Total Pageviews

Friday, October 22, 2010

Alameda District Proposes Major School Closures

Alameda District Proposes Major School Closures


video - view video -
ALAMEDA: Up To Eight Schools Could Be Shut Down Due To Budget Woes
Updated on: 2010-10-22 03:40:29

Story posted 2010.10.22 at 12:26 AM PDT

KTVU mobile News

Emotions ran high at a meeting in Alameda Thursday evening as parents and teachers voiced their opposition to a plan proposed by the Alameda Unified School District that could shut down up to eight schools in the next two years.

Anywhere from two to eight schools in the district may be shuttered under the new plan. The idea would initially be to close both of the district's middle schools. Some students would remain in elementary schools, while others would be sent to high school campuses.

Parent Tracie Reames was picking up her friend's son from music practice from at Lincoln Middle School Thursday afternoon. Lincoln is on the chopping block along with Wood Middle School.

"I just find it sad," Reames said. "I moved from Michigan to Alameda because the schools are suppose to be so good. The schools are good, but if you don't have the funding, what are you suppose to do?"

Various options were being considered, but the district's most likely scenario would have sixth graders continue in expanded elementary schools while seventh and eighth graders would join either Alameda or Encinal High Schools.

The following year, six elementary schools could close.

Jacqueline Jackson told KTVU she's concerned about the influence of older students on her great-grandson Devion. She was also concerned about teachers being stretched too thin.

The School District said because of cuts in funding and a failure to pass a parcel tax, they've already cut $7 million this year and must cut another $13 million during the next two years to balance the budget.

"It's not that we're here because we think these are the educationally sound things to do," Alameda Schools Superintendent Kirsten Vital said. "They are the realities of districts all over the state of California who are in the same budget crisis that we are in."

About 150 teachers and parents gathered for a public hearing Thursday night at the Ruby Bridges Elementary School to express opposition to the plan.

"Look, you've already said that you have great schools. Why screw with that?" asked Alameda parent Pat Willis. "Why blow up the model here on top of a radical campus footprint alteration? It just doesn't make sense."

The school board will vote on the proposed changes in December. Board members said they hope to get a new parcel tax measure on the ballot in March that, if passed, might allow all of the schools slated for closure to remain open.


Story posted 2010.10.22 at 12:26 AM PDT


© 2004-2010 LSN, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

.....



Víctor Lei

Online Gaming Business Owner Defends 'Internet Sweepstakes'

Online Gaming Business Owner Defends 'Internet Sweepstakes'


video - view video -
OAKLAND: Two Internet Cafes Agree To Close Temporarily After Illegal Gambling Allegations
Updated on: 2010-10-22 04:01:04

Story posted 2010.10.22 at 12:57 AM PDT

On Thursday, the owner of one store-front internet gambling operation defended the legality of her business and let KTVU inside to see what it was all about.

Outside T's Internet Cafe in Antioch features big signs advertising the possibility of big cash winnings. Inside the establishment's room full of computers on Thursday, many people were playing games that -- to some -- might appear to be illegal computer gambling.

For 25 cents a minute, customers to log on to the computers; for $20 they get 13 minutes. They can surf the internet or use the computer to play one of several games that pay out winnings in cash.

One customer who didn't want to be identified spoke to KTVU.

"I've seen people walk out with $500 to $600," said the man. "In just one sitting, a friend of mine put $20 in it and hit $200 in about five minutes."

But the question remained whether such online game is legal.

Outside T's Internet Cafe owner Patricia Simmons said the games were legal and the their rules follow California laws.

"It's a sweepstakes just like McDonald's monopoly. McDonald's Monopoly is done the same way," said Simmons. "When I go buy my large coke at McDonald's and I rip off my tag. If I win a Big Mac, I walk in and get my Big Mac. Same here."

But instead of burgers, prizes at the business come in payouts of up to $1,000 dollars.

This week, KTVU uncovered similar operations in Oakland attached to bingo parlors. One was at Foothill Square and another at Durant Square, where some customers claimed they had lost thousands of dollars.

The Durant location received a cease and desist order last month from the city. On Thursday, city officials met with the owners and said they're investigating whether the establishments were legal.

"We're going to talk to law enforcement agencies, the District Attorney, the State Attorney General, to find out what the rules are here," said Oakland City Attorney's Office spokesman Alex Katz.

The two Oakland businesses have agreed to shut down for a week while officials investigate. These type of gaming operations have been met with regulations and restrictions in other parts of the country.


Story posted 2010.10.22 at 12:57 AM PDT


© 2004-2010 LSN, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

.....



Víctor Lei

Giants, Lincecum Unable To Close Out Phillies

Giants, Lincecum Unable To Close Out Phillies


Page 1 of 2

Story posted 2010.10.21 at 09:07 PM PDT

KTVU mobile News

One rough inning from Tim Lincecum proved to be just enough to prevent the San Francisco Giants from holding a pennant-clinching party on the shores of McCovey Cove.

Now the Giants need to take a cross-country flight and win in Philadelphia if they want to go to the World Series for the fourth time since moving West in 1958.

Lincecum allowed three runs in the third inning with help from an error by Aubrey Huff and the Giants lost Game 5 of the NL championship series 4-2 to the Philadelphia Phillies on Thursday night.

"Obviously we wanted to shut it down here in front of the home crowd," Lincecum said. "You have to take advantage of the opportunities you get. Saturday's another day."

The Giants still lead the best-of-seven series 3-2, but wasted their first opportunity to clinch a postseason series at home since losing 1-0 to the New York Yankees in Game 7 of the 1962 World Series.

They had no chance to recover from that loss, which haunts San Francisco nearly five decades later as the team still looks for its first World Series title in Northern California.

