Thursday, April 30, 2009

[Articles of Interest] INSIDE WASHINGTON: Taxpayers to get rude surprise

INSIDE WASHINGTON: Millions of couples, retirees may have to repay some of Obama tax credit

Stephen Ohlemacher, Associated Press Writer
On Thursday April 30, 2009, 6:55 pm EDT

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Millions of Americans enjoying their small windfall from President Barack Obama's "Making Work Pay" tax credit are in for an unpleasant surprise next spring.

The government is going to want some (for now) of that money back.

The tax credit is supposed to provide up to $400 to individuals and $800 to married couples as part of the massive economic recovery package enacted in February. Most workers started receiving the credit through small increases in their paychecks in the past month.

But new tax withholding tables issued by the IRS could cause millions of taxpayers to get hundreds of dollars more than they are entitled to under the credit, money that will have to be repaid at tax time.

At-risk taxpayers include a broad swath of the public: married couples in which both spouses work; workers with more than one job; retirees who have federal income taxes withheld from their pension payments and Social Security recipients with jobs that provide taxable income.

The Internal Revenue Service acknowledges problems with the withholding tables but has done little to warn average taxpayers.

"They need to get the Goodyear blimp out there on this," said Tom Ochsenschlager, vice president of taxation for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.

For many, the new tax tables will simply mean smaller-than-expected tax refunds next year, IRS spokesman Terry Lemons said. The average refund was nearly $2,700 this year.

But taxpayers who calculate their withholding so they get only small refunds could face an unwelcome tax bill next April, said Jackie Perlman, an analyst with the Tax Institute at H&R Block.

"They are going to get a surprise," she said.

Perlman's advice: check your federal withholding to make sure sufficient taxes are being taken out of your pay. If you are married and both spouses work, you might consider having taxes withheld at the higher rate for single filers. If you have multiple jobs, you might consider having extra taxes withheld by one of your employers. You can make that request with a Form W-4.

The IRS has a calculator on its Web site to help taxpayers figure withholding. So do many private tax preparers.

Obama has touted the tax credit as one of the big achievements of his first 100 days in office, boasting that 95 percent of working families will qualify in 2009 and 2010.

The credit pays workers 6.2 percent of their earned income, up to a maximum of $400 for individuals and $800 for married couples who file jointly. Individuals making more $95,000 and couples making more than $190,000 are ineligible.

The tax credit was designed to help boost the economy by getting more money to consumers in their regular paychecks. Employers were required to start using the new withholding tables by April 1.

The tables, however, don't take into account several common categories of taxpayers, experts said.

For example:

--A single worker with two jobs making $20,000 a year at each job will get a $400 boost in take-home pay at each of them, for a total of $800. That worker, however, is eligible for a maximum credit of $400, so the remaining $400 will have to be paid back at tax time -- either through a smaller refund or a payment to the IRS.

The IRS recognized there could be a similar problem for married couples if both spouses work, so it adjusted the withholding tables. The fix, however, was imperfect.

-- A married couple with a combined income of $50,000 is eligible for an $800 credit. However, if both spouses work and make more than $13,000, the new withholding tables give them each a $600 boost -- for a total of $1,200.

There were 33 million married couples in 2008 in which both spouses worked. That's 55 percent of all married couples, according to the Census Bureau.

-- A single college student with a part-time job making $10,000 would get a $400 boost in pay. However, if that student is claimed as a dependent on a parent's tax return, she doesn't qualify for the credit and would have to repay it when she files next year.

Some retirees face even bigger headaches.

The Social Security Administration is sending out $250 payments to more than 50 million retirees in May as part of the economic stimulus package. The payments will go to people who receive Social Security, Supplemental Security Income, railroad retirement benefits or veteran's disability benefits.

The payments are meant to provide a boost for people who don't qualify for the tax credit. However, they will go to retirees even if they have earned income and receive the credit. Those retirees will have the $250 payment deducted from their tax credit -- but not until they file their tax returns next year, long after the money may have been spent.

Retirees who have federal income taxes withheld from pension benefits also are getting an income boost as a result of the new withholding tables. However, pension benefits are not earned income, so they don't qualify for the tax credit. That money will have to paid back next year when tax returns are filed.

More than 20 million retirees and survivors receive payments from defined benefit pension plans, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute. However, it is unclear how many have federal taxes withheld from their payments.

The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees union raised concerns about the effect of the tax credit on pension payments in a letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner in March.

Geithner responded that Treasury and IRS understood the concerns and were "exploring ways to mitigate that effect."

Rep. Dave Camp of Michigan, the top Republican on the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said Geithner has yet to respond to concerns raised by committee members.

"So far we've got the, 'If we don't address this maybe it will go away' approach," Camp said.

IRS withholding calculator:

http://www.irs.gov/individuals/article/0,,id96196,00.html





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[Articles of Interest] London’s ‘Twin Pillars of Doom’ May Spark Hedge Fund Exodus

By Tom Cahill and John Rega

April 30 (Bloomberg) -- After helping to move 23 hedge funds to Switzerland from London in the past two years, David Butler describes the flow as a “steady trickle.” Now he’s bracing for a flood.

“Call it the twin pillars of doom,” said Butler, a founding partner at hedge fund consultancy Kinetic Partners LLP in London. “Put together the U.K. tax changes and what the ogres in France and Germany have created and you will see a mass migration.”

Butler said inquiries about relocations have gone up “by a factor of 10” since Britain pledged a new 50 percent rate for top earners on April 22. Many came from fund managers already mulling a move after the U.K. tinkered with tax rules for non- domiciled workers last year. They’re calling again after the European Union, backed by France and Germany, proposed yesterday to regulate buyout firms and hedge funds managing more than 100 million euros ($134 million.)

The EU is pushing for tighter regulation with an “all encompassing” approach after markets fell in 2008. The hedge fund regulatory threshold was lowered “at the last minute” at the urging of Socialists in the European Parliament.

“The directive has been allowed to become a politically motivated attack on the U.K.’s successful investment management industry,” said Richard Perry, a partner in the financial services practice at Simmons & Simmons, a law firm in London. The measure may drive many fund management businesses outside Europe, he said. “This could inhibit the growth of London’s hedge fund industry significantly.”

Leaving London

London, home to at least 80 percent of Europe’s estimated $400 billion in hedge fund assets and about 60 percent of Europe’s private equity firms, may suffer as funds decide leaving is easier than complying with new regulations.

“There is a profound disincentive to base businesses in Britain that could as easily be run from Zurich, Dubai or for that matter New York,” Simon Walker, chief executive officer of the BVCA, the U.K. buyout industry’s lobby group, told reporters in London on April 29. “This is one of the biggest problems: it’s a disincentive to run businesses out of London.”

Geneva is the likeliest next port of call for managers who’ve had enough, said Butler. Switzerland encourages hedge fund managers to join a Swiss asset management trade group, said Joe Seet, founder of Sigma Partnership, a financial service consultancy in London and former hedge fund manager.

“It’s like joining a country club and you’ve got to follow the rules,” he said.

Tax Negotiation

Personal taxes for wealthy foreigners can frequently be negotiated with the local authorities in Switzerland, depending on the canton where the manager lives, and may be based on projected expenditures, not income, said Seet. “If you are a down-to-earth billionaire you can negotiate a rate based on what you spend,” said Seet.

Hedge fund managers in Britain are already regulated by the Financial Services Authority, which may prevent some from going because investors appreciate protection from that regime, said Antonio Borges, chairman of the Hedge Fund Standards Board, which has crafted a voluntary code of conduct for hedge fund managers.

“The U.K. regulatory system is still the best in the world and will survive despite this onslaught,” said Borges. “I suspect most hedge fund managers will stay in London because I don’t think long-term these rules will have much success. They have to be significantly modified because it creates too many issues about the industry in Europe.”

EU ‘Too Late’

Managers who meet the EU requirements, including minimum capital, would be eligible to offer their funds to professional investors anywhere in the region.

The EU’s plans “lacked ambition” and came too late, the European Parliament’s Socialist group said on its Web site. “The final proposal does not come close to meeting our expectations,” said Martin Schultz, head of the Socialists in the Parliament.

Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, a Danish Socialist in the Parliament who led the push for EU rules, has said managers threatening to leave Europe were bluffing and wouldn’t want to lose access to Europe’s nearly half a billion investors.

Seet, at Sigma, said many managers inquire about moves to Switzerland, then balk over cultural issues.

‘Bursting the Gate’

“The primary language in Geneva is French, and you really have to speak French; it’s not like the Cote D’Azur where you can get away with English,” said Seet. “Moving is not such an easy thing to do.”

