Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Goldman Sachs May Be Doing "God's Work," But It Still Needed Taxpayer Help http://ping.fm/DnpO4
Québec Releases Detailed Measures
to Combat Aggressive Tax Planning
Schemes http://ping.fm/kCtV8
London Stock Exchange trading hit by technical glitch, again http://ping.fm/uZ6pj

Monday, 9 November 2009

PLANET OF THE APES PIERRE BOULLE 1ST EDITION 1963 RARE

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Posted via email from Boulle Conservation, Mediation & Charities

Investors Europe Gibraltar Stock Brokers #NEWS: PartyGaming Plc - Acquisition of World Poker Tour completed

PartyGaming, the world?s leading listed online gaming company, announces the completion of the acquisition of the business and substantially all of the assets of WPT Enterprises Inc. (?WPTE?) for a cash consideration of $12.3 million plus an additional minimum aggregate payment of $3m over the next three years relating to an ongoing revenue share agreement.

To view the announcement in full, please click on the link below:

http://www.partygaming.com/prty/en/mediacentre/pressreleases/financialnews/?ref=240

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Sunday, 8 November 2009

UK, Australia seek UBS data after U.S. tax case | Reuters

imgimgreuters.com

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Saturday, 7 November 2009

New regulations won't prevent failures of big banks: break up the Masters of the Universe http://ping.fm/hPxfZ
Should people be buried with their mobiles? http://ping.fm/p93hT

Friday, 6 November 2009

This, if anything, is another reason why banks should be broken up http://bit.ly/31zfPM
Netanyahu and Obama don't need love to advance peace http://ping.fm/JECNE
Prophecy on the Markets in May 2009: http://ping.fm/54ISj

Investors Europe Stock Brokers, NEWS: Deutsche Börse Makes Bid for Warsaw Stock Exchange

Deutsche Börse Makes Bid for Warsaw Stock Exchange
Wall Street Journal
Merging the Warsaw exchange's cash-trading system onto Xetra's electronic
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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125750685758433497.html

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Thursday, 5 November 2009

Nine Canadian Basic Materials Stocks Trading on the NYSE http://ping.fm/U54Z5

Germany and Russia furious at US Blow below the Opel Button

http://link.ft.com/r/KC2844/Z1AD4/4ZIKU/ZBG3RQ/CADD8/FW/t

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Germany and Russia furious at US Blow below the Opel Button http://ping.fm/9t4dd
World Bank upgrades China growth forecast to 8.4%
http://www.cdeclips.com/en/nation/fullstory.html?id=33032

Wednesday, 4 November 2009

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El Niño is killing spider monkeys

El Niño Cycles Threaten Some New World Monkey Populations

Scientific American
By Carina Storrs WEATHER WOES: The populations of primates, like this
spider monkey, dwindle following El Niño years. El Niño atmospheric
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Risk Managers: If their bosses don't understand, how do you expect to avoid another meltdown? http://ping.fm/oMe4R

Tuesday, 3 November 2009

The Investors Portal http://ping.fm/zZ7FN
New Leverage Ratio Won’t be Enough to Stop Overconfident Bankers http://ping.fm/azdED
'The Feds Have No Faith In Recovery' http://ping.fm/i2kvX

Monday, 2 November 2009

Banks, Insurers Don't Make Full Disclosures, EU Regulators Say
http://ping.fm/4fhtB

André-Charles Boulle, the most illustrious cabinetmaker of all time: Retrospective at the Museum of Decorative Arts of Frankfurt

Art Knowledge News

André-Charles Boulle Retrospective at the Museum of Decorative Arts of Frankfurt

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Written by Jean Nérée Ronfort   
Monday, 02 November 2009 01:06

Andre-Charles Boulle - Louis XIV Style Commode - Louis XIV style Marble Top violet wood and parquetry serpentine front gilt bronze mounted three drawer commode. 39 inches H, 63 inches W, 26 inches Deep - ( Note : Not on exhibition)

FRANKFURT.- The first ever retrospective about André-Charles Boulle, the most illustrious cabinetmaker of all time, opened on October 28. With a scenography by Juan Pablo Molyneux, it takes place in the Museum of Decorative Arts of Frankfurt, the emblematic building created by Richard Meier. It was conceived by two French art historians, Jean Nérée Ronfort and Jean Dominique Augarde, in close cooperation with Professor Ulrich Schneider, director of the Museum für Angewandte Kunst (Museum of Decorative Arts) of Frankfort.

Even before he was 30 years old, the name of André-Charles Boulle (1642-1732), Founder, Chaser, Gilder, Sculptor and Marqueter Ordinary to the King, was famous throughout Europe. In 1672 Louis XIV granted him a workshop inside the Louvre palace. His totally innovative genius in the concept of forms is paired with an unheard of virtuosity in the use of gilt bronze, which he was the first to unite with marquetry on a background of tortoiseshell. His creations were the absolute summit of opulence and elegance, combining extraordinary forms with materials verging on the precious, and a technical excellence never achieved again since.

André-Charles Boulle French, Paris, about 1675 - 1680 Oak veneered with ebony, pewter, tortoiseshell, brass, ivory, horn, and various woods; with drawers of snake wood; painted and gilded wood figures; bronze mounts 7 ft. 6 1/2 in. x 4 ft. 11 1/2 in. x 2 ft. J. Paul Getty MuseumHe worked for the Queen, the King, the Grand Dauphin and for the princes of the royal family. Eminent bankers of the kingdom vied for his works to furnish their mansions on the Place Vendome. The Princes Electors of Saxony, Bavaria and Cologne, the King of Spain, were among his clients.