San Francisco will have two chances to recover from this defeat with Jonathan Sanchez set to start Game 6 against Roy Oswalt. Matt Cain, who hasn't allowed a run in two postseason starts, waits in Game 7, if necessary.

The Giants were hoping to avoid another long flight East, preferring to rest up at home for the World Series opener next Wednesday. They already won once in Philadelphia this series, now they have to do it again.

"Winning there or here, we just want to get that win," Lincecum said. "Obviously going there and getting one out of two already was something we wanted to do. Now we have confidence we can go back and take one out of two again."

There was a celebratory atmosphere at the ballpark well before game time, with Giants fans hoping their shaggy-haired ace could close out the two-time defending NL champion Phillies.

Lincecum pitched like the two-time NL Cy Young Award winner he is in his first two postseason starts, shutting out Atlanta in Game 1 of the division series and beating fellow Cy Young winner Roy Halladay in the opener of this round.

He started fast once again, retiring his first six batters. He even had the lead after the Giants managed to get to Halladay for an early run.

But the bad third inning was enough to do spoil Lincecum's night.

Raul Ibanez, back in the lineup after a night off, singled to stop an 0-for-15 slump and get the Phillies started. Lincecum then hit Carlos Ruiz with an 0-2 pitch -- the record-tying fourth time Ruiz has been hit this postseason.

"To get ahead of a batter like that and give him a free base definitely hurts," Lincecum said. "But you have to move on to the next batter."

Halladay laid down a bunt that catcher Buster Posey picked up right near the plate. Posey threw to third, but Pablo Sandoval could not get back to the bag for the force. Halladay did not run, thinking it was a foul ball, and was easily thrown out at first.

"We're inches away from getting a double play," manager Bruce Bochy said. "That's a missed opportunity for us not getting the double play, and it came back to haunt us."

Shane Victorino followed with a hard grounder to first that hit off Huff's glove and into shallow center field, scoring two runs. Placido Polanco followed with an RBI single that made it 3-1.

Chase Utley followed with a single and Lincecum retired the next 11 batters before running into a little more trouble in the seventh. He escaped that jam when pinch-hitter Ross Gload lined into an inning-ending double play with runners on first and third on his final pitch of the night.

Lincecum allowed two earned runs and four hits. He struck out seven, including Ryan Howard three times.




© 2004-2010 LSN, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

.....



Víctor Lei

Opening Of 49ers Stadium To Be Delayed To 2015

Opening Of 49ers Stadium To Be Delayed To 2015


Story posted 2010.10.21 at 10:41 PM PDT

Fans awaiting the opening of a new Santa Clara stadium for the San Francisco 49ers will have to wait an additional year because of a financing setback.

In a statement posted on the 49ers website Wednesday, National Football League and 49ers officials said that until the league and the players' unions reach an agreement on a new contract, the team will not be able to secure financing from the league and other investors for the project.

The anticipated 2014 opening date could be delayed for a year so that a financing plan can be established, officials said.

"The 49ers and the NFL cannot make a major investment in a new stadium at this time," team officials said in the statement. "We are hopeful that an agreement can be reached with the union as soon as possible to facilitate the investment needed to move forward with this project."

In June, voters passed a ballot measure to relocate the team to Santa Clara with a new $937 million, 68,500-seat stadium next to the Great America theme park.

The team and the NFL have agreed to contribute nearly $500 million to the project, and the Santa Clara Stadium Authority and the city of Santa Clara will foot the rest of the bill.

A new stadium in Santa Clara would replace Candlestick Park, located in San Francisco's Hunters Point neighborhood, as the team's home venue.

Addressing the issue at an unrelated event, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, who in June warned that the stadium plan "is built on shaky economic ground," encouraged 49ers president Jed York to consider staying in San Francisco.

"If he's going to remain here for the next five years, why doesn't he just continue the legacy of the DeBartolo family, his uncle, and continue to commit to the city and county of San Francisco?" Newsom said.

He added that the city is "ready with open arms" to start helping with construction of a new stadium.

"We can certainly help them with the financing and corporate sponsorship, and I'm committed fully to do that," he said.


Story posted 2010.10.21 at 10:41 PM PDT


© 2004-2010 LSN, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

.....



Víctor Lei

Thursday, October 21, 2010

(BN) Banks Fight Two-Front War Over Flawed Mortgages With Investors, Homeowners

Bloomberg News, sent from my iPod touch.

Banks Face Two-Front War on Bad Mortgages, Flawed Foreclosures

Oct 21 (Bloomberg) -- Shoddy mortgage lending has led bankers into a two-front war, pitting them against U.S. homeowners challenging the right to foreclose and mortgage-bond investors demanding refunds that could approach $200 billion.

While federal regulators and state attorneys general have focused on flawed foreclosures, a bigger threat may be the cost to buy back faulty loans that banks bundled into securities. JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp., Wells Fargo & Co. and Citigroup Inc. have set aside just $10 billion in reserves to cover future buybacks. Bank of America alone said this week that pending claims jumped 71 percent from a year ago to $12.9 billion of loans.

Investors such as Bill Gross's Pacific Investment Management Co. contend that sellers are obligated to repurchase some mortgages because of misrepresentations such as overstatements of borrowers' income or inflated appraisals. Their case may be bolstered by probes in 50 states into whether banks used documents that were also flawed to conduct foreclosures. Neither dispute is likely to be resolved quickly.

"It's going to be trench warfare with years of lawyering," Christopher Whalen, managing director of Institutional Risk Analytics, said in a telephone interview from White Plains, New York. "The banks can't afford to lose."

The biggest risks for banks may be loans packaged into mortgage-backed securities during the housing bubble, of which $1.3 trillion remain. The aggrieved bondholders include government-controlled firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, bond insurers and private investors.