Butler at Kinetics said hedge fund managers who previously balked at moving because of concerns like pulling children out of school, and moving house will look past those now.

“These two barriers change the whole ball game,” said Butler, who declined to name firms considering a move. “Now there’s nothing to stop them bursting through the gate.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Tom Cahill in London at tcahill@bloomberg.net; Edward Evans John Rega in Brussels at jrega@@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: April 30, 2009 06:01 EDT



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[Articles of Interest] Repo Failure Remedy Drives Away Bond Short-Sellers (Update1)

By Liz Capo McCormick

April 30 (Bloomberg) -- Just as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke revives credit markets, one of his remedies may reduce trading in Treasuries.

A Fed-endorsed industry recommendation will require traders to pay a three-percentage-point penalty on uncompleted trades, known as fails, starting tomorrow. That may reduce the number of bets on price declines, according to RBS Securities Inc. and Societe Generale SA.

While the new recommendations are meant to curb disruptions caused when traders fail to meet their obligations, some strategists are concerned it may do more harm than good in the $7 trillion-a-day repurchase market, where dealers finance their holdings. A reduction in trading would be a setback for the Fed as it seeks to lower borrowing costs by pumping cash into the banking system and purchasing as much as $1.75 trillion in Treasuries and mortgage securities.

“Making short-selling potentially costly can reduce market liquidity,” said Darrell Duffie, a Stanford University finance professor and member of the New York Fed’s Financial Advisory Roundtable. “Financial markets with relatively unencumbered short-selling perform better.”

The U.S. needs to raise $3.25 trillion this fiscal year to finances bank bailouts, stimulate the economy and service a deficit, according to New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc., one of the 16 primary dealers that trade with the Fed.

Trading Decline

Trading is already down, with volume done through the primary dealers averaging $363.6 billion a day this year, compared with $655.6 billion in the same period of 2008 and $533.3 billion in 2007, according to Fed data.

Interest rates near record lows and surging demand for the safety of Treasuries pushed the amount of bad trades to a record $5.3 trillion in the week ended Oct. 22.

Federal Reserve Bank of New York President William Dudley, who succeeded Geithner in January, said during a Nov. 12 interview that U.S. borrowing costs could rise if the logjam in the repo market, which dealers use to finance their holdings, wasn’t rectified. The New York Fed said Jan. 15 that it endorsed the Treasury Market Practices Group penalty recommendation, as well as other measures to reduce fails.

The changes should “provide an incentive for the prompt resolution of settlement failures, and with the expectation that these guidelines will contribute to the depth and liquidity of the United States Treasury market, Karthik Ramanathan, acting assistant secretary for financial markets at the Treasury, said in a statement yesterday.

Securities as Collateral

The penalty proposed by the TMPG, an industry committee formed by the Fed in 2007, would add an incremental cost of $833.33 dollars per day on a failure of $10 million worth of bonds, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

In a repurchase agreement, one party provides securities as collateral to another in exchange for cash. The penalty would result in the lender receiving a reduced amount when it delivers the Treasury late.

“Where market makers may have felt comfortable in the past making outright short sales to investors, there certainly has to be a greater consideration of these negative costs,” said Ken Silliman, a Treasury bill trader in Greenwich, Connecticut, at RBS Securities Inc., another primary dealer. “The fails penalty has risk of reducing liquidity in bills and Treasuries all along the yield curve.”

Confidence Is Returning

Investor confidence in financial markets is returning after the U.S. government and the Fed agreed to spend, lend or commit $12.8 trillion to end the longest recession since the Great Depression. The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, for three-month loans in dollars fell yesterday to 1.03 percent, the lowest level since June 2003, according to the British Bankers’ Association.

Yesterday, the Fed refrained from increasing purchases of Treasuries and mortgage securities, signaling the worst of the recession may be over, as it kept the federal funds rate target at a range of zero to 0.25 percent for the third straight meeting.

There is little incentive to make good on delivery commitments when rates are close to zero because the main cost for failing to deliver a borrowed security is the loss of interest that would have been received on the money lent to obtain it.

Overnight general collateral repo rates were about 0.25 percent today, according to GovPX Inc., a unit of ICAP Plc, the world’s largest inter-dealer broker.

‘Functioning Properly’

“If you have fails, then the market isn’t functioning properly,” said Eric Liverance, head of derivatives strategy at UBS AG in Stamford, Connecticut, another primary dealer. “That is what we saw last fall when we had massive fails. If you can lend a bond out and count on it coming back the next day, then those are properly functioning markets and it enhances liquidity.”

Trading failures fell to as low as $81.06 billion in the week ended April 8, before rising to $272.4 billion the following week, according to New York Fed data.

Primary dealers typically short Treasuries as a trading strategy to hedge their holdings in other securities. That’s changed this year, leaving them “long,” in part, because of the new repo recommendations. They held $75.1 billion of Treasuries as of April 8, the most since at least 1997, compared with an average of minus $60.6 billion, Bloomberg data show. The amount fell to $60.6 billion as of April 15.

‘Being Prudent’

“That is telling you that dealers really don’t know what all this will mean,” said Donald Galante, chief investment officer and senior vice president of fixed income at MF Global Ltd. in New York. “People are being prudent and saying I am not going to have a Treasury short now and I’ll wait to see how this pans out over the next two months.”

Galante advised his traders to not take short positions in the repo market or in short-term Treasuries going into May to allow time to analyze how the penalty and movements in repo rates evolve.

The threat of penalty will likely cause repo rates to drop below zero on Treasuries that have had high levels of fails or whose rates have traded close to zero in the repo market, according to Ira Jersey, head of U.S. interest-rate strategy in New York at RBC Capital Markets. Jersey cited the current five- year note as an example. The repo rate on that security was 0.05 percent yesterday, and 0.25 percent today, according to GovPX.

A negative repo rate means that investors who lend cash in exchange for obtaining securities as collateral actually pays interest instead of receiving it on the money they loan.

‘State of Anxiety’

Penalties for uncompleted trades will begin to accrue May 1. The due date for filing claims for fails to counterparties in trades that occur in May will be June 12, and payment or claim rejections will be due on June 30. In subsequent months the filing date will coincide with the 10th business day and the payment date will be on the last business day of the following month.

Because the penalties will be imposed across the government debt market, unregulated investors such as hedge funds will be held to the same standard as banks and bond dealers. Since it’s a recommendation, some dealers are still uncertain which counterparties will need to pay the penalty.

“The market’s heightened state of anxiety looks likely to produce unintended and unfortunate consequences,” said Ciaran O’Hagan, the Paris-based head of fixed-income at Societe Generale. “The fails penalty adds to the security of the market at the cost of liquidity. All this suggests that liquidity will be hurt across the board for U.S. Treasuries.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Liz Capo McCormick in New York at emccormick7@bloomberg.net;

Last Updated: April 30, 2009 11:29 EDT



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[Articles of Interest] Flawed Credit Ratings Reap Profits as Regulators Fail (Update1)

By David Evans and Caroline Salas

April 29 (Bloomberg) -- Ron Grassi says he thought he had retired five years ago after a 35-year career as a trial lawyer.

Now Grassi, 68, has set up a war room in his Tahoe City, California, home to single-handedly take on Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings. He’s sued the three credit rating firms for negligence, fraud and deceit.

Grassi says the companies’ faulty debt analyses have been at the core of the global financial meltdown and the firms should be held accountable. Exhibit One is his own investment. He and his wife, Sally, held $40,000 in Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. bonds because all three credit raters gave them at least an A rating -- meaning they were a safe investment -- right until Sept. 15, the day Lehman filed for bankruptcy.

“They’re supposed to spot time bombs,” Grassi says. “The bombs exploded before the credit companies acted.”

As the U.S. and other economic powers devise ways to overhaul financial regulations, they have yet to come up with plans to address one issue at the heart of the crisis: the role of the rating firms.

That’s partly because the reach of the three big credit raters extends into virtually every corner of the financial system. Everyone from banks to the agencies that regulate them is hooked on ratings.

Debt grades are baked into hundreds of rules, laws and private contracts that affect banking, insurance, mutual funds and pension funds. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission guidelines, for example, require money market fund managers to rely on ratings in deciding what to buy with $3.9 trillion of investors’ money.

‘Stop Our Reliance’

State regulators depend on credit grades to monitor the safety of $450 billion of bonds held by U.S. insurance companies. Even the plans crafted by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to stimulate the economy count on rating firms to determine how the money will be spent.

“The key to policy going forward has to be to stop our reliance on these credit ratings,” says Frank Partnoy, a professor at the San Diego School of Law and a former derivatives trader who has written four books on modern finance, including Infectious Greed: How Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets (Times Books, 2003).

