number of Senate Democrats apparently share these doubts.) Howard Gleckman of the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center summed it up in the title of a recent blog posting: “lots of buck, not much bang.”

The bottom line is that the Obama plan is unlikely to close more than half of the looming output gap, and could easily end up doing less than a third of the job.

Why isn’t Mr. Obama trying to do more?

Is the plan being limited by fear of debt? There are dangers associated with large-scale government borrowing — and this week’s C.B.O. report projected a $1.2 trillion deficit for this year. But it would be even more dangerous to fall short in rescuing the economy. The president-elect spoke eloquently and accurately on Thursday about the consequences of failing to act — there’s a real risk that we’ll slide into a prolonged, Japanese-style deflationary trap — but the consequences of failing to act adequately aren’t much better.

Is the plan being limited by a lack of spending opportunities? There are only a limited number of “shovel-ready” public investment projects — that is, projects that can be started quickly enough to help the economy in the near term. But there are other forms of public spending, especially on health care, that could do good while aiding the economy in its hour of need.

Or is the plan being limited by political caution? Press reports last month indicated that Obama aides were anxious to keep the final price tag on the plan below the politically sensitive trillion-dollar mark. There also have been suggestions that the plan’s inclusion of large business tax cuts, which add to its cost but will do little for the economy, is an attempt to win Republican votes in Congress.

Whatever the explanation, the Obama plan just doesn’t look adequate to the economy’s need. To be sure, a third of a loaf is better than none. But right now we seem to be facing two major economic gaps: the gap between the economy’s potential and its likely performance, and the gap between Mr. Obama’s stern economic rhetoric and his somewhat disappointing economic plan.