Friday, February 17, 2012

If The S&P 500 Finishes The Year With A Gain, It Will Be The Biggest Turnaround Since 1984

traders102408apNEW YORK (AP) — 2011 was shaping up to be a washout for the stock market just two weeks ago. Now, it's within shouting distance of its biggest comeback in nearly three decades.

The Standard and Poor's 500 index has jumped 11.4 percent since hitting its lowest level of the year on Oct. 3, largely because investors have become more confident that Europe will shelter its banks from huge losses on Greek bonds should that country's government stop making payments on its debt. For much of the summer, investors feared that a Greek default could lead to a freeze of lending between European banks and cascade into a credit crisis similar to the one in 2008.

The S&P 500 was down 12.6 percent for the year as of Oct. 3, when it closed at 1,099. As of Friday, it had trimmed the loss to 2.6 percent. It needs to gain just 33 points, or 2.8 percent, to get above 1,257, where it started the year.

If the S&P 500 finishes the year with a gain, it will be the biggest turnaround since 1984. That year, Apple Inc. introduced the Macintosh, and President Ronald Reagan's campaign ads proclaimed that it was "Morning Again in America." It was also the last time that the S&P 500 fell more than 10 percent during a calendar year and finished the year in the black. The index finished that year up 1.4 percent.

Edging out another gain of that size in 2011 wouldn't make anyone rich. But consider the hand that investors were dealt this year: A tsunami and nuclear disaster in Japan plunged the world's third-largest economy into a recession and created a worldwide parts shortage. Uprisings throughout the Arab world sent the price of gas skyrocketing to an average of $3.98 a gallon in May. The U.S. lost its top-notch credit ranking for the first time. And Europe has teetered on the edge of a financial crisis that could hobble the region's banking system.

With all of that going on, investors might wonder how the S&P 500 index could possibly end the year higher than where it started. The biggest reason: some think stocks may be the best value out there.

With dividend payments alone, the S&P index offers a return on par with low-risk U.S. Treasurys. From Aug. 24 through Thursday, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note was below the dividend yield of the S&P 500 index. Since 1962, the only other time that's happened was during the 2008 credit crisis, according to J.P. Morgan.

"You have to have pretty dark thoughts to think that there's not a chance that the S&P 500 beats out Treasurys at this point," said Bill Stone, chief investment strategist at PNC Bank.

Stone also thinks company earnings are going to be better in the third quarter than many analysts expect, driving stock prices higher. Since July, analysts have cut back their estimates for the S&P 500's third quarter earnings 3 percent because of concerns that the U.S. economy might be heading into a recession. Since then, retail sales, applications for unemployment benefits, and the number of jobs added in August have been better than Wall Street expected. "The market has been priced for the worst, but that's not bearing out in reality," Stone said.

Others point to the fact that the S&P 500 was stuck in a narrow trading range since Aug. 4th. That day, the index fell below 1,260 during a broad sell-off. The stock market has moved up and down a lot since then, but hasn't really gone that far. The S&P 500 has mainly traded between 1,099 and 1,218, a relatively small band. On Friday it broke out of that range, closing at 1,224.

Investors who buy and sell the S&P 500 index based on analyzing patterns in charts — known on Wall Street as technical traders — believe that indexes will tend to keep moving steadily in the same direction once they break out of a trading range. That's because investors tend to follow the herd. Increased confidence in Europe's ability to prevent a widespread financial crisis may help the S&P 500 move out of that range and stay there.

"If we have truly averted the worst of Europe then a large dark cloud is going to be lifted off of this market and momentum is going to take over," said Richard Ross, global technical analyst at Auerbach Grayson.

Seasonal investor behavior might also lift the S&P 500. The S&P index typically gains an average of 3.9 percent during the last three months of the year. "Positive market psychology hits a fever pitch as the holiday season approaches and does not begin to wane until the spring," according to the Stock Trader's Almanac. Professional investors also tend to readjust their portfolios at this time of year, buying stocks that have done well and selling those which have fared poorly for tax purposes.

That could have a greater than usual effect this year because the S&P 500 remains cheap, analysts say. At the start of the year, the S&P 500 traded at 15 times its earnings over the last 12 months. That was below the average price-to-earnings multiple of 18.6 over the last 10 years. Friday, the S&P 500 traded at 12.9 times earnings.

It's not quite time to count on gains, however. The S&P 500 has fallen more than 10 percent 43 times since 1900, according to Sam Stovall, chief equity analyst at Standard & Poor's. It finished the year with a gain only 11 times, a comeback rate of 26 percent. The average gain in those years was 1.8 percent.

"I'm skeptical of this rally," Stovall said, noting that Europe's debt problems still aren't solved. "But even if there is a gain, history says that you're not going to end up with anything to be too excited about."


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7 Reasons Why Europe's Recent Rally Could Be Short-Lived

With European leaders promising a debt crisis solution by the end of the month and all 17 countries having voted for the expansion of the EFSF, some renewed optimism has recently boosted the euro and European stock markets.

However, Europe's debt situation remains extremely complicated as it into its crucial EU summit on October 23.

Morgan Stanley's Global Currency Research team has outlined some major issues that they think will throw off Europe's path to a final solution.

In fact, they think the recent rally in the euro is just a short-term bear market rebound.  They see the euro at $1.30 in Q4 of this year and $1.25 in Q1 2012.

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This One-Handed Touchdown Grab Is An Early Contender For The Best Catch Of The NFL Season

The Indianapolis Colts' woes continued today with a 27-17 loss to the Cincinnati Bengals.

The lone bright spot came in the fourth quarter, when tight end Dallas Clark made an absurd one-handed catch on an overthrown ball in the back of the endzone.

Clark also had the presence of mind to get both feet in bounds while making the catch.

Here's the video (via Big Lead Sports):

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Here's The Chilling Blog Post That Driver Dan Wheldon Wrote For USA Today The Day Before His Death

Dan Wheldon, who died today after an IndyCar crash in Las Vegas, wrote about having car trouble in a blog post that was published by USA Today yesterday.

The post is headlined, "Driver blog: Dan Wheldon frustrated with car in Las Vegas."

In it, he worries about his race car inexplicibly being three miles per hour slower than he'd like it.

"It is incredibly frustrating, both for me and them. All the boys are working as hard as possible, but so far we haven't pinpointed what it is."

He also offered some predictions for the race:

"Honestly, if I can be fast enough early in the race to be able to get up there and latch onto those two, it will be pure entertainment. It's going to be a pack race, and you never know how that's going to turn out."

The post was the second in a three-part series from Wheldon. The third post was supposed to "recap the race day."

It's a chilling and saddening read. But it gives you a look into his thoughts and frustrations on the eve of the race that would claim his life.

