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    INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL PROGRESS REPORT - part 1

    Carol
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    Post  Carol Tue Feb 16, 2016 9:10 am

    INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL PROGRESS REPORT - part 1 - Page 14 Shutterstock_86451343
    Here’s why (and how) the government will ‘borrow’ your retirement savings
    Simon Black   February 15, 2016    Santiago, Chile

    According to financial research firm ICI, total retirement assets in the Land of the Free now exceed $23 trillion.

    $7.3 trillion of that is held in Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs).

    That’s an appetizing figure, especially for a government that just passed $19 trillion in debt and is in pressing need of new funding sources.

    Even when you account for all federal assets (like national parks and aircraft carriers), the government’s “net financial position” according to its own accounting is negative $17.7 trillion.

    And that number doesn’t include unfunded Social Security entitlements, which the government estimates is another $42 trillion.

    The US national debt has increased by roughly $1 trillion annually over the past several years.

    The Federal Reserve has conjured an astonishing amount of money out of thin air in order to buy a big chunk of that debt.

    But even the Fed has limitations. According to its own weekly financial statement, the Fed’s solvency is at precariously low levels (with a capital base of just 0.8% of assets).

    And on a mark-to-market basis, the Fed is already insolvent. So it’s foolish to think they can continue to print money forever and bail out the government without consequence.

    The Chinese (and other foreigners) own a big slice of US debt as well.

    But it’s just as foolish to expect them to continue bailing out America, especially when they have such large economic problems at home.

    US taxpayers own the largest share of the debt, mostly through various trust funds of Social Security and Medicare.

    But again, given the $42 trillion funding gap in these programs, it’s mathematically impossible for Social Security to continue funding the national debt.

    This reality puts the US government in rough spot.

    It’s not like government spending is going down anytime soon; it already takes nearly 100% of tax revenue just to pay mandatory entitlements like Social Security, and interest on the debt.

    Plus the government itself estimates that the national debt will hit $30 trillion within ten years.

    Bottom line, they need more money. Lots of it. And there is perhaps no easier pool of cash to ‘borrow’ than Americans’ retirement savings.

    $7.3 trillion in US IRA accounts is too large for them to ignore.

    And if you think it’s inconceivable for the government to borrow your retirement savings, just consider the following:

    1) Borrowing retirement funds is becoming a popular tactic.

    Forced loans have been a common tactic of bankrupt governments throughout history.
    Plus there’s recent precedent all over the world; Hungary, France, Ireland, and Poland are among many governments that have resorted to ‘borrowing’ public and private pension funds.

    2) The US government has already done this with federal pension funds.

    During the multiple debt ceiling fiascos since 2011, the Treasury Department resorted to “extraordinary measures” at least twice in order to continue funding the government.
    What exactly were these extraordinary measures?

    They dipped into federal retirement funds and borrowed what they needed to tide them over.
    In fact, the debt ceiling debacles were only resolved because the Treasury Department had fully depleted available retirement funds.

    3) They’ve been paving the way to borrow your retirement savings for a long time.
    Two years ago the government launched a new initiative to ‘help Americans save for retirement.’

    It’s called MyRA. And the idea is for people to invest retirement savings ‘in the safety and security of US government bonds’.

    Since then they’ve gone on a marketing offensive involving the President, Treasury Secretary, and other prominent politicians.

    (Most recently Nancy Pelosi published an Op-Ed in the San Francisco Chronicle a few days ago promoting the program.)

    They’ve also proposed a number of legislative reforms to ‘encourage’ American businesses to sign their employees up for MyRA.

    Just last week, Congress introduced the “Making Your Retirement Accessible”, or MyRA Act, which would charge a penalty to employers whose workers don’t have a retirement account.

    The proposed penalty is $100. Per worker. Per day.

    Imagine a small business with, say, 10 employees who don’t have retirement accounts. The penalty to Uncle Sam would be a whopping $30,000 PER MONTH.


    There’s a word for this. It’s called extortion.

    Obviously when facing a $30,000 monthly penalty, an employer will pick the easiest option.
    Given the absurd amount of government regulation on the rest of the financial industry, MyRA is the fastest choice.

    This isn’t about fear or paranoia. It’s about facts.

    And the reality is that the government in the Land of the Free is moving in the direction of borrowing more and more of your retirement savings.

    If you still remain skeptical, remember that last year the government stole more from its citizens through Civil Asset Forfeiture than thieves in the private sector.

    Or that just 45-days ago a new law went into effect authorizing the government to strip you of your passport if they believe in their sole discretion that you owe them too much tax.

    No judge. No jury. No trial. They just confiscate your passport.

    This is happening. It’s a reality that rational, thinking people should plan for.  

    https://www.sovereignman.com/trends/heres-why-and-how-the-government-will-borrow-your-retirement-savings-18679/?inf_contact_key=7dc1281cda275f0e0ffe81bbc10a00751bbcc514acf3c912921648344bc26e0b


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    Post  Carol Tue Feb 16, 2016 10:13 am

    Euro on the brink of DISASTER: Germany's debt plans could send currency into MELTDOWN
    GERMANY could spark the eurozone's collapse with controversial changes to government debt and bailout rules, a leading economist has warned. Professor Peter Bofinger, a special advisor to the Berlin-based government, said Italy and Spain could potentially be forced out of the euro and back to their own currencies under new plans.

    Under the proposed scheme, investors who hold Eurozone government-issued debts through bonds would have to accept write-offs on the value of their investment before the group steps in to offer bailout cash. Professor Bofinger believes the move could cause a "bond crisis" where investors dump debts in countries such as Italy, Spain and Portugal, for fears that they could have to accept the write downs, sending the cost of borrowing sky-high. "If I were a politician in Italy and I was confronted by this sort of insolvency risk I would want to go back to my own currency as fast as possible, because that is the only way to avoid going bankrupt."

    The scheme would potentially halt the need for billions of German cash to bail-out countries with huge debts in the future, and the German Council of Economic Advisors is largely in favour of the policy. It comes as debts in Italy, Portugal and Spain look ever more worrying.

    More: http://www.express.co.uk/finance/city/644562/Euro-on-the-brink-of-DISASTER-Germany-s-debt-plans-could-send-currency-into-MELTDOWN


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    Post  Carol Tue Feb 16, 2016 10:24 am

    China Turns on Taps and Loosens Screws in Bid to Support Growth - Bloomberg News
    February 16, 2016


    China Steps Up Support for Its Economy

    Increased local government funding planned for infrastructure
    Government considering new measures to boost bank lending

    China is stepping up support for the economy by ramping up spending and considering new measures to boost bank lending.
    The nation’s chief planning agency is making more money available to local governments to fund new infrastructure projects, according to people familiar with the matter. Meantime, China’s cabinet has discussed lowering the minimum ratio of provisions that banks must set aside for bad loans, a move that would free up additional cash for lending.

    Officials are upping their rhetoric too. Premier Li Keqiang said policy makers “still have a lot of tools in the box” to combat the slowdown in the world’s No. 2 economy, days after People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan broke a long silence to talk up confidence in the nation’s currency, the yuan.

    And to ram the message home, the biggest economic planning agencies on Tuesday promised to reduce financing costs as they rein in overcapacity. Throw in a record surge in lending in January and a picture emerges of an administration determined to put a floor under growth.