Fannie, Freddie

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the largest mortgage-finance companies, may be owed as much as $42 billion just on loans they bought directly from lenders, according to Fitch Ratings. On top of that, investors in private mortgage bonds, including them, may collect as much as $179.2 billion, Christopher Gamaitoni, vice president of research at Compass Point Research & Trading LLC in Washington, said in an August report. That brings the total to more than $220 billion.

Pimco, BlackRock Inc., MetLife Inc. and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York are seeking to force Bank of America to repurchase mortgages packaged into $47 billion of bonds by its Countrywide Financial Corp. unit. In a letter to the bank, the group cited alleged failures by Countrywide to service the loans properly.

"It enhances the likelihood of claims coming to fruition," said Gamaitoni, a former senior financial analyst at Fannie Mae.

Repurchase Obligations

Bank of America, which acquired Countrywide, the biggest U.S. mortgage lender, in 2008, faces potential repurchase obligations of $74 billion, according to an August report by Branch Hill Capital, a San Francisco hedge fund, which is betting against the Charlotte, North Carolina-based company's shares. Potential claims consist of $21.8 billion to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, $45 billion for investors in mortgage bonds and $7.2 billion for insurance companies, Branch Hill said.

Bank of America has $4.4 billion in reserves for claims on $12.9 billion of loans, the company reported Oct. 19, and has already resolved claims on more than $14 billion of loans.

The company will "defend our shareholders" by disputing any unjustified demands that it repurchase mortgages, Chief Executive Officer Brian T. Moynihan said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. Most claims "don't have the defects that people allege."

JPMorgan took a $1 billion third-quarter expense to increase its mortgage-repurchase reserves to about $3 billion. Citigroup raised its reserves to $952 million in the third quarter, from $727 million in the previous period. Wells Fargo reduced its repurchase reserves to $1.3 billion, from $1.4 billion in the second quarter.

'Overstated' Issues

"These issues have been somewhat overstated and to a certain extent, misrepresented in the marketplace," Wells Fargo Chief Financial Officer Howard Atkins said yesterday on the bank's third-quarter earnings call. "Our experience continues to be different than some of our peers in that our unresolved repurchase demands outstanding are actually down."

So far, most lenders have resisted large-scale settlements, agreeing only to paybacks after defects are discovered in individual loans. Investors have in some cases been stymied in their efforts to examine individual loan files by mortgage-bond trustees, which administer the securities.

In July, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the government conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, issued 64 subpoenas demanding loan files to assess the possibility of breaches in representations and warranties by securities issuers.

Plaintiff Claims

The most common issues with the mortgages bundled into securities were borrowers who didn't occupy the homes and inflated appraisals that distorted the loan-to-value ratio, according to lawsuits filed by the Federal Home Loan Banks in Seattle and San Francisco. A sampling of 6,533 loans in 12 securitizations by Countrywide found 97 percent failed to conform to underwriting guidelines, according to a lawsuit filed Sept. 29 by Ambac Assurance Corp. in New York state Supreme Court.

Richard M. Bowen, former chief underwriter for Citigroup's consumer-lending group, said he warned his superiors of concerns that some types of loans in securities didn't conform with representations and warranties in 2006 and 2007.

"In mid-2006, I discovered that over 60 percent of these mortgages purchased and sold were defective," Bowen testified on April 7 before the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission created by Congress. "Defective mortgages increased during 2007 to over 80 percent of production."

Analysts' Estimates

Some analysts say that the losses will be manageable by the banks. Last week, Mike Mayo, an analyst at Credit Agricole Securities USA in New York, estimated a cost of $20 billion for repurchases. Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s Richard Ramsden said a worst-case scenario would be $84 billion.

U.S. Representative Brad Miller, a North Carolina Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, says he asked Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner in a recent hearing whether the government included mortgage-repurchase losses in the so- called stress tests of banks conducted last year, because he was expects that they will be growing. Geithner couldn't immediately answer, and Miller assumes they weren't.

"It appears the banks have contractually promised the mortgages met specific requirements, and also it certainly appears not all of them did," Miller said. "In all likelihood a great many of them didn't."

The other front in the battle is the potential cost to banks of improper documentation used in foreclosures. Attorneys general in all 50 states are jointly investigating foreclosure procedures, including the use of so-called robo-signers who didn't check the material they were signing. Litigation costs for such cases may reach $4 billion, while a three-month delay in foreclosures would add an additional $6 billion to industry expenses, FBR Capital Markets estimated in an Oct. 19 report.

Document Errors

Foreclosure document errors also can be used to push for repurchases.

The total amount of loans that the four biggest banks may need to buy back because of flawed paperwork could be "on the order of" about $25 billion, said Paul Jablansky, a senior debt strategist at Stamford, Connecticut-based RBS Securities Inc. With these demands to investigate breaches of contracts, "it's relatively objective, the loan files are either complete or not, and the missing files are either material and adverse, or not."

To settle disputes with homeowners about attempts to foreclose, banks may offer borrowers more generous loan modifications, potentially including principal reductions, said Frank Pallotta, managing partner of Loan Value Group, a mortgage-consulting firm in Rumson, New Jersey.

'Going to Cost Them'

"The potential for owners to challenge lenders on foreclosure improprieties certainly is there," Pallotta said. "Even if it turns out that the banks were right in 99 percent of these foreclosures, the additional diligence on their part, going forward, is going to cost them more money."

The litigation over buybacks, also known as putbacks, can also pit big banks against each other. Last month, Deutsche Bank AG, acting as a trustee, refiled a lawsuit over misrepresented mortgages in $34 billion of Washington Mutual Inc. mortgage securities, with $165 billion in original balances.