“Even though few people respect the credit raters, most continue to rely on them,” Partnoy says. “We’ve become addicted to them like a drug, and we have to figure out a way to wean regulators and investors off of them.”

AIG Downgrade

Just how critical a role ratings firms play in the health and stability of the financial system became clear in the case of American International Group Inc., the New York-based insurer that’s now a ward of the U.S. government.

On Sept. 16, one day after the three credit rating firms downgraded AIG’s double-A score by two to three grades, private contract provisions that AIG had with banks around the world based on credit rating changes forced the insurer to hand over billions of dollars of collateral to its customers. The company didn’t have the cash.

Trying to avert a global financial cataclysm, the Federal Reserve rescued AIG with an $85 billion loan -- the first of four U.S. bailouts of the insurer.

Investors, traders and regulators have been questioning whether credit rating companies serve a good purpose ever since Enron Corp. imploded in 2001. Until four days before the Houston-based energy company filed for what was then the largest-ever U.S. bankruptcy, its debt had investment-grade stamps of approval from S&P, Moody’s and Fitch.

In the run-up to the current financial crisis, credit companies evolved from evaluators of debt into consultants.

‘Abjectly Failed’

They helped banks create $3.2 trillion of subprime mortgage securities. Typically, the firms awarded triple-A ratings to 75 percent of those debt packages.

“Ratings agencies just abjectly failed in serving the interests of investors,” SEC Commissioner Kathleen Casey says.

S&P President Deven Sharma says he knows his firm is taking heat from all sides -- and he expects to turn that around.

“Our company has always operated by the principle that if you do the right thing by the customers and the market, ultimately you’ll succeed,” Sharma says.

Moody’s Chief Executive Officer Raymond McDaniel and Fitch CEO Stephen Joynt declined to comment for this story.

“We are firmly committed to meeting the highest standards of integrity in our ratings practice,” McDaniel said in an April 15 SEC hearing.

“We remain committed to the highest standards of integrity and objectivity in all aspects of our work,” Joynt told the SEC.

Ratings and Rescue

Notwithstanding the role the credit companies played in fomenting disaster, the U.S. government is relying on them to help fix the system they had a hand in breaking.

The Federal Reserve’s Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF, will finance the purchase by taxpayers of as much as $1 trillion of new securities backed by consumer loans or other asset-backed debt -- on the condition they have triple- A ratings.

And the Fed has also been buying commercial paper directly from companies since October, only if the debt has at least the equivalent of an A-1 rating, the second highest for short-term credit. The three rating companies graded Lehman debt A-1 the day it filed for bankruptcy.

The Fed’s financial rescue is good for the bottom lines of the three rating firms, Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal says. They could enjoy as much as $400 million in fees that come from taxpayer money, he says.

S&P, Moody’s and Fitch, all based in New York, got their official blessing from the SEC in 1975, when the regulator named them Nationally Recognized Statistical Ratings Organizations.

Conflict of Interest

Seven companies, along with the big three, now have SEC licensing. The regulator created the NRSRO designation after deciding to set capital requirements for broker-dealers. The SEC relies on ratings from the NRSROs to evaluate the bond holdings of those firms.

At the core of the rating system is an inherent conflict of interest, says Lawrence White, the Arthur E. Imperatore Professor of Economics at New York University in Manhattan. Credit raters are paid by the companies whose debt they analyze, so the ratings might reflect a bias, he says.

“So long as you are delegating these decisions to for- profit companies, inevitably there are going to be conflicts,” he says.

In a March 25 report, policy makers from the Group of 20 nations recommended that credit rating companies be supervised to provide more transparency, improve rating quality and avoid conflicts of interest. The G-20 didn’t offer specifics.

52 Percent Profit Margin

As lawmakers scratch their heads over how to come up with an alternative approach, the rating firms continue to pull in rich profits.

Moody’s, the only one of the three that stands alone as a publicly traded company, has averaged pretax profit margins of 52 percent over the past five years. It reported revenue of $1.76 billion -- earning a pretax margin of 41 percent -- even during the economic collapse in 2008.

S&P, Moody’s and Fitch control 98 percent of the market for debt ratings in the U.S., according to the SEC. The noncompetitive market leads to high fees, says SEC Commissioner Casey, 43, appointed by President George W. Bush in July 2006 to a five-year term. S&P, a unit of McGraw-Hill Cos., has profit margins similar to those at Moody’s, she says.

“They’ve benefited from the monopoly status that they’ve achieved with a tremendous amount of assistance from regulators,” Casey says.

Sharma, 53, says S&P has justifiably earned its income.

‘People See Value’

“Why does anybody pay $200, or whatever, for Air Jordan shoes?” he asks, sitting in a company boardroom high over the southern tip of Manhattan. “It’s the same. People see value in that. And it all boils down to the value of what people see in it.”

Blumenthal says he sees little value in credit ratings. He says raters shouldn’t be getting money from federal financial rescue efforts.

“It rewards the very incompetence of Standard & Poors, Moody’s and Fitch that helped cause our current financial crisis,” he says. “It enables those specific credit rating agencies to profit from their own self-enriching malfeasance.”

Blumenthal has subpoenaed documents from the three companies to determine if they improperly influenced the TALF rules to snatch business from smaller rivals.

S&P and Fitch deny Blumenthal’s accusations.

‘Without Merit’

“The investigation by the Connecticut attorney general is without merit,” S&P Vice President Chris Atkins says. “The attorney general fails to recognize S&P’s strong track record rating consumer asset-backed securities, the assets that will be included in the TALF program. S&P’s fees for this work are subject to fee caps.”

Fitch Managing Director David Weinfurter says the government makes all the rules -- not the rating firms.

“Fitch Ratings views Blumenthal’s investigation into credit ratings eligibility requirements under TALF and other federal lending programs as an unfortunate development stemming from incomplete or inaccurate information,” he says.

Moody’s Senior Vice President Anthony Mirenda declined to comment.

Sharma says it’s clear that his firm’s housing market assumptions were incorrect. S&P is making its methodology clearer so investors can better decide whether they agree with the ratings, he says.

‘Talk to Us’

“The thing to do is make it transparent, ‘Here are our criteria. Here are our analytics. Here are our assumptions. Here are the stress-test scenarios. And now, if you have any questions, talk to us,’” Sharma says.

The rating companies reaped a bonanza in fees earlier this decade as they worked with financial firms to manufacture collateralized debt obligations. Those creations held a mix of questionable debt, including subprime mortgages, auto loans and junk-rated assets.

S&P, Moody’s and Fitch won as much as three times more in fees for grading structured securities than they charged for rating ordinary bonds. The CDO market started to crash in mid- 2007, as investors learned the securities were jammed with bad debt.

Financial firms around the world have reported about $1.3 trillion in writedowns and losses in the past two years.

Alex Pollock, now a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, says more competition among credit raters would reduce fees.

‘An SEC-Created Cartel’

“The rating agencies are an SEC-created cartel,” he says. “Usually, issuers need at least two ratings, so they don’t even have to compete.”

Pollock was president of the Federal Home Loan Bank in Chicago from 1991 to 2004. The bank was rated triple-A by both Moody’s and S&P. He says he recalls an annual ritual as he visited with representatives of each company.

“They’d say, ‘Here’s what it’s going to cost,’” he says. “I’d say, ‘That’s outrageous.’ They’d repeat, ‘This is what it’s going to cost.’ Finally, I’d say, ‘OK.’ With no ratings, you can’t sell your debt.”

Congress has held hearings on credit raters routinely this decade, first in 2002 after Enron and then again each year through 2008. In 2006, Congress passed the Credit Rating Agency Reform Act, which gave the SEC limited authority to regulate raters’ business practices.

The SEC adopted rules under the law in December 2008 banning rating firms from grading debt structures they designed themselves. The law forbids the SEC from ordering the firms to change their analytical methods.

Role of Congress

Only Congress has the power to overhaul the rating system. So far, nobody has introduced legislation that would do that. In a hearing on April 15, the SEC heard suggestions for legislation on credit raters. Some of the loudest proponents for change are in state government and on Wall Street. But no one’s agreed on how to do it.

“We should replace ratings agencies,” says Peter Fisher, managing director and co-head of fixed income at New York-based BlackRock Inc., the largest publicly traded U.S. asset management company.

‘Flash Forward’

“Our credit rating system is anachronistic,” he says. “Eighty years ago, equities were thought to be complicated and bonds were thought to be simple, so it appeared to make sense to have a few rating agencies set up to tell us all what bonds to buy. But flash forward to the slicing and dicing of credit today, and it’s really a pretty wacky concept.”

