Desolation Row.
Saturday, June 13, 2009
The Bob Dylan classic might be the sound track for Flint, Michigan. Having hit rock bottom, the last option on the table is to bring in the bulldozers and knock much of it down. Endlessly cited factoid: Flint, Michigan was the birthplace of General Motors. (via Drudge)
Posted by
John
at
6/13/2009 06:10:00 AM
Chesapeake Energy.
The value of its shares fell by nearly 60% in 2008. Its chief executive officer's annual compensation was increased to $112.5 million. Okey-dokey!
Posted by
John
at
6/13/2009 05:54:00 AM
Friday, June 12, 2009
E-Publishing
Scribd has a new partner in Simon & Schuster. The Goliaths (Amazon and Google) have to worry about deals like this. They're attractive.
Posted by
John
at
6/12/2009 02:50:00 PM
The Future of News?
Interesting report on how news of a man overboard in the waters around Seattle, Washington came to be known. (via Nieman Labs via Twitter)
Posted by
John
at
6/12/2009 02:46:00 PM
George Soros States the Obvious.
It's called asymmetrical risk and it's the reason AIG is now a ward of the State.
Of course, in AIG's case, it seems likely that assuming so much asymmetrical risk was the strategy all along. The idea being that the fees generated from underwriting vast amounts of CDS would generate vast bonuses. And when it all blew up, as the AIG Team surely knew it would, they could then fob the whole mess off onto the US taxpayer. Which is, of course, exactly what they did.
Posted by
John
at
6/12/2009 07:41:00 AM
Thursday, June 11, 2009
On the Clock.
California's financial meltdown is a mere 50 days away. Tax revenues have fallen sharply. A Federal bail-out appears to be the only solution.
Posted by
John
at
6/11/2009 06:27:00 AM
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Posted by
John
at
6/10/2009 10:27:00 AM
Latvia!
I bet you haven't thought much about Latvia for most of your life. That's about to change. Nouriel explains:
Once an investor darling, Latvia’s booming, double-digit growth earlier this decade was accompanied by massive imbalances - a current-account deficit approaching 25% of GDP (among the world’s widest) and an external debt load that peaked at over 140% of GDP. The correction in these imbalances would have been challenging under any circumstances, but the global financial crisis and consequent drying up of capital inflows have raised the likelihood of a full-blown balance of payments crisis. Latvia’s currency, the Lat (LVL), is pegged to the euro within a ±1% fluctuation band, and such pegs do not tend to survive harsh economic adjustments like that now underway. In countries with flexible exchange rates, domestic demand does not have to bear the full brunt of correction in external imbalances as currency depreciation can shoulder some of the burden.
Latvia’s economy is currently on life support. Although agreement was reached in December on a € 7.5 billion (US$ 10.4 billion) IMF and EU-led rescue package, the government is now forecasting an 18% contraction in growth in 2009, making it one of the world’s fastest shrinking economies. The immediate focus is on whether Latvia will receive the € 1.7 billion (US$ 2.4 billion) installment of its loan package due in late June. The key stumbling block is Latvia’s ability to meet the 5% of GDP budget deficit limit laid out in the loan terms. The problem is not that Latvia’s government has been spending recklessly. Rather, the issue is that the drop-off in Latvian growth has been so precipitous, far beyond that envisioned when the loan agreement was signed just six months ago, that extreme fiscal belt-tightening is now required to meet the loan terms. A 5% GDP contraction was assumed in the original agreement, as compared to the 18% now forecast.
Latvia has been going to agonizing extremes to make the June payout happen, dramatically slashing public sector salaries. More spending cuts are in the works. As Prime Minister Dombrovskis has pointed out, these belt-tightening measures will likely trigger an even deeper recession. Even with the cuts, Latvia’s budget deficit is still expected to come in above the limit, and it remains unclear whether the IMF and European Commission are willing to relax the loan conditions. As RGE Monitor warned in early May: if Latvia does not receive the latest tranche of its IMF-led loan, the country will likely be facing a double whammy of default and devaluation.
Latvia’s economy is currently on life support. Although agreement was reached in December on a € 7.5 billion (US$ 10.4 billion) IMF and EU-led rescue package, the government is now forecasting an 18% contraction in growth in 2009, making it one of the world’s fastest shrinking economies. The immediate focus is on whether Latvia will receive the € 1.7 billion (US$ 2.4 billion) installment of its loan package due in late June. The key stumbling block is Latvia’s ability to meet the 5% of GDP budget deficit limit laid out in the loan terms. The problem is not that Latvia’s government has been spending recklessly. Rather, the issue is that the drop-off in Latvian growth has been so precipitous, far beyond that envisioned when the loan agreement was signed just six months ago, that extreme fiscal belt-tightening is now required to meet the loan terms. A 5% GDP contraction was assumed in the original agreement, as compared to the 18% now forecast.
Latvia has been going to agonizing extremes to make the June payout happen, dramatically slashing public sector salaries. More spending cuts are in the works. As Prime Minister Dombrovskis has pointed out, these belt-tightening measures will likely trigger an even deeper recession. Even with the cuts, Latvia’s budget deficit is still expected to come in above the limit, and it remains unclear whether the IMF and European Commission are willing to relax the loan conditions. As RGE Monitor warned in early May: if Latvia does not receive the latest tranche of its IMF-led loan, the country will likely be facing a double whammy of default and devaluation.
Posted by
John
at
6/10/2009 05:57:00 AM
The Wisdom of Crowds.
News from the Virginia Democratic gubernatorial primary: Former DNC Chairman Terry McAuliffe was defeated by state Senator R. Creigh Deeds by a wide margin.
Posted by
John
at
6/10/2009 05:24:00 AM
Tuesday, June 09, 2009
Monday, June 08, 2009
Building High Quality Cars.
That's how Toyota demolished GM, Chrysler and Ford. They built better, "bulletproof" automobiles. Not a hard concept to grasp. You would think.
Posted by
John
at
6/08/2009 07:08:00 AM
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