There's absolutely no indication that his car trouble had anything to do with the tragic, 15-car wreck that took his life today.

Click here to read Wheldon's entire USA Today piece >>


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Kinder Morgan To Buy El Paso Corp. For $20.7 Billion To Become America's Largest NatGas Pipeline Operator (KMI, EP)

NEW YORK (AP) — Kinder Morgan plans to buy El Paso Corp. in a $20.7 billion deal that's expected to create America's largest natural gas pipeline operator.

Kinder Morgan Inc. is expanding its reach as the U.S. becomes increasingly reliant on natural gas. Drillers are pumping ever-increasing amounts from underground shale deposits across the U.S. Natural gas prices have dropped to less than half their level of three years ago, and power companies are using more of the fuel because it emits fewer greenhouse gases than coal.

The deal also adds to founder and CEO Richard Kinder's energy empire. Kinder, 66, started the company with friend William Morgan after leaving his post as president of the now-defunct Enron Corp. Forbes lists his net worth at $6.4 billion.

Kinder Morgan will more than double the size of its pipeline network by purchasing El Paso. The new pipeline system would stretch 80,000 miles — long enough to wind around the globe three times. Kinder Morgan's pipelines in the Rocky Mountains, the Midwest and Texas will be woven together with El Paso's expansive network that spreads east from the Gulf Coast to New England, and to the west through New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada and California.

"We believe that natural gas is going to play an increasingly integral role in North America," Kinder, who is also the company's chairman, said on Sunday when the deal was announced.

Robert McFadden, a Houston-based natural gas pipeline consultant, said the expanded network will make it easier to move natural gas from new shale fields that have mushroomed across the U.S. in the past few years.

"Think of it like federal highways and toll roads," McFadden said. "The more options you have to get from point A to B, the shorter your trip."

Pipeline companies, which get paid for moving natural gas from the field to the market, have been in big demand recently as drillers tap rich new deposits in Pennsylvania, Montana, Utah and other states. The pipeline companies been able to keep transport fees roughly constant during the past several years, even though natural gas prices have dropped from more than $13 per 1,000 cubic feet in 2008 to less than $4, pipeline this year.

The acquisition comes on the heels of other consolidation in the industry. Energy Transfer Equity is planning to buy Southern Union Co. for $5.7 billion after a tug of war with Williams Cos.

With more pipelines under its control, Kinder Morgan could charge suppliers higher transport fees, and that may affect the price that utilities and other major natural gas buyers pay for natural gas. But home owners and other retail natural gas customers won't notice much of a change on their monthly bills, if any. Retail gas bills are largely influenced by local distribution costs and other items that won't change with this deal, McFadden said.

Once approved, Kinder Morgan said it will also become the largest independent transporter of gasoline, diesel and other petroleum products. It will also be the largest independent owner and operator of petroleum storage terminals. It will be the largest transporter of carbon dioxide in the U.S., moving about 1.3 billion cubic feet per day.

Kinder Morgan and El Paso are both based in Houston. Kinder will remain chairman and CEO of the combined company.

The combined company will surpass other pipeline companies like Enterprise Products Partners LP, also based in Houston. Enterprise operates about 50,200 miles of pipelines.

The companies valued the deal at $26.87 per El Paso share, which includes $14.65 in cash, 0.4187 in Kinder Morgan shares and 0.640 in Kinder Morgan warrants.

Based on El Paso's about 770.25 million outstanding shares, the deal is worth about $20.7 billion.

Kinder Morgan is also assuming $13 billion, net of cash, of El Paso debt as part of the deal. It intends to fund the purchase with a combination of equity and more debt. But once the deal closes, the company said it plans to sell off El Paso's exploration and production assets and the cash raised will help reduce that debt.

Kinder Morgan said the deal is expected to boost Kinder Morgan's shareholder value through increased cash flow and future growth opportunities. It's also expected to boost Kinder Morgan's dividends and result in about $350 million a year in cost savings.

El Paso had announced plans to spin off its exploration and production unit in May.

The acquisition, which has been approved by the board of both companies, is expected to close in the second quarter of next year and needs regulatory approval.


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LSU Is No. 1 In First BCS Poll Of The Season

The first BCS poll of the season has been released, and LSU us the number one team in the country. They are followed by Alabama, Oklahoma, and Oklahoma State. Boise State is fifth.

The rankings suggest that there are four teams that control their own destiny, and we may be looking at a pair of BCS semifinal games.

The top two teams, LSU and Alabama will face each other in three weeks and the Sooners and Cowboys will play each other in their final regular season game. Assuming those teams win the remainder of their games, as expected, and the LSU-'Bama winner also wins the SEC championship game, then the winner of those two matchups will likely meet in the BCS title game.

Here are the complete BCS standings...

BCS Rankings 2011 Week 8

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WATCH: Sean Payton Breaks Leg, Now Coaching Game From His Butt

In their matchup with the Tampa Bay Bucs, New Orleans Saints head coach Sean Payton injured his knee when one of his own players collided with him on the sidelines.

Payton immediately tried to get up before going back down to the grass. He was tended to for several minutes before being helped to the team's bench.

Payton now has a brace on his left knee and is still coaching the game from the bench. In what is an odd sight, you would think Payton has the plague as the team has cleared the area in front of him so that he can see the field (see image below the video).

UPDATE: Sean Payton suffered a torn MCL and a broken left tibia.

Here is video of the play...

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The Week Has Begun, And Markets Are Higher Again

There wasn't too much news over the weekend -- nothing dramatic on the Europe front -- and so for now the vaguely positive-ish vibe from last week continues.

US futures are up a touch.

Japan, catching up to Friday's big move state-side, is making nice gains.

chart

For a look at what's coming this week in the economy see here.

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'Heroes' Star Zachary Quinto Comes Out After Gay Teen Commits Suicide

Zachary Quinto, the star of "Star Trek" and the former NBC series "Heroes," came out publicly on his website today.

Quinto said he was moved to make the announcement after hearing of the suicide of 14-year-old Jamey Rodemayer, a New York state resident whose parents say was bullied prior to his death.

Rodemayer had participated in the popular "It Gets Better" campaign months earlier.

Quinto's website statement read in part:

"[I]n light of jamey's death - it became clear to me in an instant that living a gay life without publicly acknowledging it - is simply not enough to make any significant contribution to the immense work that lies ahead on the road to complete equality.  our society needs to recognize the unstoppable momentum toward unequivocal civil equality for every gay lesbian bisexual and transgendered citizen of this country.  gay kids need to stop killing themselves because they are made to feel worthless by cruel and relentless bullying.  parents need to teach their children principles of respect and acceptance.  we are witnessing an enormous shift of collective consciousness throughout the world.  we are at the precipice of great transformation within our culture and government."