Displayed today in the greatest museums of the world, and symbols since three centuries of financial and social success, André Charles Boulle’s furniture is inseparable from other expressions of French art avidly sought after by the foremost European courts at the time of the Sun King.

The exhibition everyone has been waiting for …
The exhibition « André Charles Boulle (1642-1732) and the Art of his Time, A new Style for Europe » is the fruit of the combined expertise of a French group, The Association André-Charles Boulle and the Museum für Angewandte Kunst (Museum of Decorative Arts) of Frankfurt hosts this event unique of its kind. Most of the works are shown for the first time, and some have never before left the countries where they are conserved. This is the case for the loans from the State Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, the Mobilier National in Paris, the Château of Versailles et des Trianons, the Banque de France, the Castle of Mannheim, the Museum of Fine Arts of Boston, the Swedish Royal Collection, and other major cultural institutions. In all, nearly thirty international museums whose names bring to mind the treasures of Western civilisation, and a few eminent private collectors, from seven countries (France, Germany, Great Britain, Slovenia, Sweden, Russia, and the United States of America) will have permitted the coming together of these masterpieces. Through their loans they reveal to the public an unprecedented image of a decisive evolution of Western art.

The exhibition assembles some sixty exceptional pieces in floral marquetry, in tortoiseshell and brass marquetry or gilt bronze, witnesses to André-Charles Boulle’s talent. Displayed side by side with bronzes, tapestries and paintings, they illustrate the cultural beacon that was Paris at that time, and the genesis of a new European aesthetic. A rare collection of original drawings by André-Charles Boulle’s contemporaries from the Museum of Decorative Arts in Paris and Berlin will complete this ensemble. The Manufacture des Gobelins, founded by Louis XIV in 1662, which has since become the Mobilier National, will also exhibit its latest works by the most committed contemporary designers, from Le Corbusier to the brothers Bouroullec, furniture and tapestries symbols of its continuity of creation.

Fully supported by international cultural institutions
André Charles Boulle (1642-1732) The Art of his Time at the Museum of Decorative Arts in Frankfurt.In a city considered to be one of the crossroads of Europe, this exhibition reflects the age-old economic and cultural ties between Germany and France. By the presence of remarkable works of art it shows how a community of taste and thought was established between the two countries, but it also illustrates the cultural cooperation between them and the other European countries, and in a larger sense, the United States. Monsieur Nicolas Sarkozy, President of the French Republic, has granted his High Patronage to the exhibition.

A prestigious international honour committee brings its support to this event. Present among its members are particularly H.E. Bernard de Montferrand - French Ambassador to Germany, H.E. Reinhard Schäfers - German Ambassador to France, but also H.E. Alexander Avdeev, Minister of Culture of the Russian Federation. The exhibition also receives the support from the City of Frankfort and the State of Hessen, and the French Heritage Society (U.S.A.), and solicits the participation of firms and private patrons wishing to assert their engagement in favour of a strong European cultural policy through this emblematic project.

An eminent scientific committee guarantees the quality of this event. In addition to Jean Nérée Ronfort, Jean Dominique Augarde and Ulrich Schneider, it is composed of other specialists in Decorative Arts ; Arnauld Bréjon de Lavergnée - Director of the collections of the Mobilier National et des Manufactures des Gobelins ; Joan Dejean - Trustee Professor at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia ; Theodore Dell - American historian, author of the catalogue of André-Charles Boulle’s furniture at the Frick Collection of-York ; Peter Hughes - Former Curator of the Wallace Collection in London ; Hans Ottomeyer - General Director of the Deutsches Historisches Museum in Berlin ; Tamara Rappe - Director of European Decorative Arts at the State Hermitage Museum of Saint Petersburg ; Sigrid Sangl - Curator at the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum in Münich ; Gillian Wilson -Curator Emeritus of Decorative Arts of the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles.

A scenography signed Juan Pablo Molyneux
The building of The Museum für Angewandte Kunst which hosts the exhibition is emblematic of the city of Frankfort. Conceived by Richard Meier in 1985, it was to influence the design of the J. Paul Getty Museum and became the model of all future creations by the architect.

In this building, bathed in light, Juan Pablo Molyneux situated the exhibition. He created the proper setting to enshrine the aesthetic to which Boulle has given birth, and which was to become a paradigm of art for centuries to come. A fierce proponent of engaged classicism, Molyneux conceives scenographies that find their origins in History, without however being simple reconstitutions. “I try to distil that which is expected in order to transform it into something unexpected “he says.

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Saturday, 31 October 2009

Investors Europe Stock Brokers: Online Trading Platforms for FOREX, CFDs, Stocks, ETFs and Futures: About us

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She acts totally like a monkey. Last night, she took off her clothes,...

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/cambodia/6468099/Jungle-woman-Rochom-Pngieng-wants-to-return-to-the-wild.html
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Friday, 30 October 2009

Too Big to Fail: Why the Big Banks Should Be Broken Up, but Why the White House and Congress Don't Want to

    And now there are five - five Wall Street behemoths, bigger than they were before the Great Meltdown, paying fatter salaries and bonuses to retain their so-called"talent," and raking in huge profits. The biggest difference between now and last October is these biggies didn't know then that they were too big to fail and the government would bail them out if they got into trouble. Now they do. And like a giant, gawking adolescent who's just discovered he can crash the Lexus convertible his rich dad gave him and the next morning have a new one waiting in his driveway courtesy of a dad who can't say no, the biggies will drive even faster now, taking even bigger risks.