    More: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-02-16/china-turns-on-taps-and-loosens-screws-in-bid-to-support-growth

    “Policymakers are battling to prevent any further slowdown, which could escalate into a hard landing,” said Rajiv Biswas, Asia-Pacific chief economist at IHS Global Insight in Singapore. “These additional measures will act to boost liquidity in the banking sector and increase local government spending on infrastructure development.”


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    Post  Carol Tue Feb 16, 2016 1:36 pm

    Dollar Crushes Mexican Peso as Problems Balloon
    Tensions are rising in Mexico’s model economy. Chief among them is the spectacular decline of the Mexican peso, which has lost 8% percent of its value so far this year against the dollar, more than any other major currency. Since June 2014, it has shed 33% of its weight, now at 19.2 pesos to the U.S. dollar, the lowest ever.

    More: http://wolfstreet.com/2016/02/11/mexican-peso-plunges-against-dollar-as-problems-balloon/


    Oil ministers from three Opec countries, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Venezuela, as well as Russia, have agreed to freeze oil output at January levels, as long as others follow suit.
    More: http://www.bbc.com/news/business-35564492


    Russia and "OPEC" Reach to the conditional agreement to support oil prices
    More: http://translate.google.com/translate?depth=1&hl=en&sl=ar&tl=en&u=http://www.alsumaria.tv/news/159873/-


    Iraqi PM offers to pay Kurds' salaries in exchange for oil
    http://in.reuters.com/article/mideast-crisis-iraq-abadi-idINKCN0VO2D3


    TEHRAN:The first train to connect China and Iran arrived in Tehran today loaded with Chinese goods, reviving the ancient Silk Road, the Iranian railway company said.

    The train, carrying 32 containers of commercial products from eastern Zhejiang province, took 14 days to make the 9,500-kilometre (5,900-mile) journey through Kazakstan and Turkmenistan.

    "The arrival of this train in less than 14 days is unprecedented," said the head of the Iranian railway company, Mohsen Pours ..

    More: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international/business/first-silk-road-train-arrives-in-tehran-from-china/articleshow/50996514.cms


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    Post  Carol Tue Feb 16, 2016 1:43 pm

    SputnikNews:
    Vietnam: Russian Gov't Committee Backs Eurasian Union’s Free Trade Deal With Vietnam

    Russian government’s legislative committee on Tuesday endorsed a free trade deal between Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) and Vietnam, in a bid to streamline the flow of goods between the EEU and Asia Pacific.

    MOSCOW (Sputnik) — The draft law will now be scrutinized by the Russian government at a meeting. The deal needs to be ratified since it contains regulations that diverge from those enshrined in Russian laws.

    "The implementation of the agreement will help boost mutual flow of goods and strengthen trade and economic ties between its signatories, create conditions for EEU gaining a greater role in integration processes underway in the Asia-Pacific region," the Russian government said in a statement.

    Read more: http://sputniknews.com/business/20160216/1034822661/russia-eurasian-union-free-trade-deal-vietnam.html#ixzz40MUnnXMo



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    Post  Carol Tue Feb 16, 2016 8:19 pm

    JP Morgan Chase to launch first e-ATMs that don't need cards
    The US bank is going to have cashpoints across the country that can be operated with an app.
    http://home.bt.com/lifestyle/money/savings-banking/jp-morgan-chase-to-launch-first-e-atms-that-dont-need-cards-11364040606986



    Iran .. CBI starts implementing SWIFT in banking transactions
    http://www3.irna.ir/en/News/81964812/


    TheSeattleTimes:
    US, Cuba sign deal on commercial flights (first time in five decades)

    http://www.seattletimes.com/business/us-cuba-sign-deal-on-commercial-flights/?utm_source=RSS#038;utm_medium=Referral&utm_campaign=RSS_business


    Last edited by Carol on Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:12 pm; edited 1 time in total


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 9:14 am


    S&P Futures Storm Above 1900, Europe Jumps Despite Gloomy Asian Session
    It has been a morning session of two halves.

    In Asia, the mood was somber, and stocks fell with the Shanghai Composite (+1.1%) outperforming on another late session binge-fest by the National Team, and the Nikkei 225 (-1.4%), Hang Seng -1%, Kospi -0.2%, ASX -0.6%, Sensex -0.4% and the South Korean Won all down following news of the biggest Chinese Yuan devaluation in five weeks.

    ~~~~~~~~~

    Bulletin Headline Summary from RanSqawk and Bloomberg

    FX markets have seen USD/JPY and GBP/USD retrace earlier losses with both heading into US crossover seeing a bid, as participants shrug off mixed UK employment release and sentiment strengthens through the European morning

    While Asian equities failed to benefit from the positive Wall St close, European equities have traded higher this morning, benefitting from stock specific news as well as an uptick in sentiment

    Today's highlight is the release of the FOMC Minutes, while participants will also be looking out for US housing starts, building permits, industrial production and API Crude Oil Inventories

    Treasury yields little changed as European equities and oil rally during overnight trading; Fed minutes to Jan. 26-27 meeting to be released at 2pm ET.

    The yuan posted the biggest two-day decline in more than a month as the central bank’s fixing for the currency tracked an overnight advance in the dollar and official media voiced concern that capital outflows will increase

    China’s unprecedented jump in new loans at the start of 2016 is fueling concern that excessive credit growth is piling up risks in the nation’s financial system. The increase could pressure the country’s credit rating, S&P said Tuesday

    China is stepping up support for the economy by ramping up spending and considering new measures to boost bank lending. The nation’s chief planning agency is making more money available to local governments

    The BOJ should act preemptively to change the deflationary mindset in Japan and this action could come as soon as March, said Etsuro

    Honda, an adviser to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe

    Wall Street firms are readying themselves for a provision of the 2010 Dodd-Frank law that takes effect in December that forces banks to keep a stake in the commercial-property loans they package into securities and sell off to investors

    Syria’s five-year war has turned into a tangled web of proxy conflicts between global and regional powers, with a growing risk that some of them could clash directly. Right now the most dangerous flashpoint is between Russia and NATO member Turkey

    Apple rejected a court order to help the Justice Department unlock an iPhone used by one of the shooters in a terrorist attack in California, accusing the U.S. government of “overreach” that will set a dangerous precedent

    $23.425b IG corporates priced yesterday (YTD volume $206b) and $350m priced yesterday (YTD volume $9.625b)

    Sovereign 10Y bond yields little changed; European stocks higher, Asian markets drop; U.S. equity-index futures higher. Crude oil, copper and gold rally

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-02-17/sp-futures-rise-above-1900-europe-jumps-after-gloomy-asian-session


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 9:17 am

    Foreign governments sold their holdings in US Treasuries in December at record highest levels as economic despair in select parts of the world has triggered a search for cash amongst select official institutions outside the US.