By referencing "living a gay life without publicly acknowledging it," Quinto threw down a gauntlet for the movie and television industries.

Hollywood, long an inwardly progressive environment in terms of homosexuality, still dictates that actors perceived as straight by audiences remain closeted.

There's no doubt that right now, some actors who still labor under this unwritten rule are mulling following Quinto's lead -- maybe even aloud, to their agents and publicists.

So we'll have to wait and see if Quinto's move triggers a ripple effect or just a single splash.

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Here's Rhapsody's Plan To Get Millions Of New Users Without Giving Away Free Music

Thanks to the hype surrounding Spotify's U.S. launch this summer, the question on everyone's mind when they talk about signing up for one of the all you can eat music services out there is "How much free music can I get?"

So far, both MOG and Rdio have jumped on to the free music plan trend, offering "gas tanks" of music that deplete as you listen.

You can earn more music by doing things like sharing your listening activity with friends on Twitter or Facebook, but at the end of the day, you're stuck with a finite number of hours or tracks you can listen to.

But Rhapsody, the company that has been in the music streaming business for almost a decade, doesn't want to follow the rest of the pack. Instead, Rhapsody plans to see how the market reacts to the free plans and see if the conversion rate to paid packages are sustainable enough to try it too, says the company's president Jon Irwin.

We had a long interview with Irwin about Rhapsody's plans for gaining more users. For now, "free" isn't on the table, he says.

Instead, Irwin says Rhapsody plans to leverage its recent acquisition of Napster to start moving its business outside the United States. Napster has a very strong user base overseas that will help get things jump started.

Over the next few months, Napster users will start seeing their playlists, favorites, etc. migrate to Rhapsody. By the end of the year, Napster users will be added to Rhapsody's 800,000 user base. (Irwin wouldn't tell us how many Napster users Rhapsody is acquiring.)

Aside from the Napster plans, Rhapsody has another interesting strategy we have yet to see competitors talk about. Irwin told us about a deal between Rhapsody and the budget wireless carrier Metro PCS that's already in place.

Right now, when a customer buys a $60 unlimited plan through Metro PCS along with an Android phone, they get automatic access to Rhapsody as part of their contract. In one swoop, Rhapsody now has the ability to tap into Metro PCS's 9 million customers.

The deal is in its infancy, but if it catches on, Irwin says he'd like to work out similar deals with the larger carriers like Verizon and AT&T.

There's also talk of partnering with cable providers to tie Rhapsody into your cable service. Say goodbye to those ~100 Music Choice channels. Instead, Irwin envisions one channel that has all the music you want on demand. Irwin says there aren't any deals in place with cable or satellite providers, but he's working to lock something down. To make thing even better, music labels love the idea.

Despite Rhapsody's alternative strategy of partnering with cable providers and wireless carriers, Irwin says he hasn't ruled out offering a free plan similar to the ones on Spotify, MOG, and Rdio.

In fact, Rhapsody already has agreements set with the big music labels that would allow a free streaming plan. Irwin even hints the deal could allow more free music than Rhapsody's competitors since the company has a longer relationship with the labels.

But Rhapsody plans to watch how free plans work with other services. If the competition sees success in converting free users to paid users, Irwin says he just needs to "flip the switch" on Rhapsody's free plan.

For now, the company will stick with its standard 30-day free trial to suck users in.


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THE MONEY PIT: The Real Reason Harrisburg Pennsylvania Went Bankrupt

I have received a number of emails from people (mostly those familiar with my thesis that, generally speaking, state and local governments are experiencing policy crises, and not debt crises) requesting that I explain Harrisburg, Pennsylvania’s Chapter 9 bankruptcy filing. 

I do not think anyone would dispute that Harrisburg is involved in a bona fide debt crisis.  Harrisburg’s situation, however, is not typical of government borrowers in the municipal bond market.  Of course, the only way to make this point clear is to go into detail about how Harrisburg landed itself in financial distress.  So let me tell you a story.  (My fascination with project finance is endless, so you might want to get comfortable.)

The vast majority of Harrisburg’s bonded indebtedness stems from improvements made to the city’s trash incinerator plant.  According to the Patriot-News, Harrisburg’s local newspaper (a lot of the information in this post is derived from their excellent coverage), the incinerator plant has been a major source of financial trouble for the city since it opened in the early 1970s, yet city officials have demonstrated an inexplicable devotion to throwing money at the project.  (This story is, in fact, one long lesson in not allowing sunk costs to influence decision-making.  Not everyone pays attention in economics, apparently.) 

The plant was originally constructed to burn garbage and produce steam – some of which was piped to the nearby Bethlehem Steel Corporation plant, but most of which was just vented into the air.  In 1985, the city built a turbine at the plant to begin generating electricity from the steam that would otherwise be lost.  The plant was profitable until 1990, when Dauphin County (of which Harrisburg is the county seat) adopted a solid waste disposal plan that rerouted garbage produced outside of Harrisburg to various other landfills, which was less expensive than paying the incinerator plant to take the waste.  The plant lost millions of dollars of business virtually overnight.

In 1993, the city sold the incinerator to the Harrisburg Authority, the city’s public utility, for $40.7 million.  (Officials suggest that this sale was specifically encouraged by the bond rating agencies, but I find this difficult to believe.  Rating agency methodologies typically assume that governments will financially support enterprises that serve an essential government function.)  In 1995, Dauphin County was legally forced to send waste back to the plant, but the plant was already lost for other reasons.  The plant, which was more or less at the end of its useful life, was continually breaking down and was in violation of federal Clean Air Act regulations.  Some improvements were made to bring the plant back into compliance, but it was ultimately closed in 2003.  At this point, the incinerator was tied to $104 million of outstanding debt.  Officials should have just demolished the plant and eaten the expenses, but they decided to bankrupt the city instead.

City officials decided that they would gut and rebuild the plant – a problem that they approached with a truly Pennsylvanian penchant for gambling.  Rather than go with one of the large corporations that handle projects like this (like Waste Management or Covanta Energy, which is now running the incinerator), the city decided to go with Barlow Projects, a small start-up incinerator technology company based in Fort Collins, Colorado, and founded by engineer / ordained minister James Barlow. 

There were two reasons city officials preferred Barlow over his competition.  The first reason was his technology.  Barlow had patented an incinerator design that used high-pressure air to circulate burning garbage, not mechanical grates.  Jammed grates were one of the main reasons the Harrisburg plant frequently failed.

The second reason, naturally, was price.  Barlow’s final estimate for the construction work was $77 million.  Other estimates were at least $40 million higher, and one estimate was $178 million.  The difference in price should have been a red flag for city officials, but they were mostly concerned with the amount they could finance.  The authority would need to pay off the existing debt associated with the incinerator and the new debt associated with the retrofit.  At Barlow’s competitors’ prices, the plant would not produce enough revenue to be self-supporting – something the city would have to demonstrate to be able to sell the bonds to finance the project.  (Keep in mind that the city ended up guaranteeing the bonds, as did the county and Assured Guaranty. The city also received substantial reimbursements from the bond issues.)

