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‘Build America’ Bonds: Goldman Sachs Racks Up $55.7 Million In Fees

March 11th, 2010 No comments

March 10 (Bloomberg) — Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the most profitable securities firm in Wall Street history, has made $55.7 million from the sale of $36.4 billion of Build America Bonds, about a third of the fees it earned from its municipal business, it said in response to queries from Iowa Senator Charles Grassley.

Read more: Unemployment, Economic Stimulus Package, Unemployment Rate, Build America Bonds, Goldman Sachs, Bonds, Munis, Obama Administration, Financial Crisis, Job Creation, Business News

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Obama Admin Too Busy To Deal With Fannie, Freddie, Says Assistant Treasury Secretary

March 11th, 2010 No comments
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Alex Palmer: Karl Rove Comes Out Swinging

March 11th, 2010 No comments

Karl Rove has very few regrets. At an intense Q&A yesterday, the senior adviser to President George W. Bush defended the Administration on everything from the Iraq war, to rough campaign tactics, to its response to Hurricane Katrina. Rather than expressing regrets about the Iraq invasion, Rove said he only wished he had responded faster to Democrats who first supported the war but then turned on Bush when it became clear that there were no weapons of mass destruction.

“You’ve got to either hold everybody accountable, or you’ve got to drop this myth,” said Rove. “This pernicious, corrosive, hypocritical lie that Bush lied about weapons of mass destruction.”

The event, which took place at 92Y in Manhattan in connection with the release of Rove’s new memoir, Courage and Consequence: My Life as a Conservative in the Fight, was hosted by CNN’s Gloria Borger and covered a broad range of topics.

For every tough question Borger threw at him, Rove was quick with a justification. Nasty campaign tactics against John McCain in 2000? It was all coordinated by an individual who Rove had nothing to do with, and McCain should have seized the moment, not played victim. Swift-boating John Kerry? It was all coordinated by a group that Rove had nothing to do with, and their most effective ad was just using Kerry’s own words, from his testimony about the Vietnam War, against him. When Borger suggested that was still a low blow, Rove retorted: “I guess using John Kerry’s own words against him was kind of a low blow.”

He questioned the assertion that Bush “cherry picked” intelligence in the run up to the Iraq war, saying that Congress had access to the same intelligence the administration did. When asked about Katrina, Rove cited the inaccurate information the administration was receiving from local authorities. The financial collapse? “It wasn’t the banks that brought this on; what brought this on primarily were the excesses of two government-sponsored enterprises: Fannie and Freddie,” he said.

Rove got off a number of zingers (when asked by an audience member about Vice President “Darth Cheney” he corrected, “No, no, no, no, no. You’ve got it all wrong–I’m Darth Vader, Cheney is [Emperor] Palpatine”). When Borger asked him jokingly, “now that the [2000 election] is over, where are the Florida ballots?” Rove answered, “In my garage,” to laughs from the audience. He described Al Gore as “one angry dude.”

But not everyone was a fan. At one point a protester interrupted the event unfolding a sign and shouting “war criminal” before being escorted out, and throughout the event members of the audience lobbed occasional comments as Rove spoke.

When asked about whom he would have chosen as his vice presidential nominee in 2008, Rove said it would not have been Palin but would have likely gone with Romney. Though he joked that the McCain campaign didn’t call him too much for advice.

Rove expressed disappointment in the way President Barack Obama had emphasized his centrist credentials while campaigning, but tacked left once entering office. When Borger suggested that Bush had done the same thing, but legislated from the right, Rove disagreed, saying that “No Child Left Behind” and Social Security reform were centrist efforts.

Asked about Liz Cheney’s “Al Qaeda 7” commercial about the loyalties of Justice Department lawyers, Rove avoided taking a firm stance, but said, “How comfortable as a country would we be if we said, ‘the lawyers from Enron…let’s put them on the SEC and have them help determine policy regarding these same kinds of frauds’?”

On health care reform, Rove said he hoped it would be defeated and that Obama would go back to the drawing board to start from scratch with Republican involvement. He predicted that if it passed with only Democratic support, the House would go Republican in the midterm election and, “whatever method they use in the Senate to pass it, we will use to repeal it.”

Read more: John McCain, Karl Rove, Conservatives, George W. Bush, Financial Crisis, Hurricane Katrina, Al Gore, Health Care, Al Qaeda, New York News

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Stacy Mitchell: Big Banks Want You Back

March 11th, 2010 No comments

The New Rules Project, in partnership with HuffPost’s Move Your Money campaign, is using its Community Banking Initiative to get out the word that banking locally can put the power back in the hands of individuals and communities, rather than Wall Street’s CEOs.

Those who wonder whether public anger at big banks and the Move Your Money sentiment sweeping the country is substantial enough to impact these giants need only look at the banks’ own marketing over the last few weeks to see the proof.

In a spate of new advertisements and PR maneuvers, the nation’s largest banks are working hard to win us back. They are, in effect, standing on our doorstep, flowers in hand, trying to convince us they’ve changed.

They’re using words like “local” and “community,” because they know quite well that there’s a rival for our affections. A recent Zogby poll found that nearly one in ten Americans had moved at least some of their business to small banks or credit unions.

One jilted lover, Citibank, has launched a blog devoted to showcasing the “new Citi.” The site, which Citibank is promoting through newspaper and magazine ads, features a video statement by CEO Vikram Pandit, who offers a few vaguely apologetic statements before detailing how Citi is a changed bank.

We’ve given up boozing and gambling, Citibank seems to be saying as Pandit assures us that the new Citi has embraced “a culture of responsible finance.”

In his opening post, Pandit describes this as a “new chapter” and invites us to participate in a conversation. “We promise we’re listening,” he writes.

