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January 26, 2012

Taxpayers still owed $132.9B from bailout: report

Filed under: canada, legal — Tags: , , , — Snowman @ 3:08 am

A government watchdog says U.S. taxpayers are still owed $132.9 billion that companies haven’t repaid from the financial bailout, and some of that will never be recovered.

The bailout launched at the height of the financial crisis in September 2008 will continue to exist for years, says a report issued Thursday by Christy Romero, the acting special inspector general for the $700 billion bailout. Some bailout programs, such as the effort to help homeowners avoid foreclosure by reducing mortgage payments, will last as late as 2017, costing the government an additional $51 billion or so.

The gyrating stock market has slowed the Treasury Department’s efforts to sell off its stakes in 458 bailed-out companies, the report says. They include insurer American International Group Inc., General Motors Co. and Ally Financial Inc.

If Treasury plans to sell its stock in the three companies at or above the price where taxpayers would break even on their investment _ $28.73 a share for AIG, $53.98 for GM _ it may take a long time for the market to rebound to that level, the report says. AIG’s shares closed Wednesday at $25.31, while GM ended at $24.92. Ally isn’t publicly traded.

It will also be challenging for the government to get out of the 458 companies as the market remains volatile and banks struggle keep afloat in the tough economy, it says.

Congress authorized $700 billion for the bailout of financial companies and automakers, and $413.4 billion was paid out. So far the government has recovered about $318 billion. The bailout is called the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.

“TARP is not over,” Romero said in a statement. She said her office will maintain its commitment to protect taxpayers for the duration of the program.

Treasury spokesman Matt Anderson said the department “has made substantial progress winding down TARP and has already recovered more than 77 percent of the funds disbursed for the program, through repayments and other income.”

“We’ll continue to balance the important goals of exiting our investments as soon as practicable and maximizing value for taxpayers,” Anderson said.

The government has unwound its investments in four of the companies that received the most aid: Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., Chrysler Group LLC and Chrysler Financial, the automaker’s old lending arm.

On Wednesday, Treasury announced that it had sold the final batch of securities under its $368 million Small Business Administration loan program under TARP.

In Romero’s quarterly report to Congress, she said her office has uncovered and prevented fraud related to TARP. Investigations by her office have resulted in criminal charges against 10 people and three convictions, the report notes.

Source

January 3, 2012

Charities get last-minute boost from donors

Filed under: canada, money — Tags: , , , — Snowman @ 4:27 pm

Chalk it up to the holiday spirit — or just smart tax planning — but charitable giving is looking up this month.

Giving in December is already up 15% from 2010, according to the latest tally by Network for Good, a site that enables donors to contribute to more than 10,000 charities across the country. In November, donations rose 20% over the same month last year.

"This year looks a little better, but not back to pre-recession levels yet," said Katya Andresen, Network for Good’s chief strategy officer.

But the best is yet to come. While one-third of all online giving for the year occurs in December, a whopping 22% happens in the last two days of the year, according to Network for Good’s online giving study. That end-of-year rush can mainly be attributed to donors looking for some last-minute tax savings.

"It’s traditional to think about charity in December and of course, it’s the end of the tax year," Andresen said.

Still, with less than 48 hours left in the calendar year, it’s unlikely this will be a substantially better year for charities after three years in a row of lackluster giving.

Largest donations of 2011

After sinking in 2008 and 2009, donations still lag far behind pre-recession levels. Total charitable contributions from individuals, corporations and foundations increased slightly in 2010 to $290.9 billion — but remained below 2007’s $310.6 billion, according to Giving USA, a foundation that tracks charitable contributions cash advance loans.

Although Geoffrey Brown, executive director of the organization, says it’s still too early to say how 2011 will fare in comparison to last year, "giving is probably going to be flat, if anything," he noted.

Stagnant wage growth, high unemployment, Europe’s debt crisis and uncertainty about the economy have weighed on donors, while the government has drawn down support substantially, explained Daniel Borochoff, president of the American Institute of Philanthropy.

