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Adalberto Palma

CD President Obama Joins the Cult of Economics Deniers 2011.08.15 - 0 views

  • Obama is no longer paying attention to economists and economics in designing economic policy.
  • do what his campaign people tell him
  • Obama intends to focus on reducing government spending and cutting programs like social security and Medicare.
  • ...18 more annotations...
  • stimulus spending, as prescribed by mainstream economic theory, to create jobs and promote growth."
  • Obama intends to ignore the path for getting the economy back to full employment that most economists advocate.
  • vast amounts of excess capacity.
  • theory as to how budget cuts could boost growth
  • lower deficits in the present and/or near future will reduce fears that government spending will be crowding out private economic activity. This would lead to lower interest rates. Lower interest rates will provide a boost to investment and consumption. Also, lower interest rates in the United States will make dollar assets less attractive to investors. This will cause the dollar to decline against other currencies, improving our trade balance.
  • no part of this story makes sense in the current economic environment. US interest rates are already at ridiculously low levels,
  • interest rates did fall, it is difficult to believe that it would have much impact on either investment or consumption
  • policy will be determined by people with no knowledge of economics whatsoever.
  • Consumers remain heavily indebted due to the collapse of house prices.
  • The dollar continues to be a safe haven in uncertain times.
  • keep the dollar from falling too much against their currencies no matter how low interest rates fall.
  • unlikely that cutbacks in government spending will do much to lower the dollar and reduce the trade deficit.
  • Obama is apparently not listening to economists anymore, so he wouldn't care, in any case.
  • politicians who think that biology has no place in teaching the origins of species, we now have politicians who think that economics has no place in designing economic policy.
  • tens of millions of lives stand to be ruined.
  • Keynes's basic insights have been supported by a vast amount of economic research over the last seven decades. And we have solid evidence showing (pdf) that the limited stimulus pushed through by Obama in 2009 worked pretty much as predicted in generating growth and jobs.
  • doesn't matter at the White House any more.
  • evidence,
Adalberto Palma

AB Kansas City Fed Chief Esther George Takes Simpler-Is-Better Approach 2012.03.07 - 0 views

  • Esther George
  • president and chief executive of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
  • funding advantage that has come from growing consolidation in the industry
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  • didn't the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 end "too big to fail," and won't its "living wills" provision nudge our largest banks to become smaller and simpler?
  • "I can be hopeful. I am an optimist at heart, but I don't see any evidence of that."
  • his plans to protect commercial banking from riskier forms of finance
  • realizes regulatory tactics and strategies must evolve as banks balloon in size and scope, George insists boots-on-the-ground supervision is crucial. She worries complex approaches are overshadowing common-sense judgments.
  • Stress testing is a "useful tool to gauge potential losses from different economic scenarios. It is no substitute for supervisory judgment and examination," she said.
  • helps calibrate capital,
  • "but to really know a bank's condition, you have to go in and examine those credits."
  • While the central bank has taken many steps in recent years to open its monetary policy decisions to more scrutiny by outsiders, its regulatory policy making has grown more opaque. Gone are the days when Fed governors debated policy decisions in open meetings. George would reverse that trend.
  • we have to apply the transparency pledge to everything we do
  • Part of what we have succumbed to is a sense of urgency. Things are moving fast."
  • time to "ponder the unintended consequences."
  • These rules have big import
  • her philosophy on regulation.
  • concern I have
  • You can make any rule as complicated or as simple as you want. The more complicated you make it, and I learned this watching Basel II get crafted, I don't think you ensure any chance of success."
  • I would like to see us go back to a time when examiners were required to use judgment. You gave them simple, clear rules and they had to make judgments."
  • I have watched over the years. It is an accumulation of compliance, and community banks do not have the scale to spread those costs, so they bear them disproportionately."
  • I worry about the burden on small banks,
  • Consumer compliance issues seem to cause the most friction among bankers and their examiners, she said.
  • due to prescriptive rules that tell the examiner that you don't get to apply judgment here. If it meets this, this and this test, then it's a problem. That's the frustration of bankers."
  • Forbearance drags things out,
  • I think about it pretty simplistically. Anytime you have an asset, a loan, that gets into trouble, somebody has to take the loss. The sooner you take the losses," the better.
  • George belongs to a growing cohort of folks who question some of the conventional wisdom growing up around community banks, namely that a massive wave of consolidation is coming and the average size must increase.
  • I don't think there has to be a wave of consolidation."
  • I don't think they all have to be $1 billion" in assets
  • worried about credit risk at community bank
  • both margin pressure and competition from larger banks that can use lower funding costs to undercut smaller rivals.
  • is they [banks] need more yield so they will go out for more risk," she said. "And when they do that in a low interest rate environment it can look OK. But those borrowers start looking worse when rates start ticking up.
  • it's all going to affect a lot of people.
  • I hear bankers saying
  • I am going to have to start making some credits that I wouldn't normally make because I have to generate earnings.'
  • community banks also are telling her about losing business to large banks.
  • but that big bank is coming in and pricing a loan in a way that I cannot and would not."
  • They say I am trying to compete with the big bank in my market
  • Community banks that survive will be the ones that hold the line on risk but continue to adapt, she said
  • community banks are core to the payments system and core to lending in these markets. I don't see that model being outdated. It's always got to be tweaked, but I worry the thing that is going to drag them down is regulation. That seems like something we could address and should address."
anonymous