All but one member of the Harrisburg City Council were fine rubberstamping the project.  Linda Thompson, the current mayor, was on the council and voted for the project (because God told her to), but she became an early critic of the project when it became publicly apparent it was a boondoggle. The council member that voted against the project was not reelected. 

One of the largest sources of risk in project finance is construction risk.  Construction risk refers to the risk that unforeseen problems would occur in the process of constructing a project that would throw the project off schedule or radically alter the project’s scope.  When bonds are primarily backed by the revenues generated by a facility, it is important that the project actually be producing revenues by the time the first payment is due.  (Projects such as this usually involve capitalized interest, where the borrower borrows more money than is actually needed to construct the project in order to be able to make interest payments during the construction phase.  The city issued $125 million of bonds in 2003 to pay for the project.)  I mention construction risk because the Harrisburg project was several times larger than any project Barlow had previously undertaken.  When asked whether his technology could be applied to a much larger project, Barlow did what most entrepreneurs about to land a major contract would do: he said he would make it work.  Barlow also stipulated that his company be the project manager, giving him complete control over the project’s execution.

Insurance companies were less swayed by Barlow’s ambitions than city officials, however.  Barlow could not obtain a performance bond for the project.  A performance bond (not to be confused with the revenue bonds used to finance the project) is a type of insurance given to a customer (in this case, the City of Harrisburg) by a contractor (in this case, Barlow), usually covering the full contract price, ensuring that the customer would be reimbursed in the event that the contractor does not finish the project as stipulated in the contract.  This should have been the second red flag for city officials, but they decided to work around the performance bond issue.  The fact that the city would not demand a performance bond for a multimillion-dollar project absolutely defies standard public procurement procedures, but remember that officials were quite committed to getting the project done as cheaply as possible.

Officials demanded two alternative forms of security from Barlow, both of which they willingly forfeited during the course of construction.  The city did not advance the typical 50% of the amount required for equipment purchases for the project and retained 20% of all other money due to Barlow.  The only traditional form of security for the project was the performance bond produced by one of Barlow’s subcontractors, which was nullified when that subcontractor walked off the project.

After the construction began, basically anything that could go wrong did go wrong, and a relatively inexperienced contractor was left trying to pick up the pieces.  A year after the contract was finalized, Barlow discovered that the company that was supposed to build the steel boilers for the plant (the most significant element of the project) had not even begun their work and had failed to hedge against a spike in the price of steel.  Barlow asked the city to increase the contract price.  Without the boilers, there wasn’t anything that could be done at the construction site.  This set the project back six months.  Once construction could resume, making up for lost time became very expensive.  Barlow asked the city for more money.  They released the money they had been withholding, thus giving the city no security for Barlow’s performance.

By the end of 2005, city officials were becoming desperate – the bond payments were coming due and the city had budgeted revenues from the plant – so they tried to locate a contractor that could replace Barlow.  No one would touch the project.  But city officials were not out of idiotic maneuvers just yet.  They took out a short-term loan from CIT against the rights to the plant’s technology.  (Hey, it was 2005.)  The idea behind that loan was that the city would make payments to CIT, which were supposed to be passed on to Barlow.  The city, of course, found itself on the hook for making these payments.  Since CIT now owned the plant’s technology, the company had the right to shut down the plant in the event of non-payment.    

Barlow “finished” the project by April 2006, four months late.  After the plant opened, the city discovered that there were major problems with the plant’s ash-handling systems and that the third boiler was not entirely finished.  Without the third boiler, the plant could not generate enough revenue to make the required debt service payments and offset operating expenses.  (As far as I can tell, it would cost the city another $50 million for the plant to be fully functional.)  The plant’s deficits became a burden to the city, which cut staff, increased property taxes, and increased waste bills.  Even still, the city was unable to make its promised payments on the bonds and the county and Assured have had to make payments instead.  (The city has avoided defaulting on its general obligation bonds, however, due to the up-front payment it received on a parking lease.)  Last I read, the city had paid for a forensic audit of the authority’s finances in order to have a better understanding of how the project’s costs escalated so rapidly.  They have also sued Barlow.  Both of these actions are moot, of course, because Barlow filed for bankruptcy.

As massive as the city’s financial woes were at the conclusion of this project, the city council turned down a number of opportunities to fix the city’s problems.  In 2008, the city council voted down a $215 million-dollar proposed lease with a developer for its parking system.  That lease would have paid down a substantial portion of the incinerator debt.  The council has also turned down a number of other proposals to sell assets.

In October 2010, the city entered Pennsylvania’s Act 47 program for distressed municipalities.  As part of that program, the state crafted a 422-page recovery plan for the city [pdf].  That plan made some specific recommendations to reform the city’s operations and to improve its financial situation.  Unsurprisingly, the plan also suggested that the city sell assets, among other things.  The city council has rejected the state’s recovery plan three times this year.  The same four council members (out of seven total) that voted down the recovery plan also voted for the city to file for bankruptcy. 

(I have had a number of people ask me why the city should have to sell assets in order to pay the “speculators” who invested in or guaranteed the city’s debt.  If this is your reaction to the city’s bankruptcy filing, I would submit to you that city officials – and by extension, the people who elected them – have also been true speculators in this project all along.  City officials bet that they could get some nobody to construct a large project for less than far more sophisticated corporations, demanded no insurance in the event of his failure, and put their taxing authority behind that bet.  Were they born yesterday?  Was this the first project the city had ever undertaken?  No, they were greedy and reckless, plain and simple.  If the city had chosen a more honest and traditional arrangement, the project would not have been feasible on paper, and the bonds could never have been sold.  I’m not sure where the moral outrage toward the county or the bond insurance company comes from, but it is not based on anything approximating sound logic.)

The city received a similarly exhaustive and nuanced report from the law firm Cravath, Swaine & Moore.  The firm conducted its investigation and produced the report on a pro bono basis.  By the time the report was presented, state lawmakers had already introduced legislation to take over Harrisburg’s operations.  The city council hired Mark D. Schwartz somewhere around the time the takeover legislation was introduced.  Seeing as how Schwartz has been unequivocal in supporting the city’s bankruptcy filing (which he stands to make a lot of money off of, not to mention gain some level of notoriety), I imagine he had some influence over the council’s decision to vote down the recovery plan.