To create competition, the U.S. should license individuals, not companies, as credit rating professionals, Fisher says. They should be more like equity analysts and would be primarily paid by institutional investors, Fisher says. Neither equity analysts nor those who work at rating companies currently need to be licensed.

Such a system wouldn’t be fair, says Daniel Fuss, vice chairman of Boston-based Loomis Sayles & Co., which manages $106 billion. An investor-pay ratings model may give the biggest money managers a huge advantage over smaller firms and individuals because they can afford to pay for the analyses, he says.

“What about individuals?” he asks.

Eric Dinallo, New York’s top insurance regulator, proposes a government takeover of the rating business.

“There’s nothing wrong with saying Moody’s or someone is going to just become a government agency,” he says. “We’ve hung the entire global economy on ratings.”

‘Like Consumer Reports’

Insurance companies are among the world’s largest bond investors. Dinallo suggests that insurers could fund a credit rating collective run by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, a group of state regulators.

“It would be like the Consumer Reports of credit ratings,” Dinallo says, referring to the not-for-profit magazine that provides unbiased reviews of consumer products.

Turning over the credit ratings to a consortium headed by state governments could lead to lower quality because there would be even less competition, Fuss says.

“I would be strongly opposed to the government taking over the function of credit ratings,” he says. “I just don’t think it would work at all. The business creativity, the drive, would go straight out of it.”

At the April 15 SEC hearing, Joseph Grundfest, a professor at Stanford Law School in Stanford, California, suggested a variation of Dinallo’s idea. He said the SEC could authorize a new kind of rating company, owned and run by the largest debt investors.

‘Greater Discipline’

All bond issuers that pay for a traditional rating would also have to buy a credit analysis from one of these firms.

SEC Commissioner Casey has another solution. She wants to remove rating requirements from federal guidelines. She also faults investors for shirking their responsibility to do independent research, rather than simply looking to the grades produced by credit raters.

“I’d like to promote greater competition in the market and greater discipline,” she says. “Eliminating the references to ratings will play a huge role in removing the undue reliance that we’ve seen.”

Sharma, who became president of S&P in August 2007, agrees with Casey that ratings are too enmeshed in SEC rules. He wants the SEC to either get rid of references to rating companies in regulations or add other benchmarks such as current market prices, volatility and liquidity.

“Just don’t leave us the way it is today,” Sharma says. “There’s too much risk of being overused and inappropriately used.”

‘Hurt Now’

Sharma says that even with widespread regulatory reliance on ratings, his firm will lose business if investors say it doesn’t produce accurate ones.

“Our reputation is hurt now,” he says. “Let’s say it continues to be hurt; it never comes back. Three other competitors come back who do much-better-quality work. Investors will finally say, ‘I don’t want S&P ratings.’”

S&P will prove to the public that it can help companies and bondholders by updating and clarifying its rating methodology, Sharma says. The company will also add commentary on the liquidity and volatility of securities.

S&P’s New Steps

S&P has incorporated so-called credit stability into its ratings to address the risk that ratings will fall several levels under stress conditions, which is what happened to CDO grades. The company has also created an ombudsman office in an effort to resolve potential conflicts of interest.

Jerome Fons, who worked at Moody’s for 17 years and was managing director for credit policy until August 2007, says investors don’t have to wait for a change in the rating system. They can learn more about the value of debt by tracking the prices of credit-default swaps, he says.

The swaps, which are derivatives, are an unregulated type of insurance in which one side bets that a company will default and the other side, or counterparty, gambles that the firm won’t fail. The higher the price of that protection, the greater the perceived risk of default.

‘More Accurate’

“We know the spreads are more accurate than ratings,” says Fons, now principal of Fons Risk Solutions, a credit risk consulting firm in New York. Moody’s sells a service called Moody’s Implied Ratings, which is based on prices of credit swaps, debt and stock.

In July 2007, credit-default-swap traders started pricing Bear Stearns Cos. and Lehman as if they were Ba1 rated, the highest junk level. They pegged Merrill Lynch & Co. as a Ba1 credit three months later, according to the Moody’s model.

Each of those investment banks was stamped at investment grade by the top three credit raters within weeks of when the banks either failed or were rescued in 2008.

Lynn Tilton, who manages $6 billion as CEO of private equity firm Patriarch Partners in New York, says she woke up one morning in August 2007 convinced the banking system would collapse and started buying gold coins.

“I predicted the banks would be insolvent,” Tilton says. “My biggest issue was credit-default swaps. When the size of that market started to dwarf gross domestic product by six or seven times, then my understanding of what defaults would be in a down market became clear: There’s no escaping.”

‘Collective Wisdom’

Investors like Tilton watched as the financial firms tumbled while credit raters held on to investment-grade marks.

“If the ratings mandate weren’t there, we wouldn’t care because the credit-default-swap markets can tell us basically what we want to know about default probabilities,” NYU’s White says. “I’m a market-oriented guy, so I’m more inclined to be relying on the collective wisdom of the market participants.”

While credit-default-swap traders lack inside information that companies give to credit raters, swap traders move faster because they’re reacting to market changes every day.

San Diego School of Law’s Partnoy, who’s written law review articles about credit rating firms for more than a decade and has been a paid consultant to plaintiffs suing rating companies, says raters hold back from downgrading because they know the consequences can be dire.

In September, Moody’s and S&P downgraded AIG to A2 and A-, the sixth- and seventh-highest investment-grade ratings. The downgrades triggered CDS payouts and led to the U.S. lending AIG $85 billion. The government has since more than doubled AIG’s rescue funds.

‘Basically Trapped’

“When you get into a situation like we’re in right now with AIG, the rating agencies are basically trapped into maintaining high ratings because they know if they downgrade, they don’t only have this regulatory effect but they have all these effects,” Partnoy says.

“It’s all this stuff that basically turns the rating downgrade into a bullet fired at the heart of a bunch of institutions,” he says.

Sharma says S&P has never delayed a ratings change because of potential downgrade results. He says his firm tells clients not to use ratings as triggers in private contracts.

“We take action based on what we feel is right,” Sharma says.

While swap prices may be better than bond ratings at predicting a disaster, swaps can also cause a disaster.

AIG, one of the world’s biggest sellers of CDS protection, nearly collapsed -- taking the global financial system with it - - when it didn’t have enough cash to honor its swaps contracts. Loomis’s Fuss says relying on swap prices is a bad idea.

‘Not Always Right’

“The market is not always right,” he says. “An unregulated market isn’t always a fair appraisal of value.”

Moody’s was the first credit rating firm in the U.S. It started grading railroad bonds in 1909. Standard Statistics, a precursor of S&P, began rating securities seven years later.

After the 1929 stock market crash, the government decided it wasn’t able to determine the quality of the assets held by banks on its own, Partnoy says. In 1931, the U.S. Treasury started using bond ratings to analyze banks’ holdings.

James O’Connor, then comptroller of the currency, issued a regulation in 1936 restricting banks to buying only securities that were deemed high quality by at least two credit raters.

“One of the major responses was to try to find a way -- just as we are now with the stress tests and the examination of the banks -- to figure out how to get the bad assets off the banks’ books,” Partnoy says.

Since then, regulators have increasingly leaned on ratings to police debt investing. In 1991, the SEC ruled that money market mutual fund managers must put 95 percent of their investments into highly rated commercial paper.

Avoiding Liability

Like auditors, lawyers and investment bankers, rating firms serve as gatekeepers to the financial markets. They provide assurances to bond investors. Unlike the others, ratings companies have generally avoided liability for errors.

Grassi, the retired California lawyer, wants to change that. He filed his lawsuit against the rating companies on Jan. 26 in state superior court in Placer County.

The white-haired lawyer discusses his case seated at a tiny wooden desk in his small guest bedroom, with files spread over both levels of a bunk bed. Grassi says in his complaint that the raters were negligent for failing to downgrade Lehman Brothers debt as the bank’s finances were deteriorating.

The day Lehman filed for bankruptcy, S&P rated the investment bank’s debt as A, which according to S&P’s definition means a “strong” capacity to meet financial commitments. Moody’s rated Lehman A2 that day, which Moody’s defines as a “low credit risk.” Fitch gave Lehman a grade of A+, which it describes as “high credit quality.”

‘Without Merit’

“We’d like to have a jury hear this,” Grassi says. “This wouldn’t be six economists, just six normal people. That would scare the rating agencies to death.”

The rating companies haven’t yet filed responses. They’ve asked the federal court in Sacramento to take jurisdiction from the state court.