La advertencia de Moody's a Europa presiona al petróleo - 0 views

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    El West Texas Intermediate se paga a mínimos de dos semanas después de que la calificadora Moody's advierta que revisará sus ratings al crédito soberano de la Unión Europea en el primer trimestre de 2012.
anonymous

Los mercados de Wall Street retoman la tendencia bajista de fondo - 0 views

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    Los inversores se ven desmotivados porque Moody´s anunció que revisaría los ratings de 26 países de la UE en el primer trimestre de 2012, ya que desconfía de las nuevas medidas para resolver la crisis de deuda.
anonymous

La Bolsa de México sigue a Europa con ligeros avances - 0 views

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    En ausencia de actividad en Wall Street, la Bolsa de México sigue la evolución de sus pares europeos que transitan entre ganancias y pérdidas intentando ignorar la rebaja de S&P a los ratings de 9 países de Europa.
anonymous

Las acciones mexicanas suben apoyadas en el PIB de China - 0 views

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    Las compras favorecen a la Bolsa de México gracias a que la economía China creció más de lo esperado y que las colocaciones de deuda europea fueron positivas pese a las rebajas de rating que S&P hizo en la Eurozona.
anonymous

Wall Street extiende rally e ignora las rebajas de ratings de S&P - 0 views

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    Wall Street cierra al alza extendiendo el rally de dos semanas para el S&P 500 apoyada en las optimistas expectativas de la economía estadoundiense y menores costos de endeudamiento en España.
anonymous

Wall Street cierra en mínimos de noviembre 2008 - 0 views

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    Las acciones estadounidenses se desploman pronunciando la mayor caída para el S&P 500 desde noviembre de 2008, por la preocupación de que la rebaja de S&P al rating de deuda de los EE.UU. precipitará el deterioro económico.
anonymous

Wall Street se prepara para un día de optimismo ya que Fitch mantiene el rati... - 0 views

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    Los futuros del índice S&P 500 suben un 1,1% antes de la apertura del mercado. Es porque el sentimiento inversor festeja el anuncio realizado por la agencia Fitch sobre Francia y el EFSF.
Adalberto Palma

The Shrinking U.S. Banking Sector: On Balance, Who Benefits? - 0 views

  • There were 157 bank failures in the country last year, the most since 1992, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
  • consolidation process is now under way.
  • 6,529 commercial banks and 1,128 savings institutions by the end of this year. That is a 4.4% decline from the previous year, and it leaves the country with nearly half as many institutions as it had 20 years ago
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  • In 1933 alone, about 4,000 commercial banks and 1,700 savings and loans institutions failed.
  • Kenneth H. Thomas
  • not all customers will benefit from greater consolidation
  • U.S. federal government rolled out various laws in 1784 to encourage multiple banks in individual states.
  • wave of consolidation occurred in 1994
  • "Many small banks feel that they are being pushed out of existence by new regulations,
  • swing of the pendulum last year, consolidation returned to 1994 levels. But in contrast to previous times, much of the consolidation has been due to failures
  • Loretta J. Mester
  • "In the short term, I think consolidation will pick up as weaker banks go through mergers and acquisitions, and stronger banks take time to get their capital shored up" in their pursuit of greater efficiency and economies of scale,
  • institutions that will likely be hardest hit by all this activity will be the community banks
  • have less than $1 billion of assets, but account for 92% of all banks and savings institutions,
  • Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act was a death knell
  • experts expect consolidation to continue, and predict that the trend will leave the banking system better off in the long run. "We don't really need as many banks as we used to,"
  • Their plight hasn't been lost on the FDIC, which has launched various initiatives to give community banks some relief.
  • guidelines that lighten requirements for how these banks manage customers whose accounts are consistently overdrawn.
  • community banks play an important role in local economies. They typically have close relationships with individual customers
  • Todd A. Gormley,
  • "Smaller firms and local individuals trying to get loans from larger banks could be a subset of the population that is worse off because of consolidation,
  • concentration in geographic markets
  • are an important factor in the reciprocal relationship between lender and borrower
  • consolidation also leaves a handful of banks controlling the majority of certain types of products.
  • Four "mega banks" -- Wells Fargo, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup -- now hold three-fifths of the home mortgage market, which limits consumers' choice of products and their ability to shop around for competitive pricing. "It's a textbook issue of a concentration of power," Guttentag says. "A limited number of firms control the market, and they will engage in implicit collusion."
  • borrowers with low incomes or bad credit are significantly less likely to default on loans if they borrow from a local bank than if they receive a loan from a distant bank or mortgage company.
  • some cities, states and regions have just one dominant bank.
  • Pittsburgh metropolitan area, PNC Bank has 47% of the deposit share, according to the FDIC. The second-largest bank in the area is Citizens Bank of Pennsylvania, which has 8.5% of the deposit share.
  • no limits on deposit shares in certain markets, 1994's Riegle-Neal Act imposes a 10% cap on nationwide deposits for a single bank.
  • Treasury Department is now looking into modifying the cap to include all consolidated liabilities.
  • consumers need not worry
  • Mester
  • While the total number of banks may be declining, the number of branches isn't.
  • In the last 10 years, the number of bank branches nationwide has increased 15%, although that expansion has primarily involved banks with $500 million or more in assets. The number of branches dropped slightly for the first time in a decade in 2010.
  • Guttentag
  • the number of banks will continue to shrink, but he doubts the U.S. will ever look like, say, Canada -- which has just 22 banks. Indeed, if consolidation continues as it has over the past 20 years at the average annual rate of 3.3%, it would take 60 years for the total number to fall below 1,000 banks and nearly 130 years to get below 100.
  • if the number of banks shrinks from 6,000 to 100, if those 100 are operating in all market segments and if consumers have many options, there is no reason for concern," Guttentag
anonymous