(Although Harrisburg appears to have an above-average concentration of assclowns per square mile, Schwartz is an interesting character in his own right.  According to his Wikipedia page – which is surely organic – his dream in life is to be an actor.  And he does seem to love a stage.  He and the city controller, who is running for mayor, have done rounds of interviews since the filing, which seems beyond unprofessional to me.  Apparently, Schwartz even invited himself over the local paper for an interview.)

I would be very surprised if Harrisburg’s bankruptcy case was not ultimately thrown out of court.    As I explained in my December post, Default and Bankruptcy in the Municipal Bond Market (part two), a petitioner has to meet several criteria to be eligible for Chapter 9: (1) the petitioner has to meet the definition of a municipality; (2) the state must specifically authorize Chapter 9 filings (and if such authorization is conditional, the municipality must have satisfied those conditions); (3) the petitioner must meet the definition of insolvency provided in the code, which means it cannot meet its obligations as they come due; (4) the petitioner must desire to have a plan to adjust its debts, and (5) the petitioner must demonstrate that it has attempted to negotiate with its creditors in good faith.

The biggest question hanging over the bankruptcy filing is whether the city has been authorized by the state to file for bankruptcy.  As I mentioned in the earlier post, Chapter 9 was crafted with the utmost respect for state sovereignty as provided by the 10th Amendment of the US Constitution.  Pennsylvania law authorized Chapter 9 filings through Act 47.  However, the legislature, watching events unfolding in Harrisburg, passed legislation this summer prohibiting the class of cities encompassing Harrisburg from filing for bankruptcy until mid-2012.  The House of Representatives has also overwhelmingly passed the takeover legislation, which is expected to be taken up by the Senate this week, and will likely be signed by the governor.  The objective of Chapter 9 is to provide a municipality with breathing room from creditors and the opportunity to bring all stakeholders in a municipality’s finances to the table to negotiate, rather than having the municipality work out its issues on an individual basis.  This is supposed to occur with the state’s blessing.  The objective of Chapter 9 is not to offer a municipality protection from a hostile state takeover.  The state is the sovereign and issues with its political subdivisions are the prerogative of those participating in the state’s political process.  I would expect the bankruptcy judge to take the state’s actions very seriously.

Further complicating the city’s eligibility is the fact that it is unclear who is even representing the city.  The filing was approved by four council members, who have retained their own attorney, and is opposed by the mayor’s office, which has retained a different attorney to contest the filing.  As a practical matter, if there is this level of political dysfunction and lack of cooperation among the people representing the city, how is the city supposed to negotiate with creditors during the bankruptcy process?  As I have said, all Chapter 9 does is give a municipality breathing room from creditor lawsuits.  It does not guarantee a resolution to political problems if the participants are unwilling to compromise.  In fact, it does not guarantee a resolution at all – there have been instances where municipalities have filed for Chapter 9 and not reached any resolution.  (This is one way in which municipal bankruptcy is different than corporate bankruptcies.)

The city may also have a difficult time demonstrating that it has negotiated with creditors in good faith, especially considering that the council has shrugged off the recommendations of state officials and independent consultants as to how it may resolve its debt crisis.

To me, a state takeover is clearly the most advantageous solution to the city’s problems.  The city will avoid potentially years of bickering (and spending millions of taxpayer dollars on legal fees) and the negative stigma associated with bankruptcy.  Harrisburg will also still be receiving state aid along the path to recovery.  All of these benefits are tremendous.  As Vallejo has demonstrated, the cost of filing for bankruptcy can quickly spiral out of control if parties are intent on challenging every aspect of the proceedings.  Given that several parties are already challenging the city’s eligibility, I think such conflicts are to be expected.

In the meantime, this filing is unlikely to have any effect on trading in the municipal bond market.  Harrisburg’s financial problems have been known for years and have been the subject of numerous articles in industry publications.  And most muni market professionals are able to recognize that Harrisburg, like Jefferson County, Alabama, is a highly unique credit.  I doubt the fact that Harrisburg’s financial problems predate the credit bubble by at least a decade will stop anyone from portraying this event as a harbinger of massive defaults, however.  I have come to accept that few people do actual research anymore.


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Thursday, February 16, 2012

REPORT: China Made A 'Secret Offer To Save The Euro'

nullYeah, we've heard this rumor a billion times, so why not once more?

The Sunday Times (London) is reporting (behind a paywall) that China made an offer to inject oodles of money into Europe.

Gerry Davies at ForexLive summarizes it in a sentence: "Quotes sources close to G20 talks as saying China is willing to pump billions into the euro zone by buying infrastructure assets.  Report also says Chinese banks would increase purchases of euro zone sovereign debt."

Again, we've heard this tons of times, so grain of salt, etc.

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PHOTOS: Urban Life And History Mix In New York City's Apartments

Houzz | Oct. 16, 2011, 3:00 PM | 2,257 |

When looking at the residential architecture of New York, it's necessary to split it into two groups: urban homes and suburban/country homes.

Here we look at the first, which encompasses apartments, lofts, and townhouses. Most of the examples that follow are lofts, because they are such a unique part of New York City's transformation from an industrial to a post-industrial city.

New York is host to a good deal of stunning new architecture, but it also has a strong tradition of preservation that embraces conversions of old buildings into new uses. Dealing with that history inside is one aspect of the interiors in this ideabook.

More regional modern architecture on Houzz:

This post originally appeared on Houzz.

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Romney Is Now Crushing Obama On Wall Street

The financial industry abandoned President Barack Obama's reelection campaign in the third quarter of the year, according to data released by the Federal Election Commission, flocking to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

Candidate disclosure records compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics show Romney out-raising Obama with the financial services industry $3,561,783 to $1,643,149 so far this cycle. Obama, who is facing criticism for his role in passing the Dodd-Frank regulatory bill and his plans to increase taxes on the rich, raised over $15 million from the industry in the 2008 campaign.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who is barred from taking donations from many on Wall Street due to conflict of interest regulations, has raised $375,275 from the financial industry.

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BILLIONAIRE GADGET OF THE DAY: James Bond's Actual Rolex Watch Hits The Auction Block

If you want to look as cool as James Bond, here's your chance to stock up on one of coolest his accessories (via Hodinkee).

The Rolex Rodger Moore wore in "Live and Let Die" is up for auction through Christie's in Geneva next month.

It's expected to sell for between $230,000 amd $450,000.

In the movie the watch, a Rolex Reference 5513 has been tweaked by Q to include a buzzsaw bezel, which Bond uses to free himself and Solitaire (played by Jane Seymour) and the watch has a "hyper intensified magnetic field generator" that was used to stop a bullet.

The buzzsaw bezel is still in place on this watch. The caseback is also signed "Roger Moore 007." There's a small pinhole where there was once a thin wire installed to help unzip Miss Smith's dress during filming. 

The watch itself was produced by Rolex in 1972 and still has its original bracelet.