S&P and Fitch say they dispute Grassi’s allegations. “We believe the complaint is without merit and intend to defend against it vigorously,” S&P’s Atkins says.

Fitch’s Weinfurter says, “The lawsuit is fully without merit and we will vigorously defend it.”

Mirenda at Moody’s declined to comment.

S&P included a standard disclaimer with Lehman’s ratings: “Any user of the information contained herein should not rely on any credit rating or other opinion contained herein in making any investment decision.”

‘On Your Own’

Grassi isn’t deterred.

“They’re saying we know you’re going to rely on us and if you get screwed, you’re on your own because our lawyers have told us to put this paragraph in here,” he says.

The companies have defended their ratings from lawsuits, arguing that they were just opinions, protected by the free speech guarantees of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

McGraw-Hill used the First Amendment defense in 1996 after its subsidiary S&P was sued for professional negligence by Orange County, California. S&P had given the county an AA-rating before the county filed for the largest-ever municipal bankruptcy.

Orange County alleged in its lawsuit that S&P had failed to warn the government that its treasurer, Robert Citron, had made risky investments with county cash.

Not Liable

The U.S. District Court in Santa Ana, California, ruled that the county would have needed to prove the rating company’s “knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth” to win damages.

The court found that the credit rater couldn’t be held liable for mere negligence, agreeing with S&P that it was shielded by the First Amendment.

Sharma says rating companies shouldn’t be responsible when investors misuse ratings.

“Hold us accountable for what you can,” he says. He compares the rating companies to carmakers. “Look, if you drove the car wrong, the manufacturer can’t be held negligent. But if you designed the car wrong, then of course the manufacturer should be held negligent.”

Sharma subsequently stated that his use of the car manufacturer analogy and the words “negligent” and “Negligence” during an interview was a misstatement and does not reflect his or S&P’s position.

‘Regulatory Process”

“The point I was trying to convey is that the appropriate approach to accountability is through a regulatory process that requires NRSROs to adopt relevant policies and procedures and oversees their application,” Sharma said.

The bigger issue is whether the credit rating system should be changed or even abolished. From California to New York to Washington, investors and regulators are saying it doesn’t work. No one has been able to fix it.

‘Like a Cancer’

The federal government created the rating cartel, and the U.S. is as dependent on it as everyone else. So far, the legislative branch hasn’t cleaned up the ratings mess.

“This problem really is like a cancer that has spread throughout the entire investment system,” Partnoy says. “You’ve got a body filled with little tumors, and you’ve got to go through and find them and cut them out.”

As the U.S. has spent, lent or pledged about $12.8 trillion in efforts to revive the slumping economy, and as President Barack Obama and Congress have worked overtime to find a way out of the deepest recession in 70 years, no one has taken steps that would substantially fix a broken ratings system.

If the government doesn’t head in that direction, all of its efforts at financial reform may be put in jeopardy by the one piece of this puzzle that nobody has yet figured out how to solve.

To contact the reporters on this story: David Evans in Los Angeles at davidevans@bloomberg.net Caroline Salas in New York at csalas1@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: April 29, 2009 10:59 EDT



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[Articles of Interest] AIG Said to Weigh Closing Unprofitable Mortgage Guaranty Unit

By Hugh Son

April 30 (Bloomberg) -- American International Group Inc., the insurer selling assets to repay a U.S. loan, may shut its mortgage guarantor after failing to turn around the unprofitable unit, said two people familiar with the matter.

AIG may wind down any parts of the mortgage insurer that can’t be sold, said one of the people, who asked not to be identified because the plans are confidential. AIG’s United Guaranty Corp. has posted more than $2.8 billion in operating losses since April of 2007.

“We’re talking to a number of prospective buyers and we’re considering a number of options, but no decisions have been made” about United Guaranty, said Peter Tulupman, a spokesman for New York-based AIG.

AIG, which promised to sell businesses to repay a loan included in a government rescue package valued at $182.5 billion, has announced about $4.4 billion of asset sales since the September bailout. The company has disclosed plans to place its two biggest non-U.S. life insurers into trusts for eventual initial public offerings or sales as the credit crisis hobbled potential buyers’ ability to make bids.

AIG has hired consulting firm McKinsey & Co. to examine all operations being divested, said one of the people.

United Guaranty, based in Greensboro, North Carolina with about 950 employees worldwide, lost money for seven straight quarters amid the worst housing slump since the Great Depression. AIG said in October that it may be difficult to find a buyer for the unit, which reimburses mortgage lenders when borrowers can’t repay and foreclosure fails to cover costs.

The firm was ranked the fifth-largest U.S. mortgage insurer by 2008 sales, behind No. 1 ranked MGIC Investment Corp., Genworth Financial Inc., Radian Group Inc. and PMI Group Inc., according to Inside Mortgage Finance, a trade journal.

Before the Slump

United Guaranty was founded in 1963 and sold to AIG in 1981. The business generated $2.8 billion in operating income and $600 million in dividends for AIG in the eight years prior to the housing slump, the company said.

If AIG winds down the business, it may enter “runoff,” continuing to pay claims and book profits or losses from previously sold policies. The company would stop selling new coverage and cease operations when the last of its existing policies expires.

No. 7 Triad Guaranty Inc. entered runoff last year after capital ran short. The insurer was ordered by its state regulator earlier this month to defer 40 percent of claims payments because of “uncertainty” over whether it will meet its obligations.

MGIC’s Loss

MGIC posted a $184.6 million first-quarter net loss yesterday and said it may be unable to sell new policies by the end of this year without fresh capital. AIG hasn’t yet announced first-quarter results.

AIG posted the worst loss in U.S. corporate history in the fourth quarter. The company also made bad bets originating mortgages and investing in securities backed by home loans.

AIG’s rescue includes as much as $70 billion in preferred stock and warrants, $52.5 billion to buy assets owned or backed by the insurer, and a $60 billion credit line. AIG had tapped about $44 billion of its credit line as of April 22.

To contact the reporter on this story: Hugh Son in New York at hson1@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: April 30, 2009 15:30 EDT



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The DECB Daily US Market Report

Dow = 8,168.12 17.61 (-) ; δ (last) = 240 ; δ (current) = 171
last week's range [7842, 8076] ; δ = 234 ;
last week's change range = [83, 290] ; π = -55.04 ;
last week's δ range = [170 , 289]
VIX = 36.50 (+) ; δ (last) = 2.58 ; δ (current) = 2.21
Normal = 30 [3 +/-] {Best Fit Curve: Trig. function}
last week's wk-avg = 37
last week's range [36, 38] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [1.16, 3.34]
BRK/A - Berkshire Hathaway Inc = 94,000 600(+) ; δ (last) = 3600 ; δ (current) = 2890
last week's range [85050, 89000] ; δ = 3950
last week's change range = [850, 3100] ; π = -2050
last week's δ range = [1501, 3550]

{Futures/Commodities}
{core}
Oil = $50.88 0.26(+) ; δ (last) = 0.28 ; δ (current) = 0.31
last week's range [46, 49] ; δ = 3
last week's δ range = [0.45, 2.55]
UnleadG = $1.40 0.05(-) ; δ (last) = 0 ; δ (current) = 0
last week's range [1.39, 1.44] ; δ = 0.05
last week's δ range = [0, 0.03]
NaturalG = $3.40 0.07(+) ; δ (last) = 0.03 ; δ (current) = 0.03
last week's range [3.40, 3.67] ; δ = 0.27
last week's δ range = [0, 0.14]
Corn = $404.00 2.75(+) ; δ (last) = 15 ; δ (current) = 12
last week's range [379, 390] ; δ = 11
last week's δ range = [5.50, 12.75]
Wheat = $536.50 4.50(+) ; δ (last) = 7 ; δ (current) = 12
last week's range [516, 543] ; δ = 27
last week's δ range = [5.50, 15]
Sugar = $21.38 0.01(-) ; δ (last) = 0.14 ; δ (current) = 0.15
last week's range [21.50, 21.80] ; δ = 0.30
last week's δ range = [0, 0.08]

{no-core, but often considered essential}
Soybeans = $1055 30(+) ; δ (last) = 32.50 ; δ (current) = 16.50
last week's range [1012, 1039] ; δ = 27
last week's δ range = [12, 27]
Coffee = $115.80 0.70(-) ; δ (last) = 1.55 ; δ (current) = 1.55
last week's range [114, 119] ; δ = 5
last week's δ range = [0, 5.75]
Cocao = $2368 31(-) ; δ (last) = 44 ; δ (current) = 50
last week's range [2393, 2458] ; δ = 65
last week's δ range = [0, 51]
Orange Juice = $83.25 0.40(-) ; δ (last) = 1.20 ; δ (current) = 4.75
last week's range [83, 85] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [0.40, 2.20]
Pork Bellies = $75.13 0.75(-) ; δ (last) = 2.70 ; δ (current) = 1.75
last week's range [82, 83] ; δ = 1
last week's δ range = [0.80, 2.50]