    Kristian Rouz — Foreign holdings of US governmental debt have shrunk in December, according to data by the US Department of the Treasury, even though it was (and still is) hardly the best moment to sell. Domestic and international private and select state (like Russia) investors are piling into Treasury notes, currently rising in value, prompting an ongoing decline of the benchmark yield. A paradox at first glance, has a simple explanation: certain governments have to sell haven assets in order to accumulate dollar-denominated money liquidity to be spent supporting national FX rates (mainland China), whilst other governments, stripped of cash due to falling external trade revenues, are selling US debt in order to meet their fiscal targets (Saudi Arabia).
    Nearly 80 percent of US citizens are concerned about the nation's long-term debt

    A number of overseas governments sold their holdings in US Treasuries in December, the US Treasury Department reported, with the tendency likely to have continued into the new year as many emerging markets are facing FX rate risks, forcing local central bank to step up their efforts to support their respective currencies. Mainland China and Japan, most prominently, have decreased their stakes in US debt to their lowest since February 2015 and June 2013, respectively. The total volume of US debt sold by foreign official institutions in December hit its one-month record highest of $48.11 bln.

    Read more: http://sputniknews.com/business/20160217/1034900521/foreign-governments-dump-us-treasuries.html#ixzz40WWJ41Rd


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    With deepest respect ~ Aloha & Mahalo, Carol
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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 9:36 am

    T-Mobile profit nearly triples as 2.1 million subscribers added
    T-Mobile added a net 2.1 million customers, including 1.3 million new monthly or postpaid customers in the three months ended Dec. 31. In 2016, it said it expects to add a net 2.4 million to 3.4 million postpaid customers, compared with the 4.5 million it added in 2015.

    "Subscriber growth continues to be solid," MoffettNathanson analyst Craig Moffett said in a research note.
    More: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-t-mobile-us-results-idUSKCN0VQ17M


    China promises economic stability as G20, parliament loom

    Chinese policymakers emerged from the Lunar New Year hiatus with one collective message for nervous investors at home and abroad - Beijing will put a floor under the slowing economy, keep its currency steady and ensure employment remains stable even as bloated industries undergo restructuring.

    The string of assurances comes ahead of two high-profile political events for China: a meeting of G20 finance chiefs in Shanghai later this month and next month's annual gathering of China's legislature - where the next five-year economic development plan will be finalised.

    A rout in Chinese stocks last summer and its unexpected devaluation of the yuan CNY=CFXS in August have rattled global markets, raising concerns about the health of the world's second-largest economy and Beijing's ability to steer it simultaneously through both a protracted slowdown and radical restructuring.

    "China's economic fundamentals have not changed," Zhao Chenxin, a spokesman for the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the country's top economic planner, told reporters in Beijing on Wednesday. "The economy will maintain a medium- to high-rate growth."

    "China's status as the world's largest holder of foreign exchange reserves has not changed, the large-scale trade surplus has not changed and the steady progress in the yuan internationalization has not changed," Zhao said.

    Still, gross domestic product expanded 6.9 percent in 2015, the slowest in a quarter of a century, and economists see a further cooling this year even if the government expands its year-long stimulus campaign.

    More: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-economy-idUSKCN0VQ0QY


    _________________
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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 9:40 am


    Home / News / Positioning the World for Transition ~ Interview with Bix Weir
    Positioning the World for Transition ~ Interview with Bix Weir
    Posted on February 14, 2016February 14, 2016 by Perpetual Assets


    Will Lehr of Perpetual Assets interviews Bix Weir of Road To Roota. Please pardon a few minor audio glitches, otherwise we cover some fantastic content. Bix always brings an interesting element to the conversation.Despite the fires burning on the surface, Bix believes the good forces have already won this war of monetary madness. There has been an intentional wait to allow a more peaceful transition, and also to provide even more rope for the bankers to fully hang themselves. We discuss the 2008 bailout, and the unlikelihood for another one. The numbers are simply impossible at this point. The next bailout would require hundreds of trillions of dollars- an impossible amount to conjure up. The large derivatives have been placed in first position ahead of individual checking and savings accounts. When the next crash happens the obscene intention to create hundreds of trillions for bailouts will be big enough to anger much of the masses. Saying No to the bailouts, will usher in an even larger crash.

    Bix tells us about his dissection of the Economist magazine covers. The 2015 cover had many eerie signs that may have come true last year including the Paris terror attack…

    More:  https://www.perpetualassets.com/news/2016/02/14/positioning-the-world-for-transition-interview-with-bix-weir/


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:07 pm

    US foreign policies continue to isolate US from world economy:
    Brazil ditching dollar to boost Iran trade

    http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2016/02/17/450767/Iran-Brazil-trade-sanctions-dollar-Monteiro

    Brazil says it will deal in euros with Iran to sidestep US sanctions on Tehran.

    Brazil says it will ditch the dollar in trade with Iran to sidestep a US ban which prevents Tehran from using the American financial system.

    ~~~~~~~~~
    China Ramps Up Rhetoric, Plans New Steps to Juice Up Economy
    Bloomberg News
    February 16, 2016
    China Steps Up Support for Its Economy

    China is stepping up support for the economy by ramping up spending and considering new measures to boost bank lending.
    The nation’s chief planning agency is making more money available to local governments to fund new infrastructure projects, according to people familiar with the matter. Meantime, China’s cabinet has discussed lowering the minimum ratio of provisions that banks must set aside for bad loans, a move that would free up additional cash for lending.

    China Steps Up Support for the Economy
    Officials are upping their rhetoric too. Premier Li Keqiang said policy makers “still have a lot of tools in the box” to combat the slowdown in the world’s No. 2 economy, days after People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan broke a long silence to talk up confidence in the nation’s currency, the yuan. "After many complaints about poor communications, Chinese officials seem to have gotten the message," Win Thin, the global head of emerging-markets strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. in New York, wrote in a note to clients. And to ram the message home, the biggest economic planning agencies on Tuesday promised to reduce financing costs as they rein in overcapacity. Throw in a record surge in lending in January and a picture emerges of an administration determined to put a floor under growth.

    More: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-02-16/china-turns-on-taps-​and-loosens-screws-in-bid-to-support-growth


    _________________
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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:20 pm

    Fed's Kashkari, in first speech, suggests radical Wall St. overhaul

    The U.S. Federal Reserve's newest policymaker and a former point man for the government's bailout of the financial industry on Tuesday called on lawmakers to take radical action to rein in banks and protect taxpayers.

    In his first speech as head of the Minneapolis Fed, Neel Kashkari, a Goldman Sachs executive before he worked at the U.S. Treasury, urged Congress to consider "bold, transformational" rules including the breaking up of the nation's largest banks to avoid bailouts.

    Kashkari indicated that his work at Treasury, where he managed a key part of the banking and auto industry bailouts during the financial crisis of 2007-2009, helped inform his current view.

    A set of regulations introduced since the crisis, known as Dodd-Frank, did not go far enough, he said in prepared remarks that straddled the line between the Fed's policymaking remit and political advocacy.

    "Now is the right time for Congress to consider going further than Dodd-Frank with bold, transformational solutions to solve this problem once and for all," Kashkari said, arguing that the biggest banks are still too big to fail and continue to pose a significant, ongoing risk to the U.S. economy.

    He urged lawmakers to consider breaking up large banks into "smaller, less connected, less important entities" and took a swipe at existing rules for winding down failing banks should they run into difficulty amid a weak global economy.

    "I am far more skeptical that these tools will be useful," Kashkari said, adding that "we won't see the next crisis coming."

    He said Congress should consider compelling banks to hold so much capital that they "virtually can't fail," in effect treating them like public utilities.

    Speaking after his address, Kashkari said global economic and financial developments would be an "important" input when the Federal Reserve next meets on March 15-16.