    What to do? Two ideas are floating around Washington, but only one is supported by the Treasury and the White House. Unfortunately, it's the wrong one.

    The right idea is to break up the giant banks. I don't often agree with Alan Greenspan but he was right when he said last week that "[i]f they're too big to fail, they're too big." Greenspan noted that the government broke up Standard Oil in 1911, and what happened? "The individual parts became more valuable than the whole. Maybe that's what we need to do." (Historic footnote: Had Greenspan not supported in 1999 Congress's repeal of the Glass Stagall Act, which separated investment from commercial banking, we wouldn't be in the soup we're in to begin with.)

    Former Fed Chair Paul Volcker, whose only problem is he's much too tall, last week told the New York Times he'd like to see the restoration of the Glass-Steagall Act provisions that would separate the financial giants' deposit-taking activities from their investment and trading businesses. If this separation went into effect, JPMorgan Chase would have to give up the trading operations acquired from Bear Stearns. Bank of America and Merrill Lynch would go back to being separate companies. And Goldman Sachs could no longer be a bank holding company.

    But the Obama Administration doesn't agree with either Greenspan or Volcker. While it says it doesn't want another bank bailout, its solution to the "too big to fail" problem doesn't go nearly far enough. In fact, it doesn't really go anywhere. The Administration would wait until a giant bank was in danger of failing and then put it into a process akin to bankruptcy. The bank's assets would be sold off to pay its creditors, and its shareholders would likely walk off with nothing. The Treasury would determine when such a "resolution" process was needed, and appoint a receiver, such as the FDIC, to wind down the bank's operations.

    There should be an orderly process for putting big failing banks out of business. But this isn't nearly enough. By the time a truly big bank gets into trouble - one that poses a "systemic risk" to the entire economy - it's too late. Other banks, competing like mad for the same talent and profits, will already have adopted many of the excessively-risky banks techniques. And the pending failure will already have rocked the entire financial sector.

    Worse yet, the Administration's plan gives the big failing bank an escape hatch: The receiver might decide that the bank doesn't need to go out of business after all - that all it needs is some government money to tide it over until the crisis passes. So the Treasury would also have the authority to provide the bank with financial assistance in the form of loans or guarantees. In other words, back to bailout. (Historical footnote: Summers and Geithner, along with Bob Rubin, while at Treasury in 1999, joined Greenspan in urging Congress to repeal Glass-Steagall. The four of them - Greenspan, Summers, Rubin and Geithner also refused to regulate derivatives, and pushed Congress to stop the Commodity Futures Trading Corporation from doing so.)

    Congress is cooking up a variation on the "resolution" idea that would give the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation authority to trigger and handle the winding-down of big banks in trouble, without Treasury involvement, and without an escape hatch.

    Needless to say, Wall Street favors the Administration's approach - which is why the Administration chose it to begin with. If I were less charitable I'd say Geithner and Summers continue to bend over bankwards to make Wall Street happy, and in doing so continue to risk the credibility of the President, as well as the long-term financial stability of the system.

    Wall Street could live with the slightly less delectable variation that Congress is coming up with. But Congress won't go as far as to unleash the antitrust laws on the big banks or resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act. After all, the Street is a major benefactor of Congress and the Street's lobbyists and lackeys are all over Capitol Hill.

    The Street obviously detests the notion that its behemoths should be broken up. That's why the idea isn't even on the table. But it should be. No important public interest is served by allowing giant banks to grow too big to fail. Winding them down after they get into trouble is no answer. By then the damage will already have been done.

    Whether it's using the antitrust laws or enacting a new Glass-Steagall Act, the Wall Street giants should be split up - and soon.

Posted via web from Investors Europe

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Negotiaiting with the Iranians is " like playing chess with a monkey," http://ping.fm/95MfV
Economist Who Didn't Want to Audit the Fed Says We Better Audit the Fed http://ping.fm/V4B6h

Cooking up a new theory of evolution

http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/reviewofbooks_article/7645/
Cooking up a new theory of evolution Spiked
It is the change in our diets, and the improved ability to absorb
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ape-like ...

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Boulle Vortal Cape Town 'Gravity Adventures'

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Première rétrospective mondiale de André Charles Boulle, ébéniste de génie

http://www.lematin.ch/flash-info/loisirs/premiere-retrospective-mondiale-boulle-ebeniste-genie-louis-xiv
Première rétrospective mondiale de Boulle, ébéniste de génie de ...
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Photo diffusée par le Musée "Angewandte Kunst" de francfort montrant une
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exotiques, ...


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Thursday, 29 October 2009

Too Big To Fail, Too Small To Survive: Small Bank Failures Mount, While Profit At Big Banks Soars

Too Big To Fail, Too Small To Survive: Small Bank Failures Mount, While Profit At Big Banks Soars On Wall Street, they may be popping the champagne bottles over big bank profits this past quarter. But times are tough for small to mid-size banks around the country as failures mount higher and higher.

The top 10 bailed-out banks -- Citigroup, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, PNC Financial, U.S. Bancorp, SunTrust and Capital One - have reported combined profits this year of $13.5 billion in the first quarter, $16.8 billion in the second quarter and $11 billion in the third quarter after a massive $18 billion loss in the fourth quarter of 2008.

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Too Big To Fail, Too Small To Survive: Small Bank Failures Mount, While Big Banks' Profit Soars

On Wall Street, they may be popping the champagne bottles over big bank profits this past quarter. But times are tough for small to mid-size banks around the country as failures mount higher and higher.