The new suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia included JPMorgan as a defendant, after the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said that JPMorgan was wrongly claiming its insurance fund had agreed to cover the liabilities, according to the amended complaint.

JPMorgan Balks

JPMorgan, which bought most of WaMu after it failed in 2008, is balking at turning over loan files to the trustee, according to the suit. "Based on the limited information available to" Deutsche Bank, including evidence of WaMu's shoddy practices found in internal documents released in a Senate investigation, either JPMorgan or the FDIC owes investors $6 billion to $10 billion, according to the complaint.

About 26 percent of mortgages underlying securities without government backing are at least 60 days late, in foreclosure proceedings or already backed by seized homes, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Typical prices for the most-senior bonds tied to so-called Alt-A mortgages, whose borrowers often failed to document their pay or plan to live in properties, fell to as low as 33 cents on the dollar in March 2009, before rallying to 64 cents last week, according to Barclays Capital Inc. data.

Like WaMu, many lenders that originated the mortgages have gone out of business, making litigation more complex, said Kurt Eggert, professor of law at Chapman University in Orange, California. And top executives at the surviving companies, such as the CEOs of Bank of America and Citigroup, have been replaced.

"It's troubling that the people who caused the problem have walked away and left everybody else to fight over who gets stuck with the tab," Eggert said in a telephone interview. "It's like a massive game of dine and dash."

To contact the reporters on this story: John Gittelsohn in New York at johngitt@bloomberg.net Jody Shenn in New York at 2380 or jshenn@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Kara Wetzel at kwetzel@bloomberg.net .

Find out more about Bloomberg for iPhone: http://m.bloomberg.com/iphone/


Víctor Lei

(BN) Stocks, U.S. Index Futures Advance on Earnings, Economy; Euro Strengthens

Bloomberg News, sent from my iPod touch.

Stocks, U.S. Futures Rise on Earnings, Economy; Euro Advances

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. index futures and stocks in Europe rose after earnings from Caterpillar Inc., EBay Inc. and Nokia Oyj beat analysts' estimates and European manufacturing grew. The euro strengthened and rice gained for an eighth day.

Standard & Poor's 500 Index futures climbed 0.5 percent at 8:10 a.m. in New York. Caterpillar added 1.5 percent and EBay rallied 6.9 percent in pre-market trading. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose 0.5 percent. The euro gained against all but two of its 16 most-traded peers. The pound slumped to a six-month low versus the euro. Rice futures increased 1.1 percent in Chicago.

Caterpillar raised its outlook for earnings, EBay forecast higher revenue and Nokia's sales topped estimates as 75 percent of the companies in the MSCI World Index that have reported per- share income since Oct. 7 beat estimates. European manufacturing unexpectedly grew this month, Markit Economics said today. China's economy expanded 9.6 percent in the third quarter, increasing pressure on the country to let the yuan gain as Group of 20 officials prepared to meet in Seoul tomorrow to discuss currencies.

"Generally the numbers are surprising positively and are being taken well by the market," said London-based Andrea Williams, who helps manage about $1.1 billion at Royal London Asset Management.

The gain in U.S. futures indicated the S&P 500 may rise for a second day. The benchmark gauge rose 1.1 percent yesterday after the Federal Reserve said in its Beige Book business survey that the economy grew at a "modest pace" in September, while results at Boeing Co. and Yahoo! Inc. surpassed estimates. Forty-six S&P 500 companies are due to report earnings today.

Caterpillar, UPS

Caterpillar, the world's largest maker of construction and mining equipment, had third-quarter earnings of $1.22 a share, exceeding the $1.09 average analyst estimate in a Bloomberg survey. United Parcel Service Inc. reported a better-than- estimated adjusted earnings of 93 cents a share and raised the full-year outlook.

The Conference Board's gauge of the outlook for the next three to six months probably rose 0.3 percent, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed before a report due at 10 a.m. in New York. A separate release may show the number of Americans filing applications for jobless claims fell last week.

Three stocks rose for every one that fell in Europe's Stoxx 600. Nokia, the world's biggest maker of mobile phones, jumped 7.2 percent. Fiat SpA, Italy's largest manufacturer, gained 3.7 percent after increasing its outlook for full-year earnings. Pernod-Ricard SA, the maker of Chivas Regal whiskey and Absolut vodka, rallied 6.4 percent after reporting sales growth that beat estimates.

Danone, Credit Suisse

Danone SA, the world's largest maker of yoghurt, gained 4.1 percent after saying third-quarter sales rose 15 percent as it increased prices. Credit Suisse Group AG, Switzerland's third- largest bank, fell 2.2 percent after results missed analysts' projections.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose 0.7 percent, the most in five days, while the MSCI China Index of Hong Kong-traded shares advanced 0.9 percent. Russia's Micex Index increased 2.1 percent, the most among benchmark indexes in major emerging markets, after the government said it plans to raise $59 billion through asset sales in the next five years to balance the budget. India's Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index added 2 percent.

The euro rose 0.4 percent to $1.4024 and appreciated 0.3 percent to 113.67 yen. An index of euro-region manufacturing industries rose more than predicted this month, data from Markit Economics showed today.

Pound Weakens

Sterling depreciated against all 16 of its most-traded peers, falling 1 percent to 88.98 pence per euro. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne said the Bank of England has freedom to use monetary-policy tools if the squeeze in fiscal policy hurts domestic demand. He also defended his deficit- cutting plan, saying to the BBC that "if we don't take this path, then economic ruin lies ahead." The pound extended declines as a report showed U.K. retail sales unexpectedly dropped in September for a second month.