So far, many of the user comments, which are moderated, appear to come from Citibank investors, but a few disgruntled customers have managed to get through. “What Cit has done to ‘help’ me in the last year: interest rate increase to 29 percent!” writes Peter. “I have never been late with a payment… [You have] a total lack of caring toward your customer base.”

“No amount of empty words can help you guys,” comments another, now ex-, customer of Citibank.

The site makes rather conspicuous use of the words “local” and “community,” suggesting that Citigroup, which has assets of $1.3 trillion, knows exactly where its customers are moving their bank accounts. When you load the site, a pop-up window that fills the center of the screen describes the company as a team of “local community bankers.”

Citi is not the only giant financial conglomerate wrapping itself in the mantle of a local community bank. During the Olympics, Wells Fargo, which has $1.2 trillion in assets and some 10,000 locations, ran television commercials in which it described itself as “the nation’s leading community bank.”

Although there’s no set definition of a community bank, it’s commonly defined as a bank that is rooted in one place and has no more than $1 billion in assets. Wells Fargo is about 1200 times that size.

In a biting response to the commercials, Camden Fine, head of the Independent Community Bankers of America, warned, “Wall Street mega-firms better be careful what they call themselves lest they be confused with actual community banks that regulators allow to fail.”

It’s no surprise that big banks are grabbing onto words like “local” and “community,” says Tim Pannell, president of Financial Marketing Solutions, which develops branding and advertising for banks. “Big banks understand that those are the key words that are creating success for a lot of community banks,” said Pannell. “That’s what they’ve been hammered with in all these local markets, where the community banks have said, you don’t need a big bank, what you need is a local bank.”

Rather than pretending to be small itself, JPMorgan Chase has taken a slightly different tact. New print ads running in the New York Times and elsewhere present the bank as a generous financial backer of small businesses: “At JPMorgan Chase, we recognize that small businesses are critical to economic recovery and to building America’s future…. When creditworthy businesses come to us for help, we look to find every opportunity to provide the funding they need to grow.”

According to FDIC data, however, JPMorgan Chase is very much a laggard when it comes to small business lending. With just 16 percent of its commercial lending going to small business loans in 2009, Chase is not even remotely in the same league as community banks, which devoted more than half of their commercial loan portfolios to small business. But even more stunning is the fact that Chase even lags other giant banks (those with $100 billion or more in assets), which allocated an average of 19 percent of their 2009 lending to small business loans.

(Take a look at these graphs to see just how little support for small businesses big banks provide.)

All of this is just an early taste of what the rest of year is likely to bring. Nervous about customer defections and holding a lot more cash than they had last year, big banks are planning to spend big bucks on marketing this year. We should expect more speeches about how they’ve changed and more false claims about community and small business. But let’s not be seduced into taking these jerks back.


Stacy Mitchell, who has tracked corporate “local washing” across a variety of industries, is a senior researcher with the New Rules Project and its Community Banking Initiative.


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Read more: JPMorgan Chase, Wall Street, Advertising, Community Banks, Wells Fargo, Move Your Money, Financial Crisis, Business, Big Banks, Citigroup, Business News

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Mark Weisbrot: Greenspan’s Nightmare Is Much of the World’s Dream

March 11th, 2010 No comments
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Dodd Financial Regulation Bill: Bipartisan Talks Failed, Senator Plans To Introduce His Own Bill

March 11th, 2010 No comments

WASHINGTON AP) � Unable to muster bipartisan agreement on key banking provisions, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd said Thursday he will offer his own version of a sweeping overhaul of financial regulations without Republican support.

A month of talks between Dodd and Republican Sen. Bob Corker found some common ground but failed to yield agreement on consumer protections and other sticking points.

Read more: Chris Dodd Finance Regulation, Dodd Financial Regulation, Christopher Dodd, Financial Regulation Bill, Chris Dodd Financial Industry, Economy, Financial System Regulation, Financial Regulation, Politics News

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Gary Gensler, Former Goldman Partner, Leads Derivatives Reform Effort As CFTC Chair

March 11th, 2010 No comments

Former Goldman Partner Gary Gensler, Graham Bowley writes, is “emerging as one of the nation’s archreformers, pushing to impose some of the most stringent new financial regulations in history. And as the head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the leading contender to oversee the complex derivatives contracts that played a central role in the financial crisis and, in turn, the Great Recession, he is in a position to influence the outcome.”

Read more: Goldman Sachs, Derivatives, Derivatives Reform, Financial Crisis, Gary Gensler, Brooksley Born, Business News

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Senator Calls For Aggressive Financial Reform, Deplores Current ‘Incremental’ Steps

March 11th, 2010 No comments
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Big majority wants Wall Street regulation

March 11th, 2010 No comments

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – An overwhelming majority of Americans wants Wall Street subjected to tougher regulation in the aftermath of the bank bailout and the bonus scandals that have rocked the U.S. financial sector, according to a Harris poll released on Thursday.

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Matthew Bishop: ‘The Road From Ruin’: Wake Up: You Can Fix This Financial Mess

March 11th, 2010 No comments
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India Aims To Become World’s Fastest Growing Economy, Overtake China

March 11th, 2010 No comments

MUMBAI, India — Just how fast can India grow? Ask Manal Farooq, who can’t make gloves quickly enough.

“We are facing a major problem,” said Farooq, a senior executive at Marvel Gloves Industries, which produces 3 million pairs of gloves a month, most used in industrial production in India. “Despite importing gloves we are not able to meet demand.”

Read more: India, China, India Economy, Economy, Fastest Growing Economy, India China, Business News

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Cenk Uygur: Obama Administration Misunderstands Capitalism

March 11th, 2010 No comments
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