Avanzan los futuros en Wall Street, pese a la amenaza de S&P a Europa - 0 views

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    Los futuros del índice S&P 500 se posicionan al alza, a pesar de que la agencia calificadora S&P advirtió ayer que podría rebajar las notas crediticias a 15 países de la eurozona.
Adalberto Palma

FT Osborne to set out bank reform plans 2011.11.15 - 0 views

  • in mid-December detailed plans to shake up Britain’s banking sector,
  • implementing the main proposals of Sir John Vickers’ Independent Commission on Banking – by the “backstop” year of 2019, although some changes would come into effect before then.
  • changes must be enshrined in legislation before the election
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  • the Treasury fear the banks have a supportive ear in Downing Street in the shape of Jeremy Heywood, No 10 permanent secretary and a former Morgan Stanley managing director,
  • The separation of high street banking and riskier investment banking operations is the centrepiece of the Vickers package.
  • the government is considering calls for new governance safeguards at the Bank even as it gets new powers.
  • had regulators focused on the big picture rather than box ticking they might have prevented the disastrous merger of Royal Bank of Scotland with ABN Amro.
  • There was no shortage of laws – there was a lack of judgment,
  • the creation of a Financial Policy Committee at the Bank to spot danger building in the system was breaking new ground; he also conceded that the regulators had to strike a trade-off between risk and economic growth. “We don’t want the financial stability of the graveyard,”
  • Mr Osborne was giving evidence to MPs about the future shape of Britain’s financial architecture and specifically on the draft financial services bill, which will put the Bank of England in charge of spotting future crises.
  • recommended replacing the Court of the Bank with a stronger supervisory body that could review interest rates and other decisions after the fact.
Adalberto Palma

FN Seismic economic events expose regulatory fault lines 2011.08.15 - 0 views

  • three main measures that governments can use to try and jump-start their economies. They can expand the money supply by decreasing interest rates, printing money (quantitative easing) or lowering the reserve requirements of the banks.
  • The problem is with the third item on the list. The regulators are certainly not lowering reserve requirements; quite the contrary.
  • banks are once again becoming more reluctant to lend to each other.
anonymous

¿Tomo el dinero y corro ...o mejor espero? - 0 views

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    La reciente turbulencia de los mercados, el largo proceso de desapalancamiento de las diversas economías y las amenazas de las agencias de calificación, lleva a muchos inversores a pensar en una salida rápida, sin considerar detenidamente las oportunidades.
Adalberto Palma

FT Tripped up by globalisation 2011.08 - 0 views

  • A failure of economic strategy and leadership lies behind the near simultaneous collapse of market confidence
  • Europe and America have been unable to cope with the realities of global capital markets and competition from Asia
  • both regions are being whipsawed by globalisation.
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  • Jobs for low-skilled workers in manufacturing
  • lost to international competition
  • The path to recovery now lies
  • in upgraded skills, increased exports and public investments in infrastructure and low-carbon energy.
  • US and Europe have veered
  • consumption-oriented stimulus packages and austerity without a vision for investment.
  • good social policy does not mean running big deficits.
  • globalisation has not only hit the unskilled hard but has also proved a bonanza for the global super-rich
  • able to convince their home governments to cut tax rates on profits and high incomes
  • expand investments in human and infrastructure capital
  • First
  • cut wasteful spending, for instance in misguided military engagements
  • Second
  • Third
  • balance budgets in the medium term, in no small part through tax increases on high personal incomes and international corporate profits that are shielded by loopholes and overseas tax havens
  • projects will not add to net financial liabilities if they are repaid through future revenues.
  • Export-led growth is the other under-explored channel of recovery
  • through better skills and technologie
  • through better financial policies.
  • last missing piece for any recovery
  • clarity of purpose from the political class
  • Europe’s fate has been decided by German state elections and small Finnish parties
  • US has similarly devolved into a mélange of sector, class, and regional interests.
  • Obama is the incredibly shrinking leader
  • There is no growth strategy, only the hope that scared and debt-burdened consumers will return to buying houses they don’t need and can’t afford. Sadly, these global economic currents will continue to claim jobs and drain capital until there is a revival of bold, concerted leadership. In the meantime, the markets will gyrate in pangs of uncertainty.
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