The extra yield, or spread, that investors demand to hold Spanish 10-year bonds instead of similar-maturity benchmark German bunds rose six basis points to 1.68 percentage points after demand fell at a sale by the Iberian nation of 2025 bonds. Investors bid for 1.44 times the amount of Spanish securities offered, compared with a bid-to-cover ratio of 2.57 the last time the debt was sold on July 15.

Greek Bonds

The Greek-German spread widened 16 basis points to 6.77 percentage points, the most since Oct. 12, while the Portuguese- German 10-year gap increased six basis points to 3.35 percentage points. The Irish 10-year-bund spread rose six basis points to 3.93 percentage points. The yield on the German bund was little changed at 2.44 percent.

Credit-default swaps insuring Ireland's government bonds fell five basis points to 413, contracts on Portugal's debt dropped six basis points to 337, Italy decreased two basis points to 167 and Greece lost two basis points to 665, according to data provider CMA. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of default swaps on 15 governments was unchanged at 139.

Rice for January delivery rose on concern that stronger demand and crop losses may curb global supply. Lead for delivery in three months gained as much as 2.4 percent to $2,508 a metric tons, the highest intraday level since January, while zinc added 2.6 percent, the most since April. Crude oil fell 0.2 percent to $82.40 a barrel in New York trading.

To contact the reporter on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Sillitoe in London at psillitoe@bloomberg.net

Find out more about Bloomberg for iPhone: http://m.bloomberg.com/iphone/


Víctor Lei

(BN) Google 2.4% Rate Shows How $60 Billion U.S. Revenue Lost to Tax Loopholes

Bloomberg News, sent from my iPod touch.

Google 2.4% Rate Shows How $60 Billion Is Lost to Tax Loopholes

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Google Inc. cut its taxes by $3.1 billion in the last three years using a technique that moves most of its foreign profits through Ireland and the Netherlands to Bermuda.

Google's income shifting -- involving strategies known to lawyers as the "Double Irish" and the "Dutch Sandwich" -- helped reduce its overseas tax rate to 2.4 percent, the lowest of the top five U.S. technology companies by market capitalization, according to regulatory filings in six countries.

"It's remarkable that Google's effective rate is that low," said Martin A. Sullivan, a tax economist who formerly worked for the U.S. Treasury Department. "We know this company operates throughout the world mostly in high-tax countries where the average corporate rate is well over 20 percent."

The U.S. corporate income-tax rate is 35 percent. In the U.K., Google's second-biggest market by revenue, it's 28 percent.

Google, the owner of the world's most popular search engine, uses a strategy that has gained favor among such companies as Facebook Inc. and Microsoft Corp. The method takes advantage of Irish tax law to legally shuttle profits into and out of subsidiaries there, largely escaping the country's 12.5 percent income tax. (See an interactive graphic on Google's tax strategy here.)

The earnings wind up in island havens that levy no corporate income taxes at all. Companies that use the Double Irish arrangement avoid taxes at home and abroad as the U.S. government struggles to close a projected $1.4 trillion budget gap and European Union countries face a collective projected deficit of 868 billion euros.

Countless Companies

Google, the third-largest U.S. technology company by market capitalization, hasn't been accused of breaking tax laws. "Google's practices are very similar to those at countless other global companies operating across a wide range of industries," said Jane Penner, a spokeswoman for the Mountain View, California-based company. Penner declined to address the particulars of its tax strategies.

Facebook, the world's biggest social network, is preparing a structure similar to Google's that will send earnings from Ireland to the Cayman Islands, according to the company's filings in Ireland and the Caymans and to a person familiar with its plans. A spokesman for the Palo Alto, California-based company declined to comment.

Transfer Pricing

The tactics of Google and Facebook depend on "transfer pricing," paper transactions among corporate subsidiaries that allow for allocating income to tax havens while attributing expenses to higher-tax countries. Such income shifting costs the U.S. government as much as $60 billion in annual revenue, according to Kimberly A. Clausing, an economics professor at Reed College in Portland, Oregon.

U.S. Representative Dave Camp of Michigan, the ranking Republican on the House Ways and Means Committee, and other politicians say the 35 percent U.S. statutory rate is too high relative to foreign countries. International income-shifting, which helped cut Google's overall effective tax rate to 22.2 percent last year, shows one way that loopholes undermine that top U.S. rate.

Two thousand U.S. companies paid a median effective cash rate of 28.3 percent in federal, state and foreign income taxes in a 2005 study by academics at the University of Michigan and the University of North Carolina. The combined national-local statutory rate is 34.4 percent in France, 30.2 percent in Germany and 39.5 percent in Japan, according to the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

The Double Irish

As a strategy for limiting taxes, the Double Irish method is "very common at the moment, particularly with companies with intellectual property," said Richard Murphy, director of U.K.- based Tax Research LLP. Murphy, who has worked on similar transactions, estimates that hundreds of multinationals use some version of the method.

The high corporate tax rate in the U.S. motivates companies to move activities and related income to lower-tax countries, said Irving H. Plotkin, a senior managing director at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP's national tax practice in Boston. He delivered a presentation in Washington, D.C. this year titled "Transfer Pricing is Not a Four Letter Word."

"A company's obligation to its shareholders is to try to minimize its taxes and all costs, but to do so legally," Plotkin said in an interview.

Boosting Earnings

Google's transfer pricing contributed to international tax benefits that boosted its earnings by 26 percent last year, company filings show. Based on a rough analysis, if the company paid taxes at the 35 percent rate on all its earnings, its share price might be reduced by about $100, said Clayton Moran, an analyst at Benchmark Co. in Boca Raton, Florida. He recommends buying Google stock, which closed yesterday at $607.98.