"This year was a little better than last year, but, of course, last year wasn’t so good," he said.

In a survey by the Chronicle of Philanthropy, 54% of 152 organizations said they raised more money in November and during the first part of December than they had at the same time last year. Nearly 60% of charities predicted they would have an overall gain in donations in 2011, while 28% said donations would fall this year.

"This was a year in which there were certainly disasters both at home and abroad, but not at the scale that we have seen in the past," explained Stacy Palmer, editor of the Chronicle of Philanthropy.

"Even Japan giving was small, it was nothing like the crisis in Haiti," she said referring to the earthquake and tsunami that rocked the Asian nation in March. 

Source

January 1, 2012

Time Warner Cable subscribers lose MSG Networks

Filed under: canada, technology — Tags: , , , — Snowman @ 12:27 pm

Subscribers of Time Warner Cable woke up New Year’s morning to find the sports channels MSG Network and MSG+ missing from their cable TV line-up.

The New York cable company says fans may miss games featuring the New York Knicks, Rangers and Islanders; the Buffalo Sabres; and New Jersey Devils. That’s because it has failed to reach an agreement with the MSG networks owner, Madison Square Garden Co.

It is the latest spat between a cable company and a channel provider that underscores the friction on both sides over the fees carriers pay for channels.

According to Time Warner Cable, MSG wanted a 53 percent increase in the rates it charges the cable network for its games. Time Warner said this demand came after the two companies had already agreed to a 6 no faxing pay day loans.5 percent rate increase last year.

“We hope the fans will remind MSG that in these economic times, no one can afford to pay 53 percent more for their channel,” said Mike Angus, senior vice president, Content Acquisition, for Time Warner Cable.

MSG says no agreement has been reached and has urged its customers to switch providers.

The first games scheduled in 2012 on MSG Networks are at 7 p.m. Monday: New York Knicks-Toronto Raptors and New Jersey Devils-Ottawa Senators.

Source

July 25, 2011

More airlines raise fares to grab tax savings

Filed under: canada, marketing — Tags: , , , — Snowman @ 4:12 pm

The great tax holiday of 2011 for air travelers is just about over.

By Monday, most U.S. airlines had raised fares to reap the benefit of lower federal taxes on airline tickets. A few airlines that were passing the savings on to consumers changed their minds.

Several federal taxes on airline tickets expired over the weekend after Congress failed to pass legislation to keep the Federal Aviation Administration running at full speed.

Raising the fares allows the airlines to charge the consumer the same amount as before, while pocketing money previously collected for the government.

It could turn into a windfall for airlines if the stalemate in Congress drags on. The government estimates that the expiring taxes total $200 million a week. And with fuel prices much higher than last year, airlines can use the cash.

But some travel experts called the fare increases a public-relations mistake.

“One of the major airlines could have said, `Hey, at least for a week we’re going to give this money back to the consumers,’” said Rick Seaney, who tracks prices as CEO of FareCompare.com. “I’m surprised no one made promotional hay over this.”

Airlines collect various federal fees, including a 7.5 percent tax on all tickets that expired at midnight Friday night. Once the taxes expired, airlines began raising fares by an equal amount. On some tickets, the expired taxes can top 10 percent of the price.

A spokeswoman for the Air Transport Association, a trade group for major U.S. airlines, said consumers will benefit if the tax savings increase airline profits.

“This short-term additional revenue for airlines, which does not mean a fare increase for consumers, benefits all stakeholders _ customers, employees and investors _ by temporarily improving tiny industry margins to better cover costs and enable airlines to invest in their product and service,” the spokeswoman, Jean Medina, said in an email.

US Airways and American Airlines were the first to raise fares. They were joined quickly by United, Continental, Delta, Southwest, AirTran and JetBlue.

Virgin America, which at first bragged about passing the savings on to consumers, changed its mind by Monday. So did Frontier Airlines. Alaska Airlines, Spirit Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines said Monday they had not raised fares.