    He hewed closely to the Fed's January statement, saying he sees moderate growth and a gradual increase in interest rates. He declined to specify how many rate hikes there might be this year.

    Kashkari added he does not expect negative rates will be needed in the United States but it was something the central bank could use if deemed necessary.

    Financial markets have plunged amid slowing global growth and several central banks are using negative interest rates to avoid deflation and stimulate economic activity.

    Kashkari took the helm of the Fed's smallest regional bank last month, two weeks after the Fed raised its benchmark interest rate for the first time in a decade.

    He does not have a vote on the Fed's rate-setting committee until 2017 under its rotation system, but participates in deliberations.

    More: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-fed-kashkari-idUSKCN0VP1Y4


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:26 pm

    Wednesday, February 17, 2016 - 02:00
    Conditions Suitable for Single Forex Rate
    EconomyBusiness And Markets


    The move to unify foreign exchange rates is now plausible if certain conditions are met, Head of Tehran’s Chamber of Commerce said.

    In support of the government’s designated six-month time frame for exchange rate unification, Masoud Khansari said “Since the single exchange rate has nothing to do with the government’s forex reserves, the single rate regime can trigger an economic boom, provided that markets determine the rates,” Fars news agency reported.

    “Despite the 6,500 rial ($0.2153) difference between the official exchange rate and parallel (free market) rate,” Khansari said,” the release of frozen Iranian assets oversees, expected foreign investments in Iran and the predicted economic growth rates...due to the lifting of sanctions make the prospect of a single rate all the more feasible.”

    Iran has been using a dual exchange rate system since 2012 when international economic and banking restrictions on the country were tightened due to the dispute over the nuclear program.

    Airplane Finance
    Regarding the issue of paying an estimated $25 billion for purchasing planes from France’s Airbus despite the country’s economic constraints, Khansari said the import bills will be paid from the airlines’ income.

    President Hassan during a visit to France last month oversaw the signing of agreements between Iran’s national flag carrier (Iran Air) and Airbus to buy 118 aircraft.

    Some political factions inside the country have criticized the deals as “unwanted” and “costly” at a time when other key economic sectors are in dire straits and in need of help and infrastructure investment.

    “During the sanctions years, Iran paid almost $5 billion annually in airfare to foreign airlines, a cost that can be done away with,” Khansari said.


    Short Url : http://financialtribune.com/articles/ec ... forex-rate


    Last edited by Carol on Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:30 pm; edited 2 times in total


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:28 pm

    Uncertainty Grips Global Growth

    Eight years after the financial crisis, the world is coming to grips with an unpleasant realization: serious weaknesses still plague the global economy, and emergency help may not be on the way.

    Sinking stock prices, flat inflation, and the bizarre phenomenon of negative interest rates have coupled with a downturn in emerging markets to raise worries that the economy is being stalked by threats that central banks—the saviors during the crisis—may struggle to cope with, AP reported.

    Meanwhile, commercial banks are again a source of concern, especially in Europe. Banks were the epicenter of the 2007-9 crisis, which started over excessive loans to homeowners with shaky credit in the United States and then swept the globe into recession.
    "You have pretty sluggish growth globally. You don't really have any inflation. And you have a lot of uncertainty," says David Lebovitz, who advises on market strategies for JP Morgan Funds.

    Jittery Investors
    Some of the recent tumult may be an overreaction by jittery investors. And the rock-bottom interest rates are partly a result of easy money policies by central banks doing their best to stimulate growth in the years since the crisis.

    Unemployment is low in several major economies, 4.9% in the United States and 4.5% in Germany. The IMF forecasts growth picking up from 3.1% last year to 3.4% this year.

    But that's still far short of the 5.1% growth in 2007, before the crisis. The realization is dawning that growth may continue to underperform, and that recent turmoil may be more than just normal market volatility.

    In Japan, the yield on 10-year bonds briefly turned negative, meaning bondholders were willing to pay the government for the privilege of being its creditor—for years. In the United States, long-term market rates are sliding again, even though the Federal Reserve has begun pushing them higher. Many government bonds, issued by European countries, trade at yields that are negative or close to zero.

    That's alarming because such low and even negative rates are way out the ordinary. For one thing, they suggest bond investors don't expect enough economic growth for central banks to raise rates.

    Along with that have come sharp drops in global stocks. The Standard and Poor's 500 index is off 10.5% for the year; Japan's Nikkei 225 is down 16%; the Shanghai composite index 22%; Germany's DAX over 14%.

    Risks Remain
    Here are some of the risks that markets have been waking up to.
    A sharp slowdown in China threatens to remove a pillar of global growth. Slackening demand for raw materials there is hitting producers of oil and metals in other countries. Energy exporter Russia, for instance, slid into recession and its currency has plunged.
    German automaker Daimler made a record operating profit of €13.8 billion ($15.44 billion) last year, helped by a 41% surge in sales in China for its Mercedes-Benz luxury cars. But its shares fell when it announced a cautious outlook for only a slight profit increase for 2016 and "more moderate" growth in China. CEO Dieter Zetsche cautioned that he saw "more risks than opportunities" amid "restrained" global growth.

    Emerging Markets Submerging
    Money is flowing out of so-called emerging markets like Brazil, Russia, South Africa and Turkey. Investors pulled $735 billion out such countries in 2015—the first year of net outflows since 1988, according to the Institute of International Finance.

    And emerging markets aren't so emerging any more: they provide 70% of expected global growth.

    Central banks led by the US Fed responded to the global recession by slashing interest rates and printing money. That encouraged investors in search of higher returns to place their money in emerging markets.

    Now the Fed is trying to push up its interest rates, and those flows have gone into reverse, causing financial markets and currencies in emerging markets to sag. Debt becomes harder to repay.

    IMF chief Christine Lagarde has warned of "spillback" effects from emerging markets on more advanced economies.

    Shares Shaken
    Banks stocks have been plunging in the US and Europe. In the US, low oil prices may mean companies involved in expensive oil and gas extraction will be unable to repay loans made to dig wells that are no longer profitable.

    In Europe, bank shares have been shaken by the bailout of four Italian lenders and fears about €1.2 trillion ($1.35 trillion) in bad loans across the 19-country currency union.

    The spread of negative interest rates could reduce banks' profitability, since it squeezes the difference between the rates at which banks borrow and at which they lend.

    Sick banks can choke off credit to companies and dump huge costs on governments, shareholders and creditors.

    Short Url : http://financialtribune.com/articles/world-economy/36503/uncertainty-grips-global-growth


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:32 pm

    Obama’s Foreclosure Relief Program Was Designed to Help Bankers, Not Homeowners

    After her stroke, Alice Emile of Freeport, New York, wanted to die at home. On April 24, 2009, she passed away quietly at the age of 74. Her son Darrell Emile, executor of the estate, had to close the reverse mortgage she took out in 2006, which had passed into the hands of Bank of America.

    A Bank of America representative told Emile he would receive a payoff document within six months, and have six additional months to determine the best way to settle the account. This is considered standard for reverse mortgage closings. But in October 2009, a bank representative claimed that they had never received word that Emile’s mother had died (even though, by this time, the bank was addressing letters about the house to “the Estate of Alice Emile”). After Emile faxed Bank of America the death certificate, for what he says was the third time, the bank informed him that the account was in default.