{Other Indicators}
Dollar Index = 84.791 0.193(+) ; δ (last) = 0.568 ; δ (current) = 0.457
last week's range [85, 87] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [0.334, 0.897]
Baltic Dry Index = 1786 14(+)
last week's range [1737, 1897] ; δ = 160
last week's change range = [24, 72] ; π = +191

*Red means out of range, below the lower bound
*Bold means out of range, above the upper bound
*π = momentum
*δ = the difference between the high and the low



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The DECB Daily Asian Market Report

NI225 {Japan} = 8,828.26      334.49 (+) ; δ (last) = 315 ; δ (current) = 230
last week's range [8708, 8925] ; δ = 217
last week's change range = [16, 213] ; π = -199.59
last week's δ range = [120, 213]

HK:HSI  {Hong Kong} = 15,520.99    564.04 (+) ;  δ (last) = 269 ; δ (current) =  383
last week's range [14878, 15751] ; δ = 873
last week's change range = [44, 465] ; π = -641.701
last week's δ range = [306, 565]

SENSEX {India} = closed (+) ; δ (last) = 338 ; δ (current) = ---
last week's range [10818, 11329] ; δ = 511
last week's change range = [81, 317] ; π = +305.96
last week's δ range = [293, 422]

SHCOMP {SHANGHAI} = 2,477.569      9.3772 (+) ;  δ (last) = 83 ; δ (current) = 30
last week's range [2449, 2557] ; δ = 108
last week's change range = [3, 74] ; π = -55.34
last week's δ range = [36, 129]

FSSTI:IND {Singapore STRAITS TIMES} = 1,920.28   70.71 (+) ;  δ (last) = 42 ; δ (current) = 39
last week's range [1843, 1887] ; δ = 44
last week's change range = [7, 44] ; π = -43.71
last week's δ range = [19, 60]

KOSDAQ  {SKorea} = 500.98      6.51 (+) ;  δ (last) =  33 ; δ (current) = 7
last week's range [492, 514] ; δ = 22
last week's change range = [4, 13] ; π = +23.70
last week's δ range = [5, 16]

KOSPI  {SKorea} = 1,369.36      30.94 (+) ;  δ (last) = 38 ; δ (current) = 28
last week's range [1336, 1369] ; δ = 33
last week's change range = [0, 19] ; π = +25.1
last week's δ range = [19, 36]

TWSE  {Tiawan} = 5,992.57   378.51 (+) ;  δ (last) = 77 ; δ (current) = 63
last week's range [5782, 5886] ; δ = 104
last week's change range = [6, 100] ; π = +114.33
last week's δ range = [70, 217]

*Red means out of range, below the lower bound
*Bold means out of range, above the upper bound
*π = momentum
*δ = the difference between the high and the low



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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT: FIRST QUARTER 2009 (ADVANCE)

EMBARGOED UNTIL RELEASE AT 8:30 A.M. EDT, WEDNESDAY, April 29, 2009
BEA 09-17


* See the navigation bar at the right side of the news release text for links to data tables,
contact personnel and their telephone numbers, and supplementary materials.


Lisa Mataloni : (202) 606-5304 (GDP)
Recorded message: (202) 606-5306  
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT: FIRST QUARTER 2009 (ADVANCE)

Real gross domestic product -- the output of goods and services produced by labor and property located in the United States -- decreased at an annual rate of 6.1 percent in the first quarter of 2009, (that is, from the fourth quarter to the first quarter), according to advance estimates released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the fourth quarter, real GDP decreased 6.3 percent.


The Bureau emphasized that the first-quarter “advance” estimates are based on source data that are incomplete or subject to further revision by the source agency (see the box on page 4). The first-quarter “preliminary” estimates, based on more comprehensive data, will be released on May 29, 2009.


The decrease in real GDP in the first quarter primarily reflected negative contributions from exports, private inventory investment, equipment and software, nonresidential structures, and residential fixed investment that were partly offset by a positive contribution from personal consumption expenditures (PCE). Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, decreased.


The slightly smaller decrease in real GDP in the first quarter than in the fourth reflected an upturn in PCE for durable and nondurable goods and a larger decrease in imports that were mostly offset by larger decreases in private inventory investment and in nonresidential structures and a downturn in federal government spending.


Motor vehicle output subtracted 1.36 percentage points from the first-quarter change in real GDP after subtracting 2.01 percentage points from the fourth-quarter change. Final sales of computers added 0.05 percentage point to the first-quarter change in real GDP after subtracting 0.02 percentage point from the fourth-quarter change.




FOOTNOTE.--Quarterly estimates are expressed at seasonally adjusted annual rates, unless otherwise specified. Quarter-to-quarter dollar changes are differences between these published estimates. Percent changes are calculated from unrounded data and are annualized. “Real” estimates are in chained
(2000) dollars. Price indexes are chain-type measures.


This news release is available on BEA’s Web site along with the Technical Note and Highlights
related to this release.




BOX
Comprehensive Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts


BEA plans to release the results of the 13th comprehensive (or benchmark) revision of the national income and product accounts (NIPAs), as part of the annual revision on July 31, 2009. More information on the revision is available on BEA’s Web site at www.bea.gov/national/an1.htm, including a link to an article in the March 2009 issue of the Survey of Current Business that discussed the changes
in definitions and presentation that will be implemented in the revision. An article in the May Survey will describe changes in statistical methods, and the September Survey will contain an article that describes the results of the revision in detail. The Web site also contains links to redesigned PCE table stubs; other revised NIPA table stubs and press release stubs will be available in June.




The price index for gross domestic purchases, which measures prices paid by U.S. residents, decreased 1.0 percent in the first quarter, compared with a decrease of  3.9 percent in the fourth. Excluding food and energy prices, the price index for gross domestic purchases increased 1.4 percent in the first quarter, compared with an increase of 1.2 percent in the fourth. The federal pay raise for civilian and military personnel added 0.3 percentage point to the change in the first quarter gross domestic purchases price index.


Real personal consumption expenditures increased 2.2 percent in the first quarter, in contrast to a decrease of 4.3 percent in the fourth. Durable goods increased 9.4 percent, in contrast to a decrease of 22.1 percent. Nondurable goods increased 1.3 percent, in contrast to a decrease of 9.4 percent. Services increased 1.5 percent, the same increase as in the fourth.


Real nonresidential fixed investment decreased 37.9 percent in the first quarter, compared with a decrease of 21.7 percent in the fourth. Nonresidential structures decreased 44.2 percent, compared with a decrease of 9.4 percent. Equipment and software decreased 33.8 percent, compared with a decrease of 28.1 percent. Real residential fixed investment decreased 38.0 percent, compared with a decrease of
22.8 percent.


Real exports of goods and services decreased 30.0 percent in the first quarter, compared with a decrease of 23.6 percent in the fourth. Real imports of goods and services decreased 34.1 percent, compared with a decrease of 17.5 percent.


Real federal government consumption expenditures and gross investment decreased 4.0 percent in the first quarter, in contrast to an increase of 7.0 percent in the fourth. National defense decreased 6.4 percent, in contrast to an increase of 3.4 percent. Nondefense increased 1.3 percent, compared with an increase of 15.3 percent. Real state and local government consumption expenditures and gross
investment decreased 3.9 percent, compared with a decrease of 2.0 percent.


The real change in private inventories subtracted 2.79 percentage points from the first-quarter change in real GDP after subtracting 0.11 percentage point from the fourth-quarter change. Private businesses decreased inventories $103.7 billion in the first quarter, following decreases of $25.8 billion in the fourth quarter and $29.6 billion in the third.


Real final sales of domestic product -- GDP less change in private inventories -- decreased 3.4 percent in the first quarter, compared with a decrease of 6.2 percent in the fourth.


Gross domestic purchases


Real gross domestic purchases -- purchases by U.S. residents of goods and services wherever produced -- decreased 7.8 percent in the first quarter, compared with a decrease of 5.9 percent in the fourth.


Disposition of personal income

Current-dollar personal income decreased $59.9 billion (2.0 percent) in the first quarter, compared with a decrease of $42.9 billion (1.4 percent) in the fourth.


Personal current taxes decreased $193.5 billion in the first quarter, in contrast to an increase of $19.7 billion in the fourth.