George Hobica, founder of travel website airfarewatchdog.com, said stores don’t raise prices during tax holidays, and neither should airlines.

“It seems predatory,” he said. “I realize the airlines have to make money, but this is kind of a cheap shot. It’s tone-deaf.”

Source

July 12, 2011

Moody’s downgrades Ireland debt to junk status

Filed under: canada, technology — Tags: , , , — Snowman @ 6:04 pm

Moody’s Investors Service on Friday downgraded Ireland’s government debt ratings to junk status, saying it believes Ireland will need further rounds of financing when the current European Union and the International Monetary Fund support ends in 2013.

The ratings agency cut Ireland’s bond ratings to “Ba1″ from “Baa3,” and said the outlook on the ratings remains negative.

Moody’s credits Ireland with a strong commitment to fiscal consolidation, but notes that implementation risks remain significant with its weak economy.

The analysts say the EU may require private sector creditor participation as a precondition for such additional support, a negative for holders of distressed government debt.

Ireland’s short-term issuer rating also was lowered by one notch to “Non-prime” from “Prime-3.”

Source

July 11, 2011

Qantas: Australia carbon tax to increase fares

Filed under: canada, technology — Tags: , , , — Snowman @ 1:48 am

Australia’s tax on carbon emissions will cost Qantas 110 million to 115 million Australian dollars ($118 million to $123 million) for the 2013 financial year and lead to an increase in passenger fares, the airline said Monday.

The flagship Australian carrier is one of the first of the nation’s major companies to release details of the financial impact of the tax, which will force the 500 worst polluters to pay AU$23 for every ton of carbon they emit.

The government released details of the tax on Sunday, saying it would help Australia lower its massive carbon emissions. Australia is one of the world’s worst greenhouse gas polluters because of its heavy reliance on coal for electricity.

The government is granting AU$9.2 billion in compensation over the next three years to industries affected by the tax, but Qantas said airlines are exempted from that assistance. The tax goes into effect on July 1, 2012.

Qantas said it would pass the costs onto its customers, with the tax adding an average of AU$3.50 to the price of a domestic flight ticket in the financial year ending June 30, 2013. The carbon tax does not apply to international flight fuel.

Qantas shares were down 2.5 percent to AU$1.95 in early afternoon trading.

Source

June 14, 2011

Ericsson to buy Telcordia for $1.15 bln

Filed under: canada, marketing — Tags: , , , — Snowman @ 9:38 am

LM Ericsson AB has signed a deal to buy U.S.-based software development firm Telcordia for $1.15 billion, the Swedish wireless equipment company said Tuesday.

Ericsson said it will buy 100 percent of the shares in Telcordia from private equity firms Providence Equity Partners LLC and Warburg Pincus and expects to complete the acquisition in the fourth quarter 2011.

Telcordia, based in Piscataway, New Jersey, develops mobile, broadband and enterprise communications software and services. It reported revenues of $739 million during the fiscal year, ending January 31 and employs 2,600 people who will now be transferred to Ericsson.

The Swedish company said Telcordia has a leading market position within the operations and business support system field _ producing computer systems that are used by telecommunications operators to handle the growth in mobile and fixed broadband traffic easy payday loans.

“The importance of operations and business support systems will continue to grow as more and more devices are connected, services become mobile and new business models for mobile broadband are introduced,” Ericsson CEO Hans Vestberg said.

The acquisition is subject to regulatory approvals.

Shares in Ericsson rose by 1.8 percent to 88.80 Swedish kronor ($13.99) in Stockholm.

Source

May 25, 2011

India Director: Low Odds of Non-European IMF Head - Bloomberg

Filed under: Uncategorized, canada — Tags: , , , — Snowman @ 7:15 pm

A rush by European officials to maintain a 65-year lock on the International Monetary Fund’s top job leaves little hope for a candidate from an emerging economy, India’s representative to the institution said.