The company, which tells employees "don't be evil" in its code of conduct, has cut its effective tax rate abroad more than its peers in the technology sector: Apple Inc., the maker of the iPhone; Microsoft, the largest software company; International Business Machines Corp., the biggest computer-services provider; and Oracle Corp., the second-biggest software company. Those companies reported rates that ranged between 4.5 percent and 25.8 percent for 2007 through 2009.

Google is "flying a banner of doing no evil, and then they're perpetrating evil under our noses," said Abraham J. Briloff, a professor emeritus of accounting at Baruch College in New York who has examined Google's tax disclosures.

"Who is it that paid for the underlying concept on which they built these billions of dollars of revenues?" Briloff said. "It was paid for by the United States citizenry."

Taxpayer Funding

The U.S. National Science Foundation funded the mid-1990s research at Stanford University that helped lead to Google's creation. Taxpayers also paid for a scholarship for the company's cofounder, Sergey Brin, while he worked on that research. Google now has a stock market value of $194.2 billion.

Google's annual reports from 2007 to 2009 ascribe a cumulative $3.1 billion tax savings to the "foreign rate differential." Such entries typically describe how much tax U.S. companies save from profits earned overseas.

In February, the Obama administration proposed measures to curb shifting profits offshore, part of a package intended to raise $12 billion a year over the coming decade. While the key proposals largely haven't advanced in Congress, the IRS said in April it would devote additional agents and lawyers to focus on five large transfer pricing arrangements.

Arm's Length

Income shifting commonly begins when companies like Google sell or license the foreign rights to intellectual property developed in the U.S. to a subsidiary in a low-tax country. That means foreign profits based on the technology get attributed to the offshore unit, not the parent. Under U.S. tax rules, subsidiaries must pay "arm's length" prices for the rights -- or the amount an unrelated company would.

Because the payments contribute to taxable income, the parent company has an incentive to set them as low as possible. Cutting the foreign subsidiary's expenses effectively shifts profits overseas.

After three years of negotiations, Google received approval from the IRS in 2006 for its transfer pricing arrangement, according to filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The IRS gave its consent in a secret pact known as an advanced pricing agreement. Google wouldn't discuss the price set under the arrangement, which licensed the rights to its search and advertising technology and other intangible property for Europe, the Middle East and Africa to a unit called Google Ireland Holdings, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Dublin Office

That licensee in turn owns Google Ireland Limited, which employs almost 2,000 people in a silvery glass office building in central Dublin, a block from the city's Grand Canal. The Dublin subsidiary sells advertising globally and was credited by Google with 88 percent of its $12.5 billion in non-U.S. sales in 2009.

Allocating the revenue to Ireland helps Google avoid income taxes in the U.S., where most of its technology was developed. The arrangement also reduces the company's liabilities in relatively high-tax European countries where many of its customers are located.

The profits don't stay with the Dublin subsidiary, which reported pretax income of less than 1 percent of sales in 2008, according to Irish records. That's largely because it paid $5.4 billion in royalties to Google Ireland Holdings, which has its "effective centre of management" in Bermuda, according to company filings.

Law Firm Directors

This Bermuda-managed entity is owned by a pair of Google subsidiaries that list as their directors two attorneys and a manager at Conyers Dill & Pearman, a Hamilton, Bermuda law firm.

Tax planners call such an arrangement a Double Irish because it relies on two Irish companies. One pays royalties to use intellectual property, generating expenses that reduce Irish taxable income. The second collects the royalties in a tax haven like Bermuda, avoiding Irish taxes.

To steer clear of an Irish withholding tax, payments from Google's Dublin unit don't go directly to Bermuda. A brief detour to the Netherlands avoids that liability, because Irish tax law exempts certain royalties to companies in other EU- member nations. The fees first go to a Dutch unit, Google Netherlands Holdings B.V., which pays out about 99.8 percent of what it collects to the Bermuda entity, company filings show. The Amsterdam-based subsidiary lists no employees.

The Dutch Sandwich

Inserting the Netherlands stopover between two other units gives rise to the "Dutch Sandwich" nickname.

"The sandwich leaves no tax behind to taste," said Murphy of Tax Research LLP.

Microsoft, based in Redmond, Washington, has also used a Double Irish structure, according to company filings overseas. Forest Laboratories Inc., maker of the antidepressant Lexapro, does as well, Bloomberg News reported in May. The New York-based drug manufacturer claims that most of its profits are earned overseas even though its sales are almost entirely in the U.S. Forest later disclosed that its transfer pricing was being audited by the IRS.

Since the 1960s, Ireland has pursued a strategy of offering tax incentives to attract multinationals. A lesser-appreciated aspect of Ireland's appeal is that it allows companies to shift income out of the country with minimal tax consequences, said Jim Stewart, a senior lecturer in finance at Trinity College's school of business in Dublin.

Getting Profits Out

"You accumulate profits within Ireland, but then you get them out of the country relatively easily," Stewart said. "And you do it by using Bermuda."

Eoin Dorgan, a spokesman for the Irish Department of Finance, declined to comment on Google's strategies specifically. "Ireland always seeks to ensure that the profits charged in Ireland fully reflect the functions, assets and risks located here by multinational groups," he said.

Once Google's non-U.S. profits hit Bermuda, they become difficult to track. The subsidiary managed there changed its legal form of organization in 2006 to become a so-called unlimited liability company. Under Irish rules, that means it's not required to disclose such financial information as income statements or balance sheets.

"Sticking an unlimited company in the group structure has become more common in Ireland, largely to prevent disclosure," Stewart said.

Deferred Indefinitely

Technically, multinationals that shift profits overseas are deferring U.S. income taxes, not avoiding them permanently. The deferral lasts until companies decide to bring the earnings back to the U.S. In practice, they rarely repatriate significant portions, thus avoiding the taxes indefinitely, said Michelle Hanlon, an accounting professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

U.S. policy makers, meanwhile, have taken halting steps to address concerns about transfer pricing. In 2009, the Treasury Department proposed levying taxes on certain payments between U.S. companies' foreign subsidiaries.