The top 10 bailed-out banks -- Citigroup, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, PNC Financial, U.S. Bancorp, SunTrust and Capital One - have reported combined profits this year of $13.5 billion in the first quarter, $16.8 billion in the second quarter and $11 billion in the third quarter after a massive $18 billion loss in the fourth quarter of 2008.

Meanwhile, the number of failed banks has quintupled, from 10 in the third quarter of 2008 to 50 in the third quarter of 2009. So far this year, 106 banks with assets totaling $106 billion have failed, almost half of which have been concentrated in three states (California, Georgia and Illinois). That has put a major dent in the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's fund that insures deposits which recently fell into the red.

While several giant banks such as Washington Mutual and IndyMac failed last year, this year the list has been dominated by small and mid-size banks such as Brickwell Community Bank in Woodbury, Minn., which had just a single branch and $72.6 million in assets. And it promises to keep getting worse for such banks. As the New York Times recently reported:

Burdened by worsening commercial real estate loans, many small banks' troubles are just beginning. Many analysts say that the now-toxic loans could sink hundreds of small lenders over the next few years and place a significant drag on the economy.

Below, we've charted the rise in profits for the top 10 recipients of bailout funds versus the rate of failure for U.S. banks:

Story continues below

Some economists have questioned what seems to be a two-tier system.

"There is no good case for making the smaller, competitive, community-oriented institutions take the brunt of the down-sizing, as opposed to the bloated, ungovernable, and predatory institutions that were at the center of the crisis," Nobel-Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz told a Senate committee back in April.

Last month, economists Dean Baker and Travic McArthur described how government policy may end up increasing the disparity between "too big to fail" banks that have received billions in bailout dollars and smaller banks that were allowed to fail:

"A predicted result of a formal TBTF policy is that the gap between the interest rate that smaller banks must pay to obtain deposits and otherwise borrow funds and the interest rate paid by the TBTF banks would increase, since the TBTF banks are now effectively able to borrow all their
funds (not just smaller deposits) with the backing of the federal government."

And banking officials in states hit by bank failures have also been outspoken in their criticism of the administration's policy. "Federal policy has not treated the rest of the industry with the same expediency, creativity or fundamental fairness," Joseph A. Smith Jr., the North Carolina commissioner of banks, testified in Congress earlier this month. "This has been a lost opportunity for the federal government to support community and regional banks and provide economic stimulus."

The message seems to be sinking in with the Obama administration, which is set to revise its policy on such banking behemoths this week.

"'Too big to fail' has become worse," FDIC chair Sheila Bair told USA TODAY last week. "It's become explicit when it was implicit before. It creates competitive disparities between large and small institutions, because everybody knows small institutions can fail. So it's more expensive for them to raise capital and secure funding."

President Obama himself acknowledged the perception of such a disparity in a July speech though he defended the administration's approach during the financial crisis: "I know that many community bankers consider it unfair that small banks--which did not cause the financial mess--are allowed to fail, while larger banks that took the biggest risks are rescued. That's an understandable reaction. But we can't escape the reality that certain institutions, by virtue of their size or their linkages to key markets, pose unique risks to the system and can bring others down with them."

Yet the White House seems to be watering down any drastic reform of its policy, with reports that the Treasury Department "have decided against making financial firms pay upfront the costs of dismantling them if regulators decide they have grown "too big to fail," according to a House aide familiar with the plan," notes the Associated Press:

Instead, those companies would be allowed to borrow money from the government. The government would then recoup the costs by either seizing the firm's profits or seeking restitution from the entire industry, the aide said.

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Investors Europe Limited was founded in 2001 and is Authorised and Regulated by the Financial Services Commission.
 
 
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IMF: Asia to see faster growth next year http://ping.fm/I1ccw

Association of Introducing Brokers Worldwide

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Wednesday, 28 October 2009

Trading Platforms, Online Trading Platforms for FX, CFDs, Stocks, ETFs, Futures, Spreads

offshorebroker Stock Brokers at the Gates of Hercules, trading portal, 38 online trading platforms for stocks, futures, fx, cfds, etfs http://bit.ly/3LRi6f 7 days ago reply

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Trading Platforms, Online Trading Platforms for FX, CFDs, Stocks, ETFs, Futures

offshorebroker RT @investorseurope: RT @onlineplatforms: Trading Online with best Online Trading Platforms in the World: Rock Trader http://post.ly/A3E7 4 days ago reply

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Trading Platforms, Online Trading Platforms for FX, CFDs, Stocks, ETFs, Futures, Spreads

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India’s retail online trading set for boost

Online trading in India is set for rapid expansion over the next few years, spurred by economic growth and increasing disposable income, according to a new report.

Celent, the financial consultancy firm, predicts that the market share of online trading as a proportion of total retail investor trading in India will expand to 30 per cent by 2012, from about 20 per cent now.

As a proportion of the overall volume on the National Stock Exchange of India, the country’s largest bourse, online trading will probably rise to 15.2 per cent over the same period, from 10.6 per cent in the year just ended, the report showed.

Retail investors already account for 21 per cent of the NSE’s stock trading, an 18.3 per cent rise from 2007. Coupled with the 30 per cent annual growth in the internet and mobile user base, online trading is set to expand further, Celent said.

Expansion of retail stock trading will also be augmented by the potential for individuals to direct more of their savings at investing in equities. Just 3 per cent of household savings are “directed toward financial services”, a figure set to rise to 5 per cent by 2015, Celent said. In addition, the population is growing fast.

