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Monday, July 28, 2008
Fannie Mae Unsold $5 Billion Homes Bring Peril to Shareholders
US securities regulators urged to delay accounting change
(WASHINGTON) A senior US lawmaker has urged securities regulators to put off an accounting change that could force banks to put trillions of dollars back on their balance sheets.
'Changes to securitisation accounting could have a dramatic impact on the economy, the capital markets and consumers seeking credit,' Spencer Bachus said in a letter to the chairmen of the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB).
Mr Bachus said that Jan 1, 2010 would be a more realistic deadline than this year for implementing accounting changes as it would allow 'stakeholders' to have the time to debate alternatives and consequences.
FASB is working on a proposal to eliminate certain off-balance sheet items called qualified special purpose entities (QSPEs) that are used to pool debt such as mortgages and student loans.
FASB plans to issue the proposal in August despite concerns that banks and others like Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae would have to raise billions in capital at a time of tight credit.
'Significant changes to the accounting rules should be made with careful consideration and preferably when markets are functioning with minimal stress and volatility,' said Mr Bachus, the top Republican on the House Financial Services panel, which oversees the SEC.
The letter said that based on Dec 31 figures, about US$7.2 trillion in mortgage-backed securities, US$2.47 trillion in other asset-backed securities and US$816.3 billion in asset-backed commercial paper could be affected.
The SEC has directed FASB to provide clear guidance on the accounting rule by the end of 2008.
FASB is also considering requiring banks to disclose information about their exposure to mortgage-backed securities and off-balance sheet items.
The real estate industry welcomed the letter. 'We're hearing from policymakers and markets participants that this is simply the wrong medicine at the wrong time,' said Brendan Reilly, senior vice-president with the Commercial Mortgage Securities Association. -- Reuters
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Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Henry Poulson in question
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Thursday, July 3, 2008
China oil import tax rebate may be quietly dropped
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Optimistic VS Pessimistic View
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Pimp your Gnome and Win a $350 BestBuy Gift Card!!
Bling Gnome
Dow enters bear market as US stocks slide
NEW YORK - The Dow sank into a bear market on Wednesday as US stocks fell on growing concerns about the toll that record oil prices are taking on the economy and corporate profits.
After flirting with bear market status for several sessions, the Dow closed 20 per cent below its October peak as it was no longer able to withstand the avalanche of warnings about banking losses, surging inflation fears and weakening consumer confidence.
Merrill Lynch struck a negative chord early in the session when it downgraded General Motors (GM), saying the automaker will need US$15 billion to shore up liquidity. Merrill added that bankruptcy is 'not impossible' for GM if the auto market continues to slump, sending GM's shares down more than 15 per cent.
Adding to the gloom, US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said high oil prices, further home price declines and capital markets turmoil will prolong the American economy's slowdown.
Nervousness abounded a day before the key monthly jobs report after data released on Wednesday showed US private employers slashed 79,000 jobs in June. The ADP data raised expectations for an even more disappointing payrolls report.
Investors sold shares of big-cap technology companies such as Intel Corp and industrial conglomerates like Caterpillar on concerns about economic growth and rising oil prices.
'This market is not for the faint-hearted right now,' said Kurt Brunner, portfolio manager at Swarthmore Group in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
'I really don't see us getting out of this quagmire, this dark zone anytime soon - I don't believe we'll see a whole lot of positive rhetoric surrounding earnings coming up, given record oil prices and the concern about the global economy slowing.'
The Dow Jones industrial average tumbled 166.75 points, or 1.46 per cent, to 11,215.51.
The Standard & Poor's 500 Index lost 23.39 points, or 1.82 per cent, to close at 1,261.52, while the Nasdaq Composite Index slid 53.51 points, or 2.32 percent, to end at 2,251.46.
The S&P 500 is down 19.4 per cent from its October closing peak, while the Nasdaq entered a bear market in February.
Coal mining company shares, including Consol Energy, were hammered throughout the session as the price of coal fell. The Dow Jones coal index plummeted 13.9 per cent, led by a plunge of 14.6 per cent in the shares of Consol Energy.
Economic bellwether Caterpillar was the biggest drag on the Dow, as its shares dropped 5 per cent to US$70.42. Shares of GM fell 15.1 per cent to US$9.98. Intel Corp's stock lost 3 per cent to US$20.93.
There were some bright spots, however. Deutsche Bank helped calm some of the concerns about banks when Germany's biggest lender said it now expects a quarterly profit compared with a loss a year ago and would not need any more capital.
Deutsche Bank's announcement underpinned gains in the shares of JPMorgan Chase & Co, up 1.7 per cent at US$34.60.
Lehman Brothers' beaten-down stock rose 6.7 per cent to close at US$22.36 on the NYSE after CNBC reported that the investment bank is issuing stock to employees as a retention effort.
The ADP's employment report aside, Wednesday's data brought some brighter news as well, with a boost in demand for aircraft lifting new orders at US factories by an unexpectedly large 0.6 per cent in May.
US crude for August delivery jumped to a record US$144.32 a barrel.
Trading was moderate on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), with about 1.52 billion shares changing hands, below last year's estimated daily average of roughly 1.90 billion, while on Nasdaq, about 2.42 billion shares traded, above last year's daily average of 2.17 billion.
Declining stocks trounced advancing ones by a ratio of about three to one on both the NYSE and the Nasdaq. -- REUTERS
Hee Teck
U.S. Stocks Slump as Oil Surges; Dow Average Enters Bear Market
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aF4fDOUXmP2k&refer=home
It is obvious why it has gone to a bear market.... ECB rates looks likely to go up, and that will let all hell break loose on USA, US Fed, USD, Stock Markets, commodities... Everything. Just like i am saying in my previous post. I cant highlight this more.
Today is ECB rates day, and expect selling to be controlled as it is only a half day. Expect Fed to talk a lot over the weekend, and expect lots of hot air, Talk and no action stuff. Damage control stuff.
In the end, it is still actions that count. However, if Fed strongly go against ECB's vision, then expect the worst.
Hee Teck
Get to know Glenn
Get to know Glen!
Glenn Beck
路透纽约7月2日电---摩根士丹利(MS.N: 行情)周三称,计划出售投资分析和市场指数公司MSCIMXB.N的一半股权,目前这些股权价值大约8.98亿美元.
该第二大投资银行称,将为出售其5,300万股A级股票中的一半股票提交一份注册声明.
自MSCI上市以来摩根士丹利就一直在削减对其持有的多数股权.该投资银行在上月公布的第二季业绩中,宣布从出售MSCI股权中获得7.32亿美元收益,帮助抵消交易和投资的巨额亏损.(完)

Hee Teck