    Emile had the money to settle the mortgage, and would have had he simply received a payoff document. But Bank of America never delivered one, and they refused his offers to pay afterward, instead filing for foreclosure in May 2010. Since Emile cannot get a payoff document, he cannot sell the home, which is stuck in limbo awaiting completion of foreclosure. The estate did, however, benefit in April 2013 from the Independent Foreclosure Review, a Federal Reserve–led settlement designed to compensate homeowners for foreclosure errors. The check was for $300.


    Politicians, economists and commentators are debating the causes of the rise in inequality of income and wealth. But one primary cause is beyond debate: the housing collapse, and the government’s failure to remedy the aftermath. According to economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, the bottom 90 percent of Americans saw one-third of their wealth wiped out between 2007 and 2009, and there has been no recovery since. This makes sense, as a great deal of the wealth held by the middle and working classes, particularly among African-Americans and Hispanics, is in home equity, much of which evaporated after the bubble popped. The effects have been most severe in poor and working-class neighborhoods, where waves of foreclosure drove down property values, even on sound, well-financed homes. Absent a change in policy, Saez and Zucman warn, “all the gains in wealth democratization achieved during the New Deal and the postwar decades could be lost.”

    President Obama will carry several legacies into his final two years in office: a long-sought health care reform, a fiscal stimulus that limited the impact of the Great Recession, a rapid civil rights advance for gay and lesbian Americans. But if Obama owns those triumphs, he must also own this tragedy: the dispossession of at least 5.2 million US homeowner families, the explosion of inequality, and the largest ruination of middle-class wealth in nearly a century. Though some policy failures can be blamed on Republican obstruction, it was within Obama’s power to remedy this one — to ensure that a foreclosure crisis now in its eighth year would actually end, with relief for homeowners to rebuild wealth, and to preserve Americans’ faith that their government will aid them in times of economic struggle.

    More: http://billmoyers.com/2015/02/14/needless-default/


    Last edited by Carol on Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:52 pm; edited 1 time in total


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:52 pm

    'Look out, we are heading for a crash again', warns William White, the central banker who predicted 2008 crisis -
    William White, the banker who predicted 2008 crisis, warns of another crash


    -World faces a crunch that could see a collapse in London property prices
    -Despite 2008 crisis being caused by debt, the levels have since risen
    -Overall debt has gone from 200% of global GDP in 2007 to 250% now

    The world is facing a new crisis caused by an explosion in debt. So warns William White, the central banker who famously predicted the crisis of 2008. As financial markets reeled last week and fears of a fresh recession or even banking crisis sparked panic, White was more than willing to issue yet another prophecy of doom. The world is now facing a crunch that could see a collapse in property prices, including those in London; a new global banking crisis; waves of cheap commodities savaging Western industrial centres; and the need for debts to be written off on a grand scale.

    Read more: http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/news/article-3445861/Look-heading-crash-warns-William-White-central-banker-predicted-2008-crisis.html#ixzz40S8LtTgR


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:57 pm

    INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL PROGRESS REPORT - part 1 - Page 14 002AAB1B00000258-3449772-image-a-8_1455651540339
    ALEX BRUMMER: China has brought the commodity super-cycle to a halt... so natural resources are going cheap?

    Was there ever a better time to buy natural resources assets?
    Weighed down by a ton of debt, the grand old dame of South African mining Anglo-American is putting its iron ore, coal and nickel mines up for sale along with its niobium and phosphate deposits. Some 68,000 jobs will go with the assets.
    With its debt rated as junk by credit rating agency Moody, below that of Glencore, BNP and Rio, and its shares out of the FTSE 100, Anglo has few other choices.

    It joins others including Shell and Glencore in the natural resources and refining sale of the century as the commodity super-cycle has been brought to a juddering halt by China’s great slowdown.
    If Anglo does manage to get debts down to $10billion (£7billion), as chief executive Mark Cutifani plans, the slimmed down outfit can focus its attention on platinum, copper and its crown jewel of diamonds. Through its holdings in De Beers the group dominates the diamond market.

    Upstarts such as Petra in Botswana are also-rans. Other African producers are tainted with blood. What Anglo has through De Beers is not just diamond production but also distribution.
    It has the ability to sustain wholesale and retail prices by controlling the volumes of rough cut diamonds reaching the market.
    So it has then opportunity, if it can dispose of assets and bring down humongous debt levels which threaten its existence, to emerge as a slimmer, but very different kind of specialist miner. That means putting the grandiose ambitions of the past behind it.

    The key to survival is going to be asset sales. Cutifani says that he has buyers queuing up for niobium, widely used in steel making and alloys, which seems surprising given the state of the global market for steel.
    Quantitative easing and low interest rates means there is cash for those buyers patient enough to await an upturn in demand for natural resources.
    But the abrupt deterioration in the value in mining and oil facilities is not just a problem for the producers. It is also an arrow pointed at the banks and finance groups that hold debts of the miners and drillers.
    It is among the reasons why the shares in so many of the global banks are treading water.


    Read more: http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/markets/article-3449772/ALEX-BRUMMER-China-s-slowdown-brought-commodity-super-cycle-juddering-halt-better-time-invest-natural-resources.html#ixzz40S9yQ1Y1



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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 12:59 pm

    Pound falls sharply as investors bet the Bank of England will not be raising interest rates early

    The pound fell sharply yesterday as investors bet a slight uptick in inflation was not enough to convince the Bank of England to raise interest rates early.
    Sterling sank below $1.43 and towards €1.28 on another bleak day for the UK currency.
    The latest fall came after official figures showed inflation crawled up from 0.2 per cent in December to 0.3 per cent in January – its highest level for a year but still well below the 2 per cent target.
    The report, from the Office for National Statistics, did little to change expectations that interest rates in the UK will not rise until the second half of 2019 having been frozen at 0.5 per cent since March 2009.

    Read more: http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/markets/article-3450117/Pound-falls-sharply-investors-bet-Bank-England-not-raising-rates-early.html#ixzz40SARdn5J

    ~~~~~~~~~~

    HSBC reveals it will keep its HQ in London but stands accused of 'holding British taxpayers to ransom'

    Banking giant's board voted unanimously to keep its headquarters in UK
    Most likely alternative to London was seen to be Hong Kong
    But turmoil in China and on global markets helped keep it in London

    HSBC has been accused by Treasury Select Committee MP John Mann of ‘holding British taxpayers to ransom’ with its threat to leave the UK, despite it being widely-expected to stick with London.
    Senior executives gathered for a board meeting in the capital yesterday to discuss the issue and cast their vote after a ten-month relocation review.

    HSBC also said it would abandon its process of re-evaluating its HQ every three years.

    Speaking on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, HSBC chairman Douglas Flint said: 'We took 10 months to make this decision, it was a decision based on what will hopefully be a generational view.'It was not based on short-term economic or market dynamics, it was based on a very thoughtful perspective on how the economics will play out over the next 20, 25 years.'

    Read more: http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/news/article-3446880/HSBC-holding-British-taxpayers-ransom-threatening-leave-UK-claims-MP.html#ixzz40SBIr4xY


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 1:08 pm

    AmEx Overhauls Management in $1 Billion Cost-Cutting Effort

    -Payments company creating a new global marketing operation
    -Fabara takes on role as chief risk officer amid changes

    American Express Co. is reorganizing management and consolidating its marketing activities as the biggest credit-card issuer by purchases seeks to cut $1 billion in costs over the next two years.