Bond, of course, was also known for sporting a tuxedo.

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GET READY: Here Comes Another Big Week For The Economy

Last week was kind of light data-wise.

This week's upcoming slate of econ data, however is stacked with juicy morsels.

Here's a quick preview, with estimates from Nomura.

Monday:

Empire Fed Survey: Estimate -7.5 up from -8.8 previously.Industrial production: Estimate 77.2 down from 77.4 (due to Hurricane Irene).

Tuesday:

Producer prices: Estimate -0.1%

Wednesday:

Housing starts Estimate of +4.7% or 598K annualized due to Hurricane Irene Beige Book (no estimate)

Thursday:

Jobless claims: Estimate 404KPhilly Fed Survey: Estimate -9.9 up from -17.5 previouslyExisting home sales: -2.5% after the 7.7% jump in August.

Of course, it will be jam packed with Europe news, as Sarkozy and Merkel have promised a solution on banks and debt within just a few days.

Oh, and of course tons of earnings, which we'll be covering all week.

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VIDEO: Inside Dan Wheldon's Car Moments Before His Tragic Crash

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Indy 500 Champion Dan Wheldon Dies After A Horrifying IndyCar Crash In Las Vegas

Indy 500 winner Dan Wheldon died of injuries sustained in a 15-car wreck at the IndyCar World Championships in Las Vegas today.

Wheldon was airlifted to a nearby hospital with undisclosed but severe injuries after the crash, according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, but was unable to recover.

IndyCar announced his death shortly before 6:00 p.m. eastern time.

The crash occurred during the 13th lap of the race.

It appears Wheldon's car went airborne, turned, and slammed into a semi-flexible "catch fence" above the wall. But the exact details of the crash and injuries he sustained are still undisclosed.

Three other drivers were hospitalized with more minor injuries.

Wheldon was 33 years old. He is most famous for winning the Indy 500 in both 2005 and 2011.

He leaves behind a wife and two sons.

Below you can find ancedotes, driver reactions, and videos of the crash.

EARLIER

6:15 p.m.:

Tragic scene in Vegas. Many drivers crying as they prepare to drive on a five-lap tribute around Las Vegas Moter Speedway.

6:20 p.m.:

Here's what Danica Patrick told the AP after the crash:

It was debris everywhere across the whole track, you could smell the smoke, you could see the billowing smoke on the back straight from the car. There was a chunk of fire that we were driving around. You could see cars scattered.

Others have said it's the worst crash they've seen.

6:30 p.m.:

Three other drivers — Will Power, Pippa Mann, and JR Hildebrand — were injured in the crash. None of them were airlifted, and there is no indication that their injuries are as severe as Wheldon's.

7:25 p.m.:

It appears that Dan Wheldon wrote a blog post for USA Today yesterday. It's a chilling and saddening read. But it gives you an insight into Wheldon's thoughts and frustrations on the eve of the race that would ultimately claim his life. Read it here.

8:20 p.m.: What Wheldon saw

Here's video of the very beginning of the crash from Wheldon's cockpit. It cuts away before he collides.

MORE VIDEO

Here's a full version of the replay from above:

Here's one from an onboard camera of Will Power:


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A Brawl Nearly Erupted Between The Lions And 49ers After Their Coaches Got Into A Postgame Scuffle

San Francisco 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh got in a minor scuffle with Detroit Lions coach Jim Schwartz after the Niners' 25-19 win today.

After a brief postgame handshake, Schwartz began chasing after the giddy Harbaugh. At that point, multiple players became involved, the the two teams squared off near the tunnel.

Nothing came of it, but it was pretty close to an ugly scene.

After the game, Schwartz said Harbaught cursed at him.

Here's what he said, from PFT:

“I went to congratulate [Jim] Harbaugh and got shoved out of the way. . . .  I didn’t expect an obscenity at that point.”

Here's the video (the incident starts 20 seconds in):

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HOLLYWEIRD: Here's What Industry Moves Fred Durst, Lady Gaga And Woody Allen Pulled This Week

The immortal Fred Durst, lead singer of Limp Bizkit, is getting his own sitcom... and it's tentatively called "Douchebag." Stay classy, CBS.
Robert Downey, Jr. would like everyone to give Mel Gibson another chance.
During Eminem's Shady 2.0 cypher at the BET Awards on Monday, Detroit spitter Royce da 5'9" kept saying, "Hi, Rihanna," for no apparent reason. Then the world got obsessed, and Rihanna responded on Twitter. Modern romance!
Woody Allen was planning on calling his newest movie "The Bop Decameron," presumably so that nobody would see it. Fortunately, just-slightly cooler minds prevailed: the film is now called "Nero Fiddled." Lady Gaga took to the courts to make sure that British kids' website Moshi Monsters couldn't use a fictional character they'd created called "Lady Goo Goo." If Gaga takes herself any more seriously, she'll be obligated to enter the Republican race for President.
While doing press for her new movie "We Need to Talk About Kevin," Tilda Swinton told interviewers that she wanted to kill her baby brother when she was younger. But then she actually ended up saving his life... yeah, Swinton is the weirdest.
A woman is suing the distributors of "Drive" because it was nothing like "The Fast and the Furious." Meanwhile, Ryan Gosling looks in the mirror and wonders if he's going bald.Please follow The Wire on Twitter and Facebook.
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How Global Stock Markets Stacked Up During Last Week's Big Rally

Super Earth Image: Courtesy ESO/Martin Kornmesser

Major indexes posted solid returns this week as markets across the globe rallied. Some, including two in the U.S., saw year-to-date returns cross back into positive territory.

The approval of the EFSF expansion and the improving economic data out of the U.S. proved a major boon.

Look for market focus to shift to earnings over the coming weeks.

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New Sprint iPhone Owners Are Reporting Pitiful Data Speeds (AAPL, S)

Some Sprint customers have been reporting slow data speeds on their new iPhones since Friday.

MacRumors points to this thread on Sprint's own forums. It's full of anecdotal evidence of slow data speeds on Sprint when using the iPhone. A lot of the speeds reported are downright pitiful.

In some cases, other smartphones are able to achieve normal data speeds on Sprint from the same location, even though the iPhone can't.

On the other hand, other Sprint customers say data speeds are crawling on all devices, not just iPhones.

While the slow speeds don't appear to be affecting all Sprint customers, it seems like there are enough complaints floating around out there to raise a bit of alarm.

Even more evidence: Gizmodo did a very unscientific, crowdsourced speed test of several iPhone 4Ss on all three carriers. Sprint appears to be the slowest.

Are you experiencing slow data speeds with your Sprint iPhone? Let us know in the comments!

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Founders And VCs Reveal 21 Books Every Entrepreneur Should Read

We've polled everyone from First Round Capital's Charlie O'Donnell to Steve Blank and Brad Feld in the past few years, and they told us what books have shaped their careers. 