Disposable personal income increased $133.6 billion (5.1 percent) in the first quarter, in contrast to a decrease of $62.6 billion (2.3 percent) in the fourth. Real disposable personal income increased 6.2 percent, compared with an increase of 2.7 percent.

Personal outlays increased $18.1 billion (0.7 percent) in the first quarter, in contrast to a decrease of $260.2 billion (9.5 percent) in the fourth. Personal saving -- disposable personal income less personal outlays -- was $453.0 billion in the first quarter, compared with $337.4 billion in the fourth. The personal saving rate -- saving as a percentage of disposable personal income -- was 4.2 percent in the
first quarter, compared with 3.2 percent in the fourth. For a comparison of personal saving in BEA’s national income and product accounts with personal saving in the Federal Reserve Board’s flow of funds accounts and data on changes in net worth, go to http://www.bea.gov/bea/dn/nipaweb/Nipa-Frb.asp.

Current-dollar GDP

Current-dollar GDP -- the market value of the nation's output of goods and services -- decreased 3.5 percent, or $124.8 billion, in the first quarter to a level of $14,075.5 billion. In the fourth quarter,current-dollar GDP decreased 5.8 percent, or $212.5 billion.



Information on the assumptions used for unavailable source data is provided in a technical note that is posted with the news release on BEA's Web site. Within a few days after the release, a detailed "Key Source Data and Assumptions" file is posted on the Web site. In the middle of each month, an analysis of the current quarterly estimates of GDP and related series is made available on the Web site; click on Survey of Current Business, "GDP and the Economy."




* * *
BEA's national, international, regional, and industry estimates; the Survey of Current Business; and BEA news releases are available without charge on BEA's Web site at www.bea.gov. By visiting the site, you can also subscribe to receive free e-mail summaries of BEA releases and announcements.

* * *

Next release – May 29, 2009, at 8:30 A.M. EDT for: Gross Domestic Product: First Quarter 2009 (Preliminary) Corporate Profits: First Quarter 2009

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The DECB Daily US Market Report

Dow =     8,185.73      168.78 (+) ; δ (last) = 153 ; δ (current) = 240
last week's range [7842, 8076] ; δ = 234 ;
last week's change range = [83, 290] ; π = -55.04 ;
last week's δ range = [170 , 289]
VIX  =    36.08  (-) ; δ (last) = 2.22 ; δ (current) = 2.58
Normal =     30 [3 +/-] {Best Fit Curve: Trig. function}
last week's wk-avg =  37
last week's range [36, 38] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [1.16, 3.34]
BRK/A - Berkshire Hathaway Inc = 93,400   4,400 (+) ; δ (last) = 2690 ; δ (current) = 3600
last week's range [85050, 89000] ; δ = 3950
last week's change range = [850, 3100] ; π = -2050
last week's δ range = [1501, 3550]

{Futures/Commodities}
{core}
Oil    =   $50.62  1.13(+) ;  δ (last) = 0.30 ; δ (current) = 0.28
last week's range [46, 49] ; δ = 3
last week's δ range = [0.45, 2.55]
UnleadG    =   $1.45    0.05(+) ;  δ (last) = 0 ; δ (current) = 0
last week's range [1.39, 1.44] ; δ = 0.05
last week's δ range = [0, 0.03]
NaturalG    =   $3.33    0.10(-) ;  δ (last) =  0.03 ; δ (current) = 0.03
last week's range [3.40, 3.67] ; δ = 0.27
last week's δ range = [0, 0.14]
Corn    =   $401.25    17.75(+) ;  δ (last) = 9.27 ; δ (current) = 15
last week's range [379, 390] ; δ = 11
last week's δ range = [5.50, 12.75]
Wheat    =   $532.00    10(+) ;  δ (last) = 8.25 ; δ (current) = 7
last week's range [516, 543] ; δ = 27
last week's δ range = [5.50, 15]
Sugar    =   $21.39    0.06(-) ;  δ (last) = 0.20 ; δ (current) = 0.14
last week's range [21.50, 21.80] ; δ = 0.30
last week's δ range = [0, 0.08]

{no-core, but often considered essential}
Soybeans    =   $1025    42(+) ;  δ (last) = 27.5  ; δ (current) = 32.5
last week's range [1012, 1039] ; δ = 27
last week's δ range = [12, 27]
Coffee    =   $116.50    0.40(+) ;  δ (last) = 2.55 ; δ (current) = 1.55
last week's range [114, 119] ; δ = 5
last week's δ range = [0, 5.75]
Cocao    =   $2399    9(+) ;  δ (last) = 23 ; δ (current) = 44
last week's range [2393, 2458] ; δ = 65
last week's δ range = [0, 51]
Orange Juice    =   $83.65    2.05(-) ;  δ (last) = 3 ; δ (current) = 1.20
last week's range [83, 85] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [0.40, 2.20]
Pork Bellies    =   $75.88    1.92(-) ;  δ (last) = 2 ; δ (current) = 2.70
last week's range [82, 83] ; δ = 1
last week's δ range = [0.80, 2.50]

{Other Indicators}
Dollar Index = 84.598    0.582(-)  ; δ (last) = 0.580 ; δ (current) = 0.568
last week's range [85, 87] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [0.334, 0.897]
Baltic Dry Index = 1772   18(-)
last week's range [1737, 1897] ; δ = 160
last week's change range = [24, 72] ; π = +191

*Red means out of range, below the lower bound
*Bold means out of range, above the upper bound
*π = momentum
*δ = the difference between the high and the low



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The DECB Daily Asian Market Report on DECB Economics TV





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The DECB Daily Asian Market Report

NI225 {Japan} = 8,493.77    232.57 (-) ; δ (last) = 315 ; δ (current) = 315
last week's range [8708, 8925] ; δ = 217
last week's change range = [16, 213] ; π = -199.59
last week's δ range = [120, 213]

HK:HSI  {Hong Kong} = 14,956.95    401.84 (+) ;  δ (last) = 621 ; δ (current) =  269
last week's range [14878, 15751] ; δ = 873
last week's change range = [44, 465] ; π = -641.701
last week's δ range = [306, 565]

SENSEX {India} = 11,403.25    401.50 (+) ; δ (last) = 409 ; δ (current) = 338
last week's range [10818, 11329] ; δ = 511
last week's change range = [81, 317] ; π = +305.96
last week's δ range = [293, 422]

SHCOMP {SHANGHAI} = 2,468.192      66.754 (+) ;  δ (last) = 39 ; δ (current) = 83
last week's range [2449, 2557] ; δ = 108
last week's change range = [3, 74] ; π = -55.34
last week's δ range = [36, 129]

FSSTI:IND {Singapore STRAITS TIMES} = 1,849.57   41.16 (+) ;  δ (last) = 37 ; δ (current) = 42
last week's range [1843, 1887] ; δ = 44
last week's change range = [7, 44] ; π = -43.71
last week's δ range = [19, 60]

KOSDAQ  {SKorea} = 494.47    15.10 (+) ;  δ (last) =  33 ; δ (current) = 19
last week's range [492, 514] ; δ = 22
last week's change range = [4, 13] ; π = +23.70
last week's δ range = [5, 16]

KOSPI  {SKorea} = 1,338.42      38.18 (+) ;  δ (last) = 54 ; δ (current) = 38
last week's range [1336, 1369] ; δ = 33
last week's change range = [0, 19] ; π = +25.1
last week's δ range = [19, 36]

TWSE  {Tiawan} = 5,614.06   17.33 (+) ;  δ (last) = 177 ; δ (current) = 77
last week's range [5782, 5886] ; δ = 104
last week's change range = [6, 100] ; π = +114.33
last week's δ range = [70, 217]

*Red means out of range, below the lower bound
*Bold means out of range, above the upper bound
*π = momentum
*δ = the difference between the high and the low



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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

The DECB Daily US Market Report

Dow =     8,016.95    8.0498 (-) ; δ (last) = 136 ; δ (current) = 153
last week's range [7842, 8076] ; δ = 234 ;
last week's change range = [83, 290] ; π = -55.04 ;
last week's δ range = [170 , 289]
VIX  =    37.95  (-) ; δ (last) = 1.55 ; δ (current) = 2.22
Normal =     30 [3 +/-] {Best Fit Curve: Trig. function}
last week's wk-avg =  37
last week's range [36, 38] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [1.16, 3.34]
BRK/A - Berkshire Hathaway Inc = 89,000.00   1,000 (-) ; δ (last) = 4601 ; δ (current) = 2690
last week's range [85050, 89000] ; δ = 3950
last week's change range = [850, 3100] ; π = -2050
last week's δ range = [1501, 3550]