India’s economy has weathered the global financial and economic crisis well, and retail sales in particular have shown strong growth since September, data indicates. The government has forecast growth of between 6 and 6.5 per cent for the year ending next March, which would make it one of the fastest growing large economies.

The stock market is benefiting from this continued expansion. The Sensex has rallied 73.5 per cent so far this year, outperforming the Shanghai Composite Index’s 68.4 per cent rise during the same period.

The consultancy said new retail brokerages had prompted a reduction in trading fees. It said that because mature markets have shown the importance of lower fee levels in winning and keeping customers, the “lagging” brokerages will be forced to improve their operational costs in order to be successful.

One of the main obstacles to further development of online trading is telecom infrastructure, which is forcing most online retail brokerages to offer telephone trading as a backup, Celent said. Another is the introduction of the securities transaction tax, it added.

via ft.com

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For German Consumers, Cash is still King http://ping.fm/m51eo

Tuesday, 27 October 2009

BBVA €3.7bn bad loans write off twice that of 2008 http://ping.fm/b4Evf
British Sovereignty of Gibraltar's territorial waters http://ping.fm/GRxtD

131 Zombies dead, another 600 or so to go by 2012 ?

Bank Failure Friday Shutters Seven, as the total for 2009 rises to 106 bank failures

The total for “The Great Credit Crunch” reaches 131 on the way to 500 to 800 by the end of 2012.

All seven of Friday’s closures were private banks and thus not on the ValuEngine List of Problem Banks, which contains 760 publicly traded banks. There are more than 3,000 banks with the characteristics of the risks I see: Overexposures to C&D and / or CRE loans, as the US Treasury, Federal Reserve and FDIC ignore their own joint regulatory guidelines set in December 2006.

All seven of Friday’s bank failures were well above the loan to risk-based capital ratios of 100% for C&D loans and 300% for CRE loans. Two of the banks had C&D ratios of 1378% and 1858% for C&D loans, and the FDIC saw that coming in periodic reviews. Two banks had CRE ratios of 2561% and 2670%.

The FDIC says that the banking industry funds their own failures, but at the expense of other members, which puts a squeeze on lending. The FDIC says that they will not likely have to tap their $500 billion line of credit with the US Treasury. I say that’s just wishful thinking.

The trouble in the banking system is getting worse, not better and the FDIC is actually slow to close banks that are in as poor shape as those already closed. Time will not heal banks with extreme overexposures to C&D and CRE loans. The FDIC List of Problem Banks will continue to rise from the current non-listed 416, and bad loans are rising. The FDIC Quarterly Banking Profile for Q3 will be available around Thanksgiving.

By my calculations the Deposit Insurance Fund is in arrears by $5.4 billion.

Transports, small caps and SOX are leadership indices. The problem now is to the downside.

The daily chart for Dow Transports shows a double top, which was a failed test of my zone of annual resistances at 4037 and 4199. Transports closed below 21-day and 50-day simple moving averages at 3877 and 3832 with monthly support at 3615.

The daily chart for the Russell 2000 shows a double top. Friday’s close was between the 21-day and 50-day simple moving averages at 607.27 and 594.44 with monthly support at 589.03.

The daily chart for the SOX shows a double top. Friday’s close was below the 21-day simple moving average at 322.64 and on the cusp of the 50-day at 315.73. The Sox is rolling over despite great earnings from Intel and Texas Instruments.

Where would the NASDAQ be without Apple (AAPL), Google (GOOG), Amazon (AMZN) and Microsoft (MSFT)?

The daily chart for the NASDAQ shows declining MOJO with a reading of 7.8 with the NASDAQ above its 21-day and 50-day simple moving averages at 2129 and 2080.

Breakouts in Copper and Crude Oil should be a Fed worry about commodity speculation.

Comex Copper is above its 200-week simple moving average at 293.16. Weekly support is 273.98 with monthly resistance at 321.34.

Nymex Crude Oil is above its 200-week simple moving average at $75.29. Weekly support is $72.71 with monthly and quarterly resistances at $82.98 and $83.16.

Disclosure: I Hold No Positions in the Stocks I Cover.

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131 bankRUPTS so far, total really dead Zombies by 2012: 500 to 800 http://ping.fm/Slc4J
Merchants of Financial Mayhem Dancing Again http://ping.fm/B1mNS

Break ING up of ING continued... who's next..?

http://link.ft.com/r/ZE9K33/5GLZ2/UBZVE/LQQX92/UREFE/50/t

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Monday, 26 October 2009

ape intelligence: Balloon Boy's vomit and the science of lying

Balloon Boy's vomit and the science of lying http://trueslant.com/hivemind/2009/10/26/balloon-boys-vomit-and-the-science-of-lying/
True/Slant - New York,NY,USA
Evolutionarily speaking, white matter correlates with greater intelligence.
We've got more of it than our monkey and ape relatives (who lie plenty, ...

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Nasdaq serves up Twitter stock buzz on iPhone

Nasdaq has released an iPhone app that enables users to track the performance of their portfolio, access share price information and search for the latest tweets on particular stocks.

The QFolio App is designed for the average novice investor to the active trader, says Nasdaq. It offers access to real-time pre-market, regular session and after hours trading data alongside a stock search facility.

Users can monitor the performance of their portfolio and set up watch lists to track particular stocks of interest.

The app also comes with a built-in StockTwits feature for users to drill down into the real-time Twitter buzz on particular stocks.