From Malcolm Gladwell's "Blink" to Robert Pirsig's "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance," these books will teach you how to think -- no matter if you're a serial entrepreneur or are just starting a business.  

Let us know what books have influenced your career in the comments. 

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The TRUTH About How Housing Has Destroyed This Recovery

Why has this "recovery" been so mediocre, and perhaps even verging on ending?

In a speech given late last month in Sweden, Eric S. Rosengren of the Boston Fed took a deep look at the impact of housing weakness on the US economy.

Although everyone knows that housing has been a problem, the impact may be more stark than you realize.

For example, this chart shows: Growth in Real GDP Components: Current and Three Previous Recoveries

chart

Note that outside of residential fixed investment (and also government, though to a much lesser degree) the recovery looks like a pretty normal one. Business Fixed Investment is actually a larger share of the recovery than previous ones have been.

Rosengren's presentation also looks at the impact of housing on wealth, including some breakdowns by ethnicity that we hadn't seen before.

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Watch An Alabama Star Break A Defender's Ankles On His Way To A 76-Yard Touchdown Run

Alabama running back Trent Richardson bolstered his Heisman Trophy campaign with an incredible 76-yard touchdown run last night.

After Ricardson bursts through the line, he looks to be cornered by Ole Miss defenders at the 20 yard line.

But he jukes Senquez Golson to the ground at the 14-yard-line and scampers into the endzone.

Second-ranked Alabama won 52-7.

Here's the video (slow-mo replay of the juke at the 1-minute mark):

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Google Voice For iPhone Pulled From The App Store Because It Keeps Crashing (AAPL, GOOG)

Google has pulled its Google Voice iPhone app from the App Store because the latest version keeps crashing, Engadget reports.

Google told Engadget that the app's latest update causes it to crash at sign in.

The app has been pulled from the store until the bug can be fixed. (Don't worry, if you already have Google Voice on your phone you can still use it.)

We've been having problems with Google Voice since upgrading to iOS 5. The app crashes almost every time we try to check our inbox. Still, the problem doesn't appear to be affecting everyone. We'll keep you posted once the bug-free version is live in the App Store.

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Herman Cain's 3-3-3 Plan For Healthcare Revealed

Saturday Night Live can't get enough of the race for the Republican presidential nomination, slamming the chaotic state of the field in the third sketch in as many weeks.

Herman Cain, played by Kenan Thompson, takes the starring role, explaining why his 9-9-9 plan is getting savaged from all sides, before offering a few more quick and easy 'solutions' to the nation's problems.

"I never thought that anyone would look at it... If America is looking for catchy, unworkable solutions to complicated problems, Herman Cain has the answer.

How we fight terrorism – my 5-5-5 plan. For every terrorist, America will send five planes, five soldiers, and five of those dogs that caught Osama bin Laden. 

How do we fix healthcare — my 3-3-3 plan. Every time you get sick you get three pills, three days off, and three chicken-noodle soups."

Jason Sudeikis once again played an uncomfortable Mitt Romney, struggling with why the Republican party just doesn't like him. He compares himself to Forest Gump — waiting for Jenny to come home and die.

'Newt Gingrich' and 'Michele Bachmann' were shown locked in a closet, told that the last person standing would participate in the next debate. Bachmann begins to pummel Gingrich, as the camera cuts to 'Rick Santorum' at a gay bar.

The moderator summed it up best: "Join us for the next debate, when we basically turn into a season of Survivor where no one is ever voted off the island."

Watch the video below:


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G-20: IMF Could Extend Aid To Italy And Spain, Only If EU Leaders Have A Concrete Plan By Oct. 23

PARIS (AP) — The finance chiefs of the world's leading economies have opened the door for the International Monetary Fund to play a bigger role in fighting the eurozone's escalating debt troubles.

The Group of 20 rich and developing nations asked the IMF on Saturday to propose ways that it could help stop countries under severe market pressure from toppling into a full-blown crisis with potential global repercussions.

The move appeared aimed at Italy and Spain, the eurozone's third and fourth largest economies, which have seen their funding costs spike amid growing worries over the currency union's stability. The rest of Europe cannot afford to bail out Spain or Italy should they run out of money.

Until now, the IMF has funded about a third of the bailouts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal, but helping the eurozone to stem contagion beyond those countries would require a broader use of resources that would go far beyond the fund's traditional role of providing rescue loans to cash-strapped governments.

But while acknowledging that the IMF has a role to play in containing the continent's debt problems, G-20 ministers made clear Saturday that Europe must first come up with its own solutions.

"Of course, even though the world has a big stake in Europe doing this effectively, Europe itself has the strongest interest," U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told reporters after a two-day meeting of G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors in Paris.

"I think they've come to recognize that, if you underdo it, it's going to be more expensive."

Eurozone ministers sketched out a plan to their counterparts on Saturday and have promised that it will restore confidence in Europe and its banks when they unveil it next weekend.

At their Oct. 23 summit in Brussels, European leaders are expected to sign off on a scheme to maximize the impact of their €440 billion ($600 billion) bailout fund, a plan to recapitalize banks across the continent to ensure they can withstand worsening market turmoil, and a second bailout for Greece.

Part of an effort to shore up shaky countries on the continent may include a bigger role for the IMF, too.

"What has been asked of us is instruments that are more flexible, more short term, that allow countries in good economic health but in difficulty to resist," the IMF's managing director Christine Lagarde said.

She said G-20 leaders would consider the new tools at their summit in Cannes, France, early next month.

The IMF's investigation of new instruments reflects the extent to which the eurozone's debt crisis has affected the rest of the global economy.

"We heard loud and clear that the emerging markets in particular were very concerned about the risk of contagion from advanced economies to emerging markets and to low-income countries," Lagarde said.

The G-20 also committed to making sure that the IMF has the resources it needs to stabilize the world economy, indicating that an increase in its funding was possible. But there is resistance to such a move.

Geithner, for instance, stressed that the IMF, with $390 billion on hand, didn't need any more funding, although he said the IMF should continue to play its important role in containing the turmoil.

"That is a very, very substantial amount of financial firepower," he said. After Europe unveils its plan, "if there's a case for more use of the IMF's existing resources, we'd be supportive of that."

In discussing the requested list of tools, Lagarde said the IMF's efforts would focus on "short-term liquidity instruments available to what we call the 'non-consenting' victims of the economic crisis."

She gave the example of precautionary credit lines the IMF offered to several countries after the collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008, and said the new tools could go in a similar direction.

Precautionary credit lines are linked to fewer conditions than traditional IMF rescue loans that come only in return for radical economic reforms and painful budget cuts. That's why they would be aimed at countries that are fundamentally in decent health, but suffering from increased risk-adversity among investors.