    “To get ahead of the changes that are altering the dynamics of the payments business, we need to readjust our expense base," Chief Executive Officer Ken Chenault said Wednesday in a statement. “This is a big task. It essentially means that we must transform the way the company works."

    AmEx is creating a global marketing operations unit led by Mike McCormack, who will report to Tammy Weinbaum, executive vice president of global business services, according to the statement. Chief Marketing Officer John Hayes is leaving after 21 years at the firm, while Elizabeth Rutledge was named head of global advertising and media. The company is creating an enterprise digital group to centralize Web, mobile and digital products under Luke Gebb.

    Chenault, 64, is grappling with the loss of AmEx’s biggest partner, Costco Wholesale Corp., and trying to end the lender’s steepest stock slump since the financial crisis. Quarterly results will be uneven and expenses are expected to rise as the company spends money to attract new customers, AmEx has said.

    More: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-02-17/amex-plans-to-reduce-jobs-in-1-billion-cost-cutting-effort


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 1:10 pm

    The eurozone can’t survive another banking crisis

    LONDON (MarketWatch) — In the end, it was not quite another 2008.

    There were no queues around the block in Hanover or Dusseldorf as people tried to withdraw their life savings from the bank, and there was no Lehman moment where angry and bewildered looking bankers were turfed out onto the streets of Frankfurt. Even so, the wobble in the German banking system over the last week, centered in particular over the stability of the mighty Deutsche Bank, was still a troubling moment for the eurozone.

    Why? Because it now looks like the single currency would find it very hard to survive another banking crisis.

    That is not because the central bank would not step up to the plate. There can be no question that Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, would print all the euros needed to bail out the banks if he had to. It is because the politics would make it impossible. The Greek banks were allowed to close for a long period last year, and capital controls were introduced, so if the ECB were to fully rescue French and German banks while it placed restrictions on Greek ones, the contrast would become too painful to ignore.
    If any banks go down, they will take the euro with them.

    This has certainly been a bad month to be a shareholder in Deutsche Bank DB, +4.55% , or indeed any of the major eurozone lenders FX7, +3.33% . Last week, shares in Deutsche fell off a cliff. From more than 20 euro last month, they slumped all the way down to slightly more than 13 euros. The prices of its convertible bonds sank to an all-time low, and the cost of its credit default swaps soared, as at least some people in the market seemed to want to make a bet against its survival.

    The situation became so bad that at one point its chief executive John Cryan was wheeled out to reassure everyone the bank was “rock solid,” the kind of statement that could have been purposefully designed to put everyone on edge. The carnage was even worse in the Italian banking system, always fragile at the best of times, and by the close of the week started to spread to France as well.

    It was not quite 2008 all over again, but it was also too close to it for comfort.

    More: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-eurozone-cant-survive-another-banking-crisis-2016-02-17


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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 1:25 pm

    Market Watch Headlines

    Gold hold gains in electronic trade as minutes reveal Fed concern about global market risk
    2:04p
    Market selloff worried all but ‘a couple’ on Fed, minutes show
    2:03p
    30-year Treasury yield up 5 basis points to 2.691%
    2:03p
    2-year Treasury yield up 2 basis points to 0.742%
    2:03p
    10-year Treasury yield up 4.4 basis points to 1.821%
    2:03p
    Treasury yields lose about 1 basis point in all maturities but remain higher on the day
    2:03p
    Treasury yields inch lower after Fed minutes
    2:03p
    SEC says analyst secretly told hedge funds ‘sell’ while officially saying ‘buy’
    2:02p
    Nasdaq up 2% at 4,524
    2:02p
    Dow industrials up 1.4% at 16,429
    2:02p
    S&P 500 up 1.5% at 1,924
    2:01p
    Dollar falls to 113.88 yen
    2:01p
    Euro up 0.2% at $1.1148
    2:01p
    U.S. stocks trim gains after Fed minutes
    2:01p
    Dollar weakens vs. yen, euro after Fed minutes
    2:00p
    Fed doves want 'direct evidence' inflation rising before further interest rate increases: minutes
    2:00p
    Most of Fed viewed market selloff, if sustained, as adding to downside risks: minutes
    2:00p
    Only small minority on Fed officials discounted market selloff, minutes of January meeting show
    1:59p
    Mexican peso is on track for its best daily gain in years
    1:52p
    Former Deutsche Bank analyst to pay $100,000 penalty over deceptive rating
    1:49p
    Gold settles higher as Fed minutes loom
    1:43p
    April gold settles $3.20, or 0.3%, higher at $1,211.40/oz
    1:32p
    This is how much potholes cost American drivers…
    1:25p
    Do you believe in memorabilia? A piece of hockey history is for sale
    1:22p
    Getting rid of $100 bill would be no easy task
    1:19p
    High-deductible health plans are hurting health care profits, analysts say
    1:18p
    Obama to meet with former NSA chief, IBM CEO on cybersecurity
    1:17p
    Expansion of the Syrian war could send oil prices higher
    1:06p
    Nasdaq up 2.1% at 4,527
    1:06p
    S&P 500 up 1.6% at 1,926
    1:06p
    U.S. stocks extend gains; Dow up 250 points to 16,447
    1:02p
    Producer-price gains suggest inflation declines may be over
    1:02p
    Don’t quit your job if you work in these 5 industries
    12:51p
    S&P cuts Saudi Arabia's credit rating to A-minus
    12:38p