Treasury officials, who estimated the policy change would raise $86.5 billion in new revenue over the next decade, dropped it after Congress and Treasury were lobbied by companies, including manufacturing and media conglomerate General Electric Co., health-product maker Johnson & Johnson and coffee giant Starbucks Corp., according to federal disclosures compiled by the non-profit Center for Responsive Politics.

Administration Concerned

While the administration "remains concerned" about potential abuses, officials decided "to defer consideration of how to reform those rules until they can be studied more broadly," said Sandra Salstrom, a Treasury spokeswoman. The White House still proposes to tax excessive profits of offshore subsidiaries as a curb on income shifting, she said.

The rules for transfer pricing should be replaced with a system that allocates profits among countries the way most U.S. states with a corporate income tax do -- based on such aspects as sales or number of employees in each jurisdiction, said Reuven S. Avi-Yonah, director of the international tax program at the University of Michigan Law School.

"The system is broken and I think it needs to be scrapped," said Avi-Yonah, also a special counsel at law firm Steptoe & Johnson LLP in Washington D.C. "Companies are getting away with murder."

See additional stories about corporate tax avoidance:

To contact the reporter on this story: Jesse Drucker in New York at jdrucker4@bloomberg.net .

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Gary Putka at gputka@bloomberg.net .

Find out more about Bloomberg for iPhone: http://m.bloomberg.com/iphone/


Víctor Lei

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Big Event Coming Up For C3 Editors Group!

Hey everyone! Are you interested in working in audio, video or broadcasting industries? Do you want to know the tips and tricks about getting a good internship or how to start your career in broadcasting, video or audio? Then you should come to the upcoming public meeting held by the C3 Editors Group, a special interest group for students and teachers at City College of San Francisco's Broadcast Media Department! C3 Editors Group will hold their very first public meeting for this semester on this Friday the 22nd, from 6-9 pm, inside the room 140 of the CCSF Ocean Campus' new Multi-Use Building. (Location Map link) This public meeting should be a good event for everyone who is serious to get a good internship or job in broadcasting, audio or video in the SF Bay Area, and you will certainly get a load of good ideas and tips from the people who are currently working in the relevant fields.

Guest speakers for this public meeting include:
Nick Smith (ABC 7 / KGO-TV Correspondent)
Zack Hayden (Link-TV Editor and former CCSF student)
Francine Podenski (CCSF BEMA Department Chair and Internship Instructor)

with special guest Fabrizio Dal Bello (Sound engineer and BEMA student). Fab will share his working experience as sound engineer and his learning experience at the CCSF BEMA Department. Oh! Wait! Fab is not only our special guest for this event, he is also our guest performer. Fab will sing a song for everyone, and you will not be disappointed!

What are you waiting for? RSVP now by email: c3editors@gmail.com! Hurry! Spaces are limited!
Follow C3 Editors via Facebook: http://tinyurl.com/C3editorsFB, or search "C3Editors".

Thanks everyone! Hope to see you there!

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

City Tells Appeals Court Prop 8 Is 'Peculiarly Irrational'

City Tells Appeals Court Prop 8 Is 'Peculiarly Irrational'


Story posted 2010.10.18 at 09:25 PM PDT

The city of San Francisco told a federal appeals court Monday that "Proposition 8 is peculiarly irrational under California law."

Lawyers for the city made the argument in a brief asking the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to uphold an August ruling in which U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker struck down California's ban on same-sex marriage.

Supporters of the ban, enacted by state voters as Proposition 8 in 2008, have appealed to the 9th Circuit. The appeals court will hear arguments in San Francisco in early December and in the meantime has stayed Walker's ruling.

In an appeal brief filed in September, Proposition 8 sponsors argued the measure was justified to promote "responsible procreation and child-rearing" by biological parents within heterosexual marriages.

But that reasoning makes no sense because California law treats gay and lesbian parents the same as heterosexual parents and makes no distinction in the rights and responsibilities of biological and adoptive parents, city lawyers argued Monday.

"There is no suggestion in any of the California statutes or cases governing parentage that same-sex couples are any less fit to be parents than opposite-sex couples or any policy preference for opposite-gendered parenting," city lawyers wrote.

Since Proposition 8 didn't change any of those laws, the city lawyers argued, it "is not rationally related to legitimate government interests" in California.

"When you look at California laws governing families and parenting, the hypothetical reasons proponents offer to justify Proposition 8 just don't add up," city attorney Dennis Herrera said.

The city lawyers said they also support two broader arguments scheduled to be made in a separate brief due by midnight tonight from the two same-sex couples who filed the lawsuit decided by Walker.

Yusef Robb, a spokesman for the two couples' lawyers, said the plaintiffs' brief would be filed later tonight.

Those arguments are that Proposition 8 violates the federal constitutional rights of equal treatment and due process. Walker based his Aug. 4 decision on his conclusion that Proposition 8 violated those two constitutional guarantees.

But the city's argument that Proposition 8 is irrational under California law would offer the appeals court a narrower ground for upholding Proposition 8, in a ruling that might be restricted to California's situation.

Proposition 8 supporters have until Nov. 1 to file a reply to today's briefs.

A three-judge panel of the appeals court will hear the case during the week of Dec. 6. The date will be announced about six weeks beforehand, and the names of the judges will be announced about 10 days in advance.

Proposition 8, an amendment to the California Constitution, provides that "only marriage between a man and a woman is recognized or valid in California."


Story posted 2010.10.18 at 09:25 PM PDT


© 2004-2010 LSN, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

.....