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FRB: Speech--Tarullo, Confronting Too Big to Fail--October 21, 2009

Governor Daniel K. Tarullo

At the Exchequer Club, Washington, D.C.

October 21, 2009

Confronting Too Big to Fail

The far-reaching financial crisis that has afflicted our country in the past two years has drawn attention to a raft of problems--from the concentration of commercial real estate exposures in some regional and community banks, to the risks associated with some forms of derivatives, to the need for more vigorous financial services consumer protection. Proposals for administrative and congressional responses are thus appropriately diverse. I would suggest, however, that the reform process cannot be judged a success unless it substantially reduces systemic risk generally and, in particular, the too-big-to-fail problem. This afternoon I will address my remarks specifically to the task of forging an effective response to this problem.1

The Current Form of the Too-Big-to-Fail Problem
The concern is hardly a new one. In one manifestation, too big to fail was an extension of the classic problem of bank runs and panics. If a large bank failed--whether because it was illiquid after a deposit run or insolvent after severe losses--the entire banking system might be endangered. In cases in which other banks held significant deposits in the distressed institution, the failure of a large bank might lead directly to the illiquidity or insolvency of other banks. The result could be a domino effect in the interbank lending market, with one bank's failure toppling the next. Even where direct losses to other banks were thought manageable, the failure of a large bank might strike panic into depositors, especially uninsured depositors, of other large institutions. The result might be a far-reaching run on the entire banking system that could, in a worst case such as occurred in early 1933, freeze the financial system completely.

Faced with either variant of such a devastating impact on the system, government authorities often believe they have little choice but to intervene. The government may provide funds or guarantees to the bank in order to keep it functioning. Alternatively, the government may allow the bank to fail, but shield some or all of its depositors from loss, even those not covered by existing insurance programs. In 1984, for example, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation protected the uninsured depositors of Continental Illinois Bank, then the nation's seventh largest depository institution, after a foreign depositor run that followed heavy losses.

One concern arises from the effects on incentives of bank creditors and, possibly, the banks themselves. Creditors who believe that an institution will be regarded by the government as too big to fail may not price into their extensions of credit the full risk assumed by the institution. That, of course, is the very definition of moral hazard. Thus the institution has funds available to it at a price that does not fully internalize the social costs associated with its operations. The consequences are a diminution of market discipline, inefficient allocation of capital, the socialization of losses from supposedly market-based activities, and a competitive advantage for the large institution compared to smaller banks.

The management and shareholders of the too-big-to-fail institution may, in turn, regard themselves as holding a kind of put option and may thus be motivated to take greater risks with the cheaper funds now available to them. If the risky projects pay off, the shareholders profit famously. If the results are bad, the government may keep the institution afloat, thereby preserving at least some value for shareholders.

The roots of the present crisis--and thus of the current form of the too-big-to-fail problems--reach much deeper than the breakdown of private risk management and shortcomings of government regulation during the first part of this decade. Its origins lie in 30 years of change in the organization of financial firms and markets that squeezed the traditional business model of commercial banking. The regulatory system accommodated the growth of capital market alternatives to traditional financing by relaxing many restrictions on the type and geographic scope of bank activities, and virtually all restrictions on affiliations between banks and non-bank financial firms. The result was a financial services industry dominated by one set of very large financial holding companies centered on a large commercial bank and another set of very large financial institutions not subject to prudential regulation.

Many firms of both types relied for a considerable portion of their financing on short-term capital market sources that were often poorly matched with the maturity structure of a firm's assets. Securitization markets were a major part of these complex, tightly wound financial arrangements. When questions arose about the quality of assets held by the borrowing institutions, a classic adverse feedback loop ensued. With lenders increasingly unwilling to extend credit against these assets, liquidity-strained institutions made increasingly distressed asset sales, which placed additional downward pressure on asset prices, leading to margin calls for leveraged actors and mark-to-market losses for all holders of the assets.

As shown by the intervention of the government when Bear Stearns, AIG, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac were failing and by the repercussions from the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, the universe of financial firms that appeared too big to fail by 2008 included more than the insured depository institutions subject to prudential regulatory requirements. It is noteworthy that, prior to the start of the crisis, relatively few market observers would likely have identified Bear Stearns as so systemically important that it could not be permitted to fail in a "disorderly" fashion. Indeed, some observers counseled letting the firm enter bankruptcy. The extension of funds by the Treasury Department from the Troubled Asset Relief Program and guarantees from the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program to each of the nation’s largest institutions in the fall of 2008 revealed the government’s view that a very real threat to the nation’s entire financial system was best addressed by shoring up the nation’s largest financial firms.

The government-arranged and subsidized absorption of Bear Stearns into JPMorgan Chase draws attention to two additional features of the too-big-to-fail problem. First, no matter what its general economic policy principles, a government faced with the possibility of a cascading financial crisis that could bring down its national economy tends to err on the side of intervention. Second, once a government has obviously extended the reach of its safety net, moral hazard problems are compounded, as market actors may expect similarly situated firms to be rescued in the future. Both these observations underscore the importance of adopting robust policies in non-crisis times that will diminish the chances that, in some future period of financial distress, a government will believe it must intervene to prevent the failure of a large financial institution.