Such flexible short-term loans could help Italy and Spain if they had to come up with billions of euros to recapitalize their banks, also reassuring private investors that they will get their money back.

___

AP Business Writer Greg Keller contributed to this report.


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Seriously, This 'Occupy' Movement Is Now Global And Needs Defining

When you see spontaneous social protests erupting from Tunisia to Tel Aviv to Wall Street, it’s clear that something is happening globally that needs defining. There are two unified theories out there that intrigue me. One says this is the start of “The Great Disruption.” The other says that this is all part of “The Big Shift.” You decide.        

Paul Gilding, the Australian environmentalist and author of the book “The Great Disruption,” argues that these demonstrations are a sign that the current growth-obsessed capitalist system is reaching its financial and ecological limits. “I look at the world as an integrated system, so I don’t see these protests, or the debt crisis, or inequality, or the economy, or the climate going weird, in isolation — I see our system in the painful process of breaking down,” which is what he means by the Great Disruption, said Gilding. “Our system of economic growth, of ineffective democracy, of overloading planet earth — our system — is eating itself alive. Occupy Wall Street is like the kid in the fairy story saying what everyone knows but is afraid to say: the emperor has no clothes. The system is broken. Think about the promise of global market capitalism. If we let the system work, if we let the rich get richer, if we let corporations focus on profit, if we let pollution go unpriced and unchecked, then we will all be better off. It may not be equally distributed, but the poor will get less poor, those who work hard will get jobs, those who study hard will get better jobs and we’ll have enough wealth to fix the environment.        

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Someone Please Forward This To Meredith Whitney

The big muni finance news this week was the bankruptcy declaration by Harrisburg, PA, which has long been at the vanguard of cities in financial distress.

The fact that such a well-known big city filed for Chapter 9 has of course brought back all of the maybe Meredith Whitney was right chatter.

As a refresher, 2011 has not been a bad year at all for muni finance. Below is the iShares S&P National Municipal Bond Fund (MUB), which took a dip over the 2010-2011 winter, but has overall been a big gainer this year.

MUB:

chart

So is Harrisburg a harbinger of doom?

To answer that, you must go read this post by Bond Girl at Self-Evident, examining the roots of Harrisburg's woes.

Essentially it boils down to a trash incinerator that the city built in the 1970s, and a series of mis-steps made by the city government to keep it going past its lifespan, resulting in hundreds of millions of dollars ultimately wasted. The whole thing has been a gigantic money pit, made worse by the fact that the city tried to cut corners to save money (by going with cheapo contractor), ultimately of course costing it even more money.

And even once the plant was rebuilt...

[The contractor] Barlow “finished” the project by April 2006, four months late.  After the plant opened, the city discovered that there were major problems with the plant’s ash-handling systems and that the third boiler was not entirely finished.  Without the third boiler, the plant could not generate enough revenue to make the required debt service payments and offset operating expenses.  (As far as I can tell, it would cost the city another $50 million for the plant to be fully functional.)  The plant’s deficits became a burden to the city, which cut staff, increased property taxes, and increased waste bills.  Even still, the city was unable to make its promised payments on the bonds and the county and Assured have had to make payments instead.  (The city has avoided defaulting on its general obligation bonds, however, due to the up-front payment it received on a parking lease.)  Last I read, the city had paid for a forensic audit of the authority’s finances in order to have a better understanding of how the project’s costs escalated so rapidly.  They have also sued Barlow.  Both of these actions are moot, of course, because Barlow filed for bankruptcy.

Muni crises like this are idiosyncratic, and not reflective of a broader wave of trouble on the horizon.

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iPhone 5 Coming Next Summer, Says Analyst -- It Was Steve Jobs' Last Big Project (AAPL)

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Citi: Here's The Real Reason 24 People Get Arrested At One Of Our Branches

Citibank Public Affairs issued the following statement regarding today's incident: "A large amount of protesters entered our branch at 555 La Guardia Place around 2:00 PM today. They were very disruptive and refused to leave after being repeatedly asked, causing our staff to call 911. The Police asked the branch staff to close the branch until the protesters could be removed. Only one person asked to close an account and was accommodated."

To be clear: no one was arrested for closing an account; we didn't lock people in our branch - the police decided to close the branch; and we didn't ask for anyone to be arrested -  that is a police decision.

(via @bank_able)


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Here's The Tablet HTC Expects You To Shell Out $700 For (T)

HTC Jetstream hands on photosImage: Steve Kovach, Business Insider

We finally got our hands on HTC's first 10-inch tablet, the Jetstream.

For now, the Jetstream is only available through AT&T and is the carrier's first LTE capable tablet. Unfortunately, AT&T's zippy LTE network is only available in Chicago, Atlanta, San Antonio, Austin, and Dallas.

If you don't live in one of those cities, you're going to be stuck with a slower 3G or HSPA+ connection.

While our snap reaction of the tablet is pretty good after using it for a day or so -- we love the modifications HTC made to Honeycomb -- we can't get over the price tag.

The Jetstream will set you back a whopping $700 if you sign up for a two-year data plan from AT&T. It'll cost you $850 to get the tablet contact-free.

For comparison, Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 LTE model sells for $530 with a two-year contract from Verizon.

We'll have more thoughts later this week in our full review. For now, check out our first hands on photos.

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21 Years In The Life Of Shaquille O'Neal

Since joining the Orlando Magic in 1992, Shaquille O'Neal has occupied a special place in the heart of American sports fans.

Part athlete, part actor, part wordsmith, and all entertainer, Shaq approached the game with a youthful energy that made him beloved by the common fan, but derided by the diehards.

As the NBA lockout drags on, Shaq's next career — TNT NBA analyst — remains on standby. 

So while you wait for the Big Aristotle to make his TV debut, take a look back at his 21 years on the hardwood.

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Saturday Night Live Mocks Bloomberg Over Occupy Wall Street Response

Saturday Night Live laid into New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg over his administration's response to the Occupy Wall Street protests.

Fred Armisen opened the show as the billionaire mayor welcoming the protestors to the city:

"With all due respect to Chicago, Los Angeles, and London, if you're looking to vent your rage at a system where the richest 1 percent controls 40 percent of the planet's wealth, there is no better time or place than autumn in New York. And why not cap off a day of protest with dinner at one of New York's many world class restaurants. Or take in a Broadway show like Mary Poppins — currently playing at the New Amsterdam theater."

'Bloomberg' defended his decision to power wash Zuccotti park:

"As all New Yorkers know, various parts of the city are routinely power washed. Power washing is a New York institution, and without it, the Big Apple would lose its reputation as the cleanest and most thoroughly sanitized city. With streets — as the saying goes — you can eat off."

Watch the video below:

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