“I’m not totally pessimistic but I’m not at all optimistic,” Arvind Virmani, who represents India and three other countries on the IMF board, said in an interview yesterday in Washington. “There is no indication which suggests that the result will be any different this time.”

Officials including U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi have said French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde should replace countryman Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who resigned last week following his arrest on sexual assault charges in New York, as the IMF’s chief.

Virmani said the European stance contradicts calls by the Group of 20, which includes the advanced economies plus major emerging ones, for a selection process based on merit rather than geography.

Virmani and IMF representatives for Russia, China, South Africa and Brazil yesterday released a statement urging “abandoning the obsolete unwritten convention” by which the IMF leader is always a European and the head of the World Bank an American. Countries from the European Union hold about 31 percent of the votes at the agency and the U.S. 17 percent.

“If the Fund is to have credibility and legitimacy, its managing director should be selected after broad consultation with the membership,” the directors from the so-called BRICS nations wrote.

Virmani said he is consulting with his counterparts from Brazil, Russia and China about putting a candidate forward.

Advising Friends

“At this point in time if I was advising my own friends, I would have to frankly tell them that ‘the probability of your winning is minuscule and you’re really competing for second place,’” he said. At the same time “there is still perhaps merit in saying that ‘we tried’ even though we knew that it would fail.”

Mexico is nominating its central bank governor, Agustin Carstens, who in an interview yesterday said it was too early to say which countries will back him.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters last week that Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis “speaks for a European candidate.”

Virmani objected to that logic.

“There was no discussion about who’s the best, there were statements, saying that ‘we have to have a European because there’s a European crisis,’” said Virmani, who also represents Bangladesh, Bhutan and Sri Lanka.

Source

May 17, 2011

Protester handcuffed at Chase shareholders meeting

Filed under: canada, marketing — Tags: , , , — Snowman @ 4:36 pm

Shareholders trying to get into JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s annual meeting held Tuesday in this midwestern city were greeted by heavy security and over 400 protesters shouting slogans outside every entrance.

At least one person was handcuffed after a group of about 400 protestors marched up Chase’s property and placed a sign on a raft floating in a pond in the bank’s premises. The sign read: “Foreclosed: Chase sinks our economy.”

Police had each entrance blocked ahead of the meeting, as protesters gathered in the rain and cold chanting slogans such as “Make Banks Pay” and carried signs that said: “Chase gets rich, we lose homes, jobs, services.” At least 20 police cruisers circled the building.

Inside, several shareholders spoke out against the bank’s handling of mortgage foreclosures.

“As a person of faith, my God believes you shouldn’t take advantage of people when they are down,” said Dawn Dannenbring of the community group Illinois People’s Action, addressing CEO Jamie Dimon. “Do you believe in the same God I believe in?”

Dimon answered: “That’s a hard one to answer.”

After another question on foreclosures, Dimon said: “We are doing everything we can to keep people in their homes that should stay in their homes payday loans.”

Chase, headquartered in New York, is holding its annual meeting in Columbus for the first time. Along with all the major banks in the country, Chase has been criticized for its handling of mortgage foreclosures.

The protests were organized by The New Bottom Line, a coalition of clergy and unions, which is pushing for action and legislation around banking practices that hurt troubled homeowners.

Annual shareholder meetings of large banks routinely draw protesters. However, security this year has been especially tight after Wells Fargo & Co.’s annual meeting on May 4 in San Francisco became a rowdy scene after hundreds protested outside. Inside the meeting, a group of shareholders demanded that the bank immediately stop foreclosures and waive principal for troubled home owners. The shareholders were escorted out of the meeting by police. Eight people were arrested for blocking entrances to the building.

Source

April 23, 2011

Request for coal waste information rejected at Ameren meeting

Filed under: canada, news — Tags: , , , — Snowman @ 8:35 am

A shareholder proposal that would have required Ameren Corp. to provide detailed information about coal waste management got broad support at the company’s annual meeting Thursday but ultimately fell short.

The proposal by the Midwest Coalition for Responsible Investment got 46 percent of the votes cast

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