A Program to Contain the Problem
Moral hazard is, if not quite pervasive, certainly common in modern economic life. The best evidence that we are willing to live with some degree of moral hazard may be found in the importance of insurance as a social institution. The costs that would be incurred in trying to eliminate moral hazard completely from, say, a casualty insurance policy are simply too high as a practical matter. Similarly, we should not realistically expect to eliminate moral hazard completely in the financial sector. What we can reasonably expect and, indeed, should insist upon, is that we take steps to contain the problem such that the social costs associated with the consequences of the misaligned incentives do not exceed the benefits associated with the operation of the institutions or markets in which the moral hazard exists.

Parallel reasoning applies with respect to the negative effects that may attend the failure of a large financial institution. Efforts should be made to reduce those effects, but in such a way that takes account of the costs that these efforts may themselves impose on productive activities. In the financial arena, the trade-off is often characterized as one between the availability and efficient allocation of credit, on the one hand, and the safety and soundness of the financial system on the other.

The conventional response to moral hazard problems arising from anticipated government support for financial actors has been to enact regulation to counteract unwelcome effects on the incentives of creditors, investors, or managers. Thus, for example, the potential moral hazard arising from the availability of discount window lending or from the presence of federal deposit insurance is offset to some degree through safety and soundness regulation. Likewise, the potential for large negative externalities from a firm’s activities is often countered with regulation designed to force some measure of social cost internalization by the firm.

A regulatory response for the too-big-to-fail problem would enhance the safety and soundness of large financial institutions and thereby reduce the likelihood of severe financial distress that could raise the prospect of systemic effects. Such a response consists of three elements.

First, the shortcomings of the regulations that failed to protect the stability of the firms and the financial system need to be rectified. Regulatory capital requirements can balance the incentive to excessive risk-taking that may arise when there is believed to be government support for a firm, or at least some of its liabilities. There is little doubt that capital levels prior to the crisis were insufficient to serve their functions as an adequate constraint on leverage and a buffer against loss. The Federal Reserve has worked with other U.S. and foreign supervisors to strengthen capital, liquidity, and risk-management requirements for banking organizations. In particular, higher capital requirements for trading activities and securitization exposures have already been agreed. Work continues on improving the quality of capital and counteracting the procyclical tendencies of important areas of financial regulation, such as capital and accounting standards.

These regulatory changes are surely a necessary part of a response to the too-big-to-fail problem, but there is good reason to doubt that they are sufficient. Generally applicable capital and other regulatory requirements do not take account of the specifically systemic consequences of the failure of a large institution. It is for this reason that many have proposed a second kind of regulatory response--a special charge, possibly a special capital requirement, based on the systemic importance of a firm. Ideally, this requirement would be calibrated so as to begin to bite gradually as a firm’s systemic importance increased, so as to avoid the need for identifying which firms are considered too-big-to-fail and, thereby, perhaps increasing moral hazard.

While very appealing in concept, developing an appropriate metric for such a requirement is not an easy exercise. There is much attention being devoted to this effort--within the U.S. banking agencies, in international fora, and among academics--but at this moment there is no specific proposal that has gathered a critical mass of support.

A third regulatory change is in some respects the most obvious and straightforward: Any firm whose failure could have serious systemic consequences ought to be subject to regulatory requirements such as those I have just described. At present, these apply only to firms that own a commercial bank--a regulatory gap that became painfully evident last year as systemic problems arose from the activities of other firms. Although the five large, "free-standing" investment banks of early 2008 have subsequently either converted to bank holding company status or ceased operations as independent firms, action by Congress is needed to ensure that other firms posing such a risk--now or in the future-- can be brought within the perimeter of regulation.

This regulatory agenda has much to be said for it and should, I believe, be vigorously pursued. But I doubt that rules directed at the conduct of financial firms will be an adequate response to the too-big-to-fail problem. In the first place, there is some danger that simply piling on a series of administrative reforms and restrictions intended to constrain the behavior of firms would have unnecessarily adverse consequences for the availability of credit on risk-sensible terms for consumers and businesses alike. The interaction of regulatory changes needs to be thought through. Also, the financial crisis should itself inject a considerable dose of humility into regulators’ assessment of the efficacy of even well-considered regulations. Rules directed at the behavior of large firms must be complemented with reforms directed at the behavior of their investors and counterparties.

An agenda to enhance market discipline can serve two purposes. First, establishing the realistic prospect of losses for investors and counterparties in a large financial institution should change their calculations in deciding whether to enter a transaction with the firm, and thus lead to a more complete incorporation of risk into the terms of such a transaction. Second, the assessment of that risk by these financial actors, as reflected in the pricing of their investments and contracts with a firm, can itself provide valuable information to regulators.

While the role of market discipline has been much discussed in academic and policy literature as a potentially central element of a financial regulatory system, it had not been significantly developed and implemented by regulators themselves. The crisis has pushed some market discipline ideas to the fore. Here again, I think there are three important measures.

First would be creation by Congress of a special resolution procedure for systemically important financial firms. The Federal Deposit Insurance Act establishes such a process for banks, but not for the holding companies of which they are part, or for important financial firms that do not own commercial banks. A regime that raised the real prospect of losses for shareholders and creditors would add a third alternative to the unattractive existing options of bailout or disorderly bankruptcy. The consequent increase in market discipline before severe financial distress arises could be a key advance in the containment of the too-big-to-fail problem.

A related innovation would be a requirement that each major financial institution draw up and submit for approval to its supervisors a plan for orderly wind-down in the event of serious liquidity or solvency difficulties. Although even a good faith effort might not anticipate all the circumstances that may raise such difficulties, and thus might not adequately prepare an effective wind-down strategy, the development of such a plan would at the least be a useful supervisory exercise. It would, for example, provide an occasion for examining the relationships among the many separate corporate entities within a large financial organization.