    European stocks post gain, with an assist from oil
    12:24p
    ComScore beats profit view, but misses on sales
    12:20p
    Why some Americans are using 8-year loans to buy fancier cars
    12:19p
    Adidas hires former Lululemon CEO as adviser
    12:18p
    CSX sees profit falling 'significantly' in Q1
    12:16p
    Why income investors should consider peer-to-peer lending
    12:15p
    How your kid could become a victim of identity theft
    12:15p
    Apple’s $450 million e-book settlement Is affirmed by court
    12:14p
    This man wants to upend the world of high-frequency trading
    12:13p
    FTSE 100 ends higher, bolstered by oil, mining shares
    12:08p
    Oil futures extend rise on Iran comments
    12:07p
    Is there enough blood in the streets to buy stocks?
    12:00p
    Priceline adds nearly $13 billion in market cap during stock’s win streak
    12:00p
    2 things we haven’t learned since the 2008 financial crisis
    11:59a
    S&P 500 climbs, led by rally in materials, consumer-discretionary stocks
    11:55a
    Fossil Group shares up 27.3% in Wednesday trading
    11:43a
    Bizarre new fronts in the battle of the sexes: Laundry detergent, yogurt
    11:40a
    How missing out on 25 days in the stock market over 45 years costs you dearly
    11:38a
    Bill Simmons announces official return with The Ringer
    11:38a
    Medallion Taxi Corp. shares up 27%
    11:35a
    Iran stops short of committing to oil production cap
    11:34a
    The apartment boom may be waning
    11:28a
    Gold prices turn modestly higher ahead of Fed minutes
    11:25a
    20 transportation stocks for bullish investors to consider
    11:12a
    5 dividend stocks that have only gotten more attractive
    11:12a
    Steer toward more ‘reasonable’ momentum stocks, J.P. Morgan says
    10:53a
    A technical look at three hedge fund titans’ recent purchases
    10:48a
    South Carolina luring Chinese firms seeking to save money
    10:43a
    Nymex March oil futures up $1.45, or 5%, at $30.49 a barrel
    10:42a
    Oil futures extend gains after Iran comments
    10:36a
    S&P 500 climbs 1.4%; Nasdaq Composite advances 1.7%
    10:35a
    U.S. stock gains accelerate late morning; Dow up more than 200 points or 1.3%
    6:03a
    Really, is 78.8 years long enough to live?
    5:44a
    A bond star, buried by junk, looks for daylight
    5:16a
    Brent oil futures jump 3.2% to $33.18 a barrel
    5:16a
    U.S. oil futures leap 2.4% to $29.73 a barrel
    5:12a
    U.K. unemployment falls, wage growth barely moves
    5:11a
    Swiss economic activity expected to fall: survey
    5:11a
    Glencore in early refinancing of $8.45 bln loan
    5:11a
    Lead poisoning crisis sends Flint real-estate market tumbling
    5:09a
    RWE suspends dividend even as earnings meet views
    5:08a
    Viruses worse than Zika threaten global economic growth
    5:08a
    Asian stocks fall as markets take wait-and-see attitude toward oil freeze
    4:35a
    U.K. wages rise 1.9% including bonuses in December
    4:34a
    U.K. wage growth rises 2% excluding bonuses in December
    4:32a
    U.K. unemployment rate 5.1% in December, unchanged on month
    4:28a
    OPEC chief to meet Iran, Iraq oil ministers for production talks in Tehran
    4:02a
    Taiwan economy shrinks more than estimated
    4:01a
    Schneider Electric profit down 28% on China, forex
    3:36a
    Crédit Agricole reveals credit restructuring plan
    3:24a
    Why a selloff in European banks is ominous
    3:21a
    Why the gold/oil ratio could tip investors off to the next market storm
    3:16a
    5 key reasons oil is sinking after oil-output freeze
    3:15a
    IMF cuts Philippines growth forecasts
    3:14a
    Glencore does early refinancing of $8.45 bln loan
    3:13a
    BASF, AkzoNobel agree price for coatings unit sale
    3:10a
    The eurozone can’t survive another banking crisis
    3:03a
    France's CAC 40 opens 0.1% higher at 4,112.61
    3:03a
    Germany's DAX opens 0.4% higher at 9,165.01
    3:02a
    U.K.'s FTSE 100 opens 0.5% higher at 5,891.93
    2:37a
    Euronext profit jumps 46%; hikes dividend by 48%
    2:36a
    Beiersdorf profit up 15% on strong Nivea sales
    2:34a
    AstraZeneca cancer drug gets FDA breakthrough nod
    2:34a
    Schneider Electric profit falls 28%, misses views
    2:33a
    ABN Amro profit falls 32% on regulatory costs
    2:33a
    Norsk Hydro swings to profit on strong dollar
    2:33a
    Crédit Agricole to sell back regional bank stakes
    2:32a
    SIA Engineering, Airbus to form maintenance JV
    2:32a
    Indictments sought in Monte Dei Paschi case
    2:31a
    Telecom Italia to invest billions in turnaround
    12:02a
    The real reason many millennials aren’t saving for retirement
    2/16
    China’s central bank injects another 10 billion yuan into system
    2/16
    China deploys anti-aircraft missiles on disputed island
    2/16
    'Ludicrous' expectations concern ECB's Nowotny
    2/16
    Funding twist to Apollo’s $7 billion buyout of ADT
    2/16
    Woodside Petroleum's net profit collapses by 99%
    2/16
    Singapore's January exports tumble 9.9%
    2/16
    DoorDash near $700 million valuation, missing target
    2/16
    United Continental mechanics reject new labor contract
    2/16
    Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp profit surges 21%
    2/16
    Japan core machinery orders gain in December
    2/16
    Apple Pay prepares to launch in China
    2/16
    CEO of home-electronics chain Hhgregg resigns
    2/16
    Is the system busted?
    2/16
    Fed can be ‘unhurried’ to raise interest rates: Rosengren
    2/16
    Google think tank becomes Jigsaw, latest independent Alphabet company
    2/16
    U.S., Cuba agree to reopen air travel for first time in 50 years
    2/16
    Starbucks gets spicy with new menu additions
    2/16
    Drone-flying, hoverboard Barbie is here
    2/16
    50 Cent says bankruptcy plan would be like indentured servitude
    2/16
    Is time running out for the backdoor Roth?
    2/16
    Cerner adjusts outlook following weaker bookings
    2/16
    Kinder Morgan's stock soars after Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway discloses new share stake
    2/16
    Devon Energy to cut 20% of workers, slash dividend
    2/16
    Rackspace sees 2016 revenue below Wall Street view
    2/16
    What to do before selling stocks, and more tax tips
    2/16
    Obama says he does not think Trump will be president
    2/16
    Elliott Management adds stakes in Alcoa, CenterPoint Energy; sells off Comcast and Juniper
    2/16
    Obama says plenty of time for Senate to consider a Supreme Court nominee
    2/16
    Agilent Technologies forecast disappoints
    2/16
    Express Scripts shares slide after sales decline
    2/16
    UBS thinks ‘super bears’ are wrong about China
    2/16
    Lumber Liquidators CEO to remain active after leukemia diagnosis
    2/16
    Lumber Liquidator CEO Pressley diagnosed with leukemia
    2/16
    Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway buys new Kinder Morgan stake, cuts back on AT&T
    2/16
    Obama says he expects Senate to vote on his pick to replace Scalia
    2/16
    Fossil Group reports better-than-expected results
    2/16
    Rackspace shares sink more than 8% as quarterly earnings slide
    2/16
    This is the worst quarter for company earnings since 2009
    2/16
    Cheesecake Factory reports higher profit
    2/16
    Fossil shares jump after earnings exceed expectations despite negative currency impact
    2/16
    Loeb's Third Point reported nearly doubling stake in Allergan Plc in Q4 filing
    2/16
    David Einhorn's Greenlight cuts stake in Apple and Micron, adds stake in Macy's
    2/16
    Cerner shares drop following outlook, earnings
    2/16
    Loeb's Third Point also reported new stakes in insurer ACE Ltd., Axalta Coating Systems in Q4
    2/16
    Loeb's Third Point holding reported owning 95 million shares of Morgan Stanley
    2/16
    Loeb's Third Point reported holding a new stake in Morgan Stanley in Q4 filing
    2/16
    Potbelly shares up 7% after company beats expectations
    2/16
    U.S. stocks close at session highs despite drop in oil prices
    2/16
    Soros Fund Management sells off stake in General Motors in Q4
    2/16
    Fossil Group shares up 14% in after-hours trading
    2/16
    David Einhorn's Greenlight Capital slashes stake in Apple to 6.3 mln shares from 11.7 mln in Q4
    2/16
    Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway takes new 26.5 mln share stake in Kinder Morgan in Q4
    2/16
    NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell’s 2014 pay: $34 million
    2/16
    Lumber Liquidators is out of the woods: strong buy rating
    2/16
    Nasdaq Composite Index closes up 2.3%
    2/16
    S&P 500 Index finishes up 1.6%
    2/16
    Dow Jones Industrial Average closes up 1.4%
    2/16
    U.S. stocks close higher as Dow industrials rally more than 200 points
    2/16
    Nasdaq up 2.3%
    2/16
    Dow industrials up 1.4%
    2/16
    S&P up 1.6%
    2/16
    U.S. stocks end with strong gains despite drop in oil prices
    2/16
    Oil prices end lower as OPEC output talks disappoint
    2/16
    Millennial voters a concern for Clinton, Republicans alike
    2/16
    Community Health's stock plunges after results
    2/16
    Monopoly trades colorful currency for bank cards in its ‘Ultimate Banking’ game
    2/16
    Dollar weakens vs. yen as oil slide resumes
    2/16
    Gold logs worst single-session point loss in about a year

    http://www.marketwatch.com/newsviewer


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    It is the flash of a firefly in the night, the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is the little shadow which runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.