{Futures/Commodities}
{core}
Oil    =   $49.49   1.2(-) ;  δ (last) = 0.43 ; δ (current) = 0.30
last week's range [46, 49] ; δ = 3
last week's δ range = [0.45, 2.55]
UnleadG    =   $1.40    0.00(0) ;  δ (last) = 0 ; δ (current) = 0
last week's range [1.39, 1.44] ; δ = 0.05
last week's δ range = [0, 0.03]
NaturalG    =   $3.43    0.07(+) ;  δ (last) =  0.03 ; δ (current) = 0.03
last week's range [3.40, 3.67] ; δ = 0.27
last week's δ range = [0, 0.14]
Corn    =   $383.50    2.75(+) ;  δ (last) = 8.75 ; δ (current) = 9.27
last week's range [379, 390] ; δ = 11
last week's δ range = [5.50, 12.75]
Wheat    =   $522.00    2.5(+) ;  δ (last) = 32.50 ; δ (current) = 8.25
last week's range [516, 543] ; δ = 27
last week's δ range = [5.50, 15]
Sugar    =   $21.45    0.09(-) ;  δ (last) = 0.01 ; δ (current) = 0.20
last week's range [21.50, 21.80] ; δ = 0.30
last week's δ range = [0, 0.08]

{no-core, but often considered essential}
Soybeans    =   $983    14(-) ;  δ (last) = 39.5  ; δ (current) = 27.5
last week's range [1012, 1039] ; δ = 27
last week's δ range = [12, 27]
Coffee    =   $116.10    1.05(+) ;  δ (last) = 2.8 ; δ (current) = 2.55
last week's range [114, 119] ; δ = 5
last week's δ range = [0, 5.75]
Cocao    =   $2390    15(+) ;  δ (last) = 19 ; δ (current) = 23
last week's range [2393, 2458] ; δ = 65
last week's δ range = [0, 51]
Orange Juice    =   $82.45    2.05(-) ;  δ (last) = 3 ; δ (current) = 4.3
last week's range [83, 85] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [0.40, 2.20]
Pork Bellies    =   $77.80    3(-) ;  δ (last) = 0.70 ; δ (current) = 2
last week's range [82, 83] ; δ = 1
last week's δ range = [0.80, 2.50]

{Other Indicators}
Dollar Index = 85.18    0.48(-)  ; δ (last) = 0.835 ; δ (current) = 0.580
last week's range [85, 87] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [0.334, 0.897]
Baltic Dry Index = 1790   49 (-)
last week's range [1737, 1897] ; δ = 160
last week's change range = [24, 72] ; π = +191

*Red means out of range, below the lower bound
*Bold means out of range, above the upper bound
*π = momentum
*δ = the difference between the high and the low



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The DECB Daily Asian Market Report

NI225 {Japan} = 8,493.77    232.57 (-) ; δ (last) = 192 ; δ (current) = 315
last week's range [8708, 8925] ; δ = 217
last week's change range = [16, 213] ; π = -199.59
last week's δ range = [120, 213]

HK:HSI  {Hong Kong} = 14,555.11   285.31 (-) ;  δ (last) = 362 ; δ (current) =  621
last week's range [14878, 15751] ; δ = 873
last week's change range = [44, 465] ; π = -641.701
last week's δ range = [306, 565]

SENSEX {India} = 11,001.75      370.10 (-) ; δ (last) = 315 ; δ (current) = 409
last week's range [10818, 11329] ; δ = 511
last week's change range = [81, 317] ; π = +305.96
last week's δ range = [293, 422]

SHCOMP {SHANGHAI} = 2,401.438       3.9099 (-) ;  δ (last) = 60 ; δ (current) = 39
last week's range [2449, 2557] ; δ = 108
last week's change range = [3, 74] ; π = -55.34
last week's δ range = [36, 129]

FSSTI:IND {Singapore STRAITS TIMES} = 1,808.41   10.20 (-) ;  δ (last) = 60 ; δ (current) = 37
last week's range [1843, 1887] ; δ = 44
last week's change range = [7, 44] ; π = -43.71
last week's δ range = [19, 60]

KOSDAQ  {SKorea} = 479.37   26.60 (-) ;  δ (last) =  11 ; δ (current) = 33
last week's range [492, 514] ; δ = 22
last week's change range = [4, 13] ; π = +23.70
last week's δ range = [5, 16]

KOSPI  {SKorea} = 1,300.24      39.59 (-) ;  δ (last) = 33 ; δ (current) = 54
last week's range [1336, 1369] ; δ = 33
last week's change range = [0, 19] ; π = +25.1
last week's δ range = [19, 36]

TWSE  {Tiawan} = 5,596.73    108.32 (-) ;  δ (last) = 275 ; δ (current) = 177
last week's range [5782, 5886] ; δ = 104
last week's change range = [6, 100] ; π = +114.33
last week's δ range = [70, 217]

*Red means out of range, below the lower bound
*Bold means out of range, above the upper bound
*π = momentum
*δ = the difference between the high and the low



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Monday, April 27, 2009

The DECB Daily US Market Report

Dow =     8,025.00      51.29 (-) ; δ (last) = 170 ; δ (current) = 136
last week's range [7842, 8076] ; δ = 234 ;
last week's change range = [83, 290] ; π = -55.04 ;
last week's δ range = [170 , 289]
VIX  =    38.32  (+) ; δ (last) = 1.16 ; δ (current) = 1.55
Normal =     30 [3 +/-] {Best Fit Curve: Trig. function}
last week's wk-avg =  37
last week's range [36, 38] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [1.16, 3.34]
BRK/A - Berkshire Hathaway Inc = 90,000.00   1,749.898 (+) ; δ (last) = 3059 ; δ (current) = 4601
last week's range [85050, 89000] ; δ = 3950
last week's change range = [850, 3100] ; π = -2050
last week's δ range = [1501, 3550]

{Futures/Commodities}
{core}
Oil    =   $50.05   1.2(+) ;  δ (last) = 0.80 ; δ (current) = 0.43
last week's range [46, 49] ; δ = 3
last week's δ range = [0.45, 2.55]
UnleadG    =   $1.40    0.04(-) ;  δ (last) = 0.01 ; δ (current) = 0
last week's range [1.39, 1.44] ; δ = 0.05
last week's δ range = [0, 0.03]
NaturalG    =   $3.36    0.04(-) ;  δ (last) =  0.14 ; δ (current) = 0.03
last week's range [3.40, 3.67] ; δ = 0.27
last week's δ range = [0, 0.14]
Corn    =   $380.75    4.5(-) ;  δ (last) = 12.75 ; δ (current) = 8.75
last week's range [379, 390] ; δ = 11
last week's δ range = [5.50, 12.75]
Wheat    =   $519.50    23.75(-) ;  δ (last) = 12.50 ; δ (current) = 32.50
last week's range [516, 543] ; δ = 27
last week's δ range = [5.50, 15]
Sugar    =   $21.54    0.04(+) ;  δ (last) = 0.08 ; δ (current) = 0.01
last week's range [21.50, 21.80] ; δ = 0.30
last week's δ range = [0, 0.08]

{no-core, but often considered essential}
Soybeans    =   $997    37(-) ;  δ (last) = 18.75  ; δ (current) = 39.5
last week's range [1012, 1039] ; δ = 27
last week's δ range = [12, 27]
Coffee    =   $115.05    4.4(-) ;  δ (last) = 1 ; δ (current) = 2.8
last week's range [114, 119] ; δ = 5
last week's δ range = [0, 5.75]
Cocao    =   $2375    74(-) ;  δ (last) = 18 ; δ (current) = 19
last week's range [2393, 2458] ; δ = 65
last week's δ range = [0, 51]
Orange Juice    =   $84.50    0.50(-) ;  δ (last) = 2.20 ; δ (current) = 3
last week's range [83, 85] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [0.40, 2.20]
Pork Bellies    =   $80.80    0.70(-) ;  δ (last) = 1.90 ; δ (current) = 0.70
last week's range [82, 83] ; δ = 1
last week's δ range = [0.80, 2.50]

{Other Indicators}
Dollar Index = 85.66    0.894(+)  ; δ (last) = 0.344 ; δ (current) = 0.835
last week's range [85, 87] ; δ = 2
last week's δ range = [0.334, 0.897]
Baltic Dry Index = 1,839    34 (-)
last week's range [1737, 1897] ; δ = 160
last week's change range = [24, 72] ; π = +191

*Red means out of range, below the lower bound
*Bold means out of range, above the upper bound
*π = momentum
*δ = the difference between the high and the low



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