A second kind of market discipline initiative is a requirement that large financial firms have specified forms of "contingent capital." Numerous variants on this basic idea have been proposed over the past several years. While all are intended to provide a firm with an increased capital buffer from private sources at the moment when it is most needed, some also hold significant promise of injecting market discipline into the firm. For example, a regularly issued special debt instrument that would convert to equity during times of financial distress could add market discipline both through the pricing of newly issued instruments and through the interests of current shareholders in avoiding dilution.

A third improvement in market discipline could come through judicious extension of disclosure requirements for regulated financial institutions. Disclosure requirements have at times served as too easy an answer to calls for market discipline. Indeed, poorly crafted requirements can simultaneously impose significant costs on firms while providing little useful information to investors. However, an organized inquiry of actual and potential investors might identify discrete categories of information thought to have particular salience for purchase and pricing decisions. There may be a need to resolve issues of potential competitive harm to firms required to publish certain forms of information. Still, such an effort seems worth pursuing, especially in conjunction with specific proposals for contingent capital or similar requirements.

Alternatives
The foregoing set of administrative and legislative proposals constitutes a strong reform program to address the too-big-to-fail problem, particularly as supplemented by the greater emphasis on horizontal reviews, creation of a quantitative surveillance mechanism, and other supervisory changes being implemented at the Federal Reserve.2 Along with our domestic and international colleagues, we are already working on many of these initiatives. We are hopeful that Congress will, in its legislative response to the crisis, include a resolution mechanism and an extension of regulation to all systemically important financial institutions.

Still, we cannot know for certain that this program, even if forcefully implemented, would substantially contain the too-big-to-fail problem. All participants in the reform process must continue to explore other possibilities, including some that would work more fundamental changes in the structure of the financial industry.

One approach suggested by a number of commentators is to reverse the 30-year trend that allowed progressively more financial activities within commercial banks and more affiliations with non-bank financial firms. The idea is presumably to insulate insured depository institutions from trading or other capital market activities that are thought riskier than traditional lending functions. There are, however, at least two reasons why this strategy seems unlikely to limit the too-big-to-fail problem to a significant degree. One is that, historically at least, some very large institutions got themselves into a good deal of trouble through risky lending alone. Moreover, as we have already seen in the experience with Bear Stearns and Lehman, firms without commercial banking operations can now also pose a too-big-to-fail threat.

Another approach would be to attack the bigness problem head-on by limiting the size or interconnectedness of financial institutions. Some observers have even suggested that existing large firms should be split up into smaller, not-too-big-to-fail entities, in a manner a bit reminiscent of the break-up of AT&T in the early 1980s. Of course, the conceptual and practical challenges in breaking up the nation’s largest financial institutions would be considerably more daunting than those faced by Judge Greene in creating four regional operating companies and a long distance carrier out of the old AT&T. Indeed, to my knowledge, no one has offered anything like standards for undertaking this task, much less a blueprint for how it would be accomplished. This is, in other words, more a provocative idea than a proposal. Like many a provocative idea, though, even in an unelaborated form it can focus attention on the relative effectiveness of alternative policy proposals.

The fact that the largest financial firms will account for a significantly larger share of total industry assets after the crisis than they did before can only add to the uneasiness of those worried about the too-big-to-fail phenomenon. It is notable that current law provides very little in the way of structural means to limit systemic risk and the too-big-to-fail problem. The statutory prohibition on interstate acquisitions that would result in a commercial bank and its affiliates holding more than 10 percent of insured deposits nationwide is the closest thing to such an instrument.3 Policymakers and policy commentators alike might usefully attempt to develop similarly discrete mechanisms that could be beneficial in containing the too-big-to-fail problem. As must be apparent from my remarks today, my strong suspicion is that an effective response to the problem will likely require multiple, mutually reinforcing instruments.

Conclusion
In closing, let me reiterate the importance of moving ahead with the administrative and legislative reform agenda that I have laid out this afternoon. The components of this agenda will each be significant contributions to a more effective regulatory system. They will enhance financial stability and increase market discipline in transactions involving large financial firms.

Of course, financial instability can occur even in the absence of serious too-big-to-fail problems. Other reform measures--such as regulating derivatives markets and money market funds--are thus also important to pursue. In focusing today upon measures to mitigate too-big-to-fail problems, I mean only to suggest that no reform package should be considered sufficient if it does not address these problems in a robust fashion. And in suggesting that policymakers should continue to examine possible measures beyond the current reform agenda, I certainly do not intend to suggest that the current agenda should be delayed. I only urge that we all keep the too-big-to-fail problem front and center as the regulatory reform effort moves forward.

Footnotes

1. The views expressed here are my own, and do not necessarily reflect those of other members of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve. Return to text

2. See Daniel K. Tarullo (2009), "Bank Supervision," statement before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, U.S. Senate, August 4. Return to text

3. 12 U.S.C. § 1842(d). Return to text

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Sunday, 25 October 2009

'Mad' monkey mauls 2 Paharganj infants to death

http://news.google.com/news/story?ncl=http://www.expressindia.com/latest-news/mad-monkey-mauls-2-paharganj-infants-to-death/532929/&hl=en'Mad' monkey mauls 2 Paharganj infants to death
Expressindia.com
Lucknow Eleven-year-old Raja is scared to step out of the house as he fears
that “the monkey” will attack him again. Wearing a fresh bandage on his
left arm ...

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