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    INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL PROGRESS REPORT - part 1 - Page 14 Empty Re: INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL PROGRESS REPORT - part 1

    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 4:58 pm

    RUSSIAN BANKS SHUT DOWN FOR USING HACKERS TO WITHDRAW FUNDS
    Published: February 17, 2016
    SOURCE: SC MAGAZINE / http://www.scmagazine.com/russian-bank-licences-revoked-for-using-hackers-to-withdraw-funds/article/474477/

    The Russian Central Bank  suspects that certain national banks have been using hackers to withdraw funds from the accounts of their clients according to the results of a recent investigation conducted by experts at the Central Bank.

    Georgy Luntovsky, first deputy chairman of the Central Bank, told SCMagazineUK.com through his representative that in recent months many Russian banks and financial institutions have begun using fake cyberattacks, which help them to cover up their previous crimes or violations, as well as to withdraw money from the accounts of their clients.

    Luntovsky has also added that in the fourth quarter of 2015 the Central Bank had revoked the licences of three domestic banks that had previously been reportedly subject to cybe- attacks by hackers.

    According to data from the Russian Central Bank, in Q4 2015 alone cyber-attacks resulted in the theft of more than 1.5 billion rubles (US$ 20 million) from the accounts of clients at some Russian banks and there is a strong suspicion that these attacks could have taken place with the knowledge of these banks and even with their direct participation.

    Criminals were able to cash funds using real credit cards, making thousands of anonymous bank transfers and falsifying accounting details of the banks' counterparties.


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    It is the flash of a firefly in the night, the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is the little shadow which runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.

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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 5:01 pm

    START PREPARING FOR THE COLLAPSE OF THE SAUDI KINGDOM
    For half a century the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has been the lynchpin of U.S. Mideast policy. A guaranteed supply of oil has bought a guaranteed supply of security. Ignoring autocratic practices and the export of Wahhabi extremism, Washington stubbornly dubs its ally “moderate.” So tight is the trust that U.S. special operators dip into Saudi petrodollars as a counterterrorism slush fund without a second thought. In a sea of chaos, goes the refrain, the kingdom is one state that’s stable.

    Saudi Arabia is no state at all. There are two ways to describe it: as a political enterprise with a clever but ultimately unsustainable business model, or so corrupt as to resemble in its functioning a vertically and horizontally integrated criminal organization. Either way, it can’t last. It’s past time U.S. decision-makers began planning for the collapse of the Saudi kingdom.

    In recent conversations with military and other government personnel, we were startled at how startled they seemed at this prospect. Here’s the analysis they should be working through.

    Understood one way, the Saudi king is CEO of a family business that converts oil into payoffs that buy political loyalty. They take two forms: cash handouts or commercial concessions for the increasingly numerous scions of the royal clan, and a modicum of public goods and employment opportunities for commoners. The coercive “stick” is supplied by brutal internal security services lavishly equipped with American equipment.

    More: http://www.defenseone.com/ideas/2016/02/de-waal-and-chayes-saudi-arabia/125953/


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    It is the flash of a firefly in the night, the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is the little shadow which runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.

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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 5:03 pm

    UNLIKELY CRITIC SAYS BANKS STILL TOO BIG TO FAIL, POSE 'NUCLEAR' RISK TO US ECONOMY
    A former Goldman Sachs executive—one credited as an architect of the 2008 banking bailout—said Tuesday that the country's largest financial institutions are "still too big to fail and continue to pose a significant, ongoing risk to our economy."

    In his first speech delivered as the newly appointed president of the Minneapolis Federal Reserve, Neel Kashkari "came out swinging," Business Insider reported.

    He likened the risk posed by big banks to that of a nuclear reactor, noting: "The cost to society of letting a reactor melt down is astronomical."

    "Enough time has passed that we better understand the causes of the crisis, and yet it is still fresh in our memories," Kashkari said at the Brookings Institution think tank in Washington, D.C. "Now is the right time for Congress to consider going further than Dodd-Frank with bold, transformational solutions to solve this problem once and for all."

    To that end, Kashkari continued, "the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis is launching a major initiative to develop an actionable plan to end [too-big-to-fail, or TBTF], and we will deliver our plan to the public by the end of the year.  Ultimately Congress must decide whether such a transformational restructuring of our financial system is justified in order to mitigate the ongoing risks posed by large banks."

    Among the solutions he floated: "breaking up large banks into smaller, less connected, less important entities" and "turning large banks into public utilities by forcing them to hold so much capital that they virtually can't fail (with regulation akin to that of a nuclear power plant)."

    More: http://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/02/16/unlikely-critic-says-banks-still-too-big-fail-pose-nuclear-risk-us-economy


    Last edited by Carol on Wed Feb 17, 2016 5:12 pm; edited 1 time in total


    _________________
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    It is the flash of a firefly in the night, the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is the little shadow which runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.

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    Post  Carol Wed Feb 17, 2016 5:05 pm

    GERMAN 'BAIL-IN' PLAN FOR GOVERNMENT BONDS RISKS BLOWING UP THE EURO

    The London Debt Conference in 1953, when much of Germany's debt was written off. European sovereign debt was sacrosanct after that until the euro led to serial crises A new German plan to impose "haircuts" on holders of eurozone sovereign debt risks igniting an unstoppable European bond crisis and could force Italy and Spain to restore their own currencies, a top adviser to the German government has warned. "A speculative attack could come very fast. If I were a politician in Italy and I was confronted by this sort of insolvency risk I would want to go back to my own currency as fast as possible, because that is the only way to avoid going bankrupt,” he told The Telegraph.

    The German Council has called for a “sovereign insolvency mechanism” even though this overturns the financial principles of the post-war order in Europe, deeming such a move necessary to restore the credibility of the "no-bailout" clause in the Maastricht Treaty. Prof Bofinger issued a vehement dissent.

    The plan has the backing of the Bundesbank and most recently the German finance minister, Wolfgang Schauble, who usually succeeds in imposing his will in the eurozone. Sensitive talks are under way in key European capitals, causing shudders in Rome, Madrid and Lisbon.

    More: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/12158626/German-bail-in-plan-for-government-bonds-risks-blowing-up-the-euro.html


    _________________
    What is life?
    It is the flash of a firefly in the night, the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is the little shadow which runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.

    With deepest respect ~ Aloha & Mahalo, Carol

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