Víctor Lei

Internet Cafes May Be Fronts For Illegal Gambling

Internet Cafes May Be Fronts For Illegal Gambling


video - view video -
OAKLAND: East Bay Businesses Accused Of Running Illegal Gambling Operations
Updated on: 2010-10-19 01:51:47

Story posted 2010.10.18 at 10:46 PM PDT

KTVU mobile News

Critics were leveling serious charges Monday night against certain businesses around the East Bay that appear to be nondescript internet cafes but – according to detractors – are actually fronts for illegal internet gambling.

The critics claimed the illegal activity is taking place right under the noses of authorities.

When KTVU investigated, it was difficult to determine if the so-called internet cafes were fronts for illegal gambling because none of the people seen entering and leaving one establishment in question wanted to talk about it.

At Durant Square on International Boulevard in Oakland, several people could be seen sitting in front of monitors playing games. Those coming out wouldn't discuss what kind of games they were playing.

Dee King runs a small non-profit charity in Richmond and relies on bingo money to fund her services. She said small charities were losing money to some larger bingo halls which allegedly run illegal internet gambling on the side.

"They call them internet cafes," explained King. "They have a variety of names for them."

Richard Poe said he became aware of the problem as a property owner in Richmond. He showed KTVU a cease and desist order from the city of Oakland against the Durant Square operation.

The order was dated almost three weeks ago, but the operation appears to be going strong regardless.

"They're in Vallejo, they're in Concord and they have two very large ones here in Richmond," said Poe.

KTVU visited a second location located at Foothill Square on Oakland's Macarthur Boulevard Monday, but security asked the camera crew to leave.

There have been busts of such internet gambling operations in San Diego and Stockton. One woman at Durant Square said she hadn't considered whether the games were illegal until she was asked.

"It looks like a slot machine," the woman conceded.

A representative from Durant Square stayed behind a door, but told KTVU she didn't know if the tenant was breaking the law.

The issue was expected to go in front of the Oakland City Council Tuesday night. The city attorney's office said it will also be on hand to hear the complaints and possibly take action.


Story posted 2010.10.18 at 10:46 PM PDT


© 2004-2010 LSN, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

.....



Víctor Lei

(BN) Stocks Decline on Apple's Profit Outlook, China Rates; IBM, BofA Retreat

Bloomberg News, sent from my iPod touch.

Stocks, Oil Fall on China Rates, Apple Outlook; Dollar Rallies

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Stock slid, dragging the MSCI World Index down from a six-month high, as China raised interest rates and Apple Inc.'s profit forecast missed analyst estimates. The dollar rallied after Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said the U.S. will preserve confidence in a strong currency.

The MSCI gauge of equities in developed nations sank 1.4 percent, the most in almost two months, as of 9:37 a.m. in New York. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index slid 1.2 percent and the Nasdaq-100 Index, in which Apple has a 21 percent weighting, sank 1.6 percent. The Dollar Index, which tracks the currency against those of six trading partners, gained 1.5 percent for the biggest advance since August. Oil fell 2.8 percent to $80.79 a barrel in New York and copper lost 2.6 percent in London.

Technology companies were the biggest drag on the S&P 500 as Apple, the world's third-largest company, reported iPad sales that missed some analysts' estimates and International Business Machines Corp. posted a drop in new contracts. China's central bank raised one-year lending and deposit rates by 25 basis points. Geithner said yesterday the U.S. "will not engage" in currency devaluation.

"Technology is supposed to be one of the best things that the U.S. exports and the iPad is a major product, so if you see sales disappointing, the outlook for the economy is reduced," said Steve Tse, a Hong Kong-based research manager at BEA Union Investment Management, which oversees $4.5 billion.

Apple, IBM

Apple lost as much as 5.7 percent, its steepest decline since May, and IBM slid 4.3 percent. Financial shares retreated after Bank of America Corp. reported a $7.3 billion loss tied to the cost of new federal rules on consumer accounts and credit cards. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. gained 1.4 percent after reporting third-quarter earnings per share of $2.98, more than the average estimate of $2.29 in a Bloomberg survey.

U.S. equities retreated even after a government report today showed builders unexpectedly began work on more homes in September, a sign the real estate market is stabilizing at depressed levels.

Commodity, energy and technology stocks led declines in Europe's Stoxx 600, with Rio Tinto Group and Total SA losing more than 1.5 percent. The gauge for banks rallied 1.1 percent, with Deutsche Bank AG and Banco Santander SA gaining at least 2 percent.

The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision said it agreed on details of minimum liquidity requirements for banks in a report to the Group of 20 nations.

SKF, Porsche

SKF AB, the world's biggest maker of ball bearings, jumped 10 percent as earnings topped estimates. Porsche SE dropped 7.2 percent as Volkswagen AG Chief Executive Officer Martin Winterkorn said the merger of the two companies may have to put on hold until risks from U.S. lawsuits and German tax issues are resolved. German investor confidence fell to a 21-month low in October as weaker global growth and a stronger euro dimmed the export outlook, a report today showed.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index declined for a third day, losing 0.6 percent, as technology companies including Samsung Electronics Co. and Infosys Technologies Ltd. retreated. The Bloomberg-JPMorgan Asia Dollar Index fell 0.5 percent, heading for the steepest drop since Aug. 11, after the World Bank lowered its growth forecast for east Asia and urged the region's policy makers to ward off asset bubbles.

Mol Nyrt., Hungary's largest refiner, climbed the most in two weeks, driving the benchmark BUX Index 1.2 percent higher, after Chief Executive Officer Zsolt Hernadi said in a radio interview the company may pay less tax than analysts estimated.

No Devaluation

The Dollar Index, used by IntercontinentalExchange Inc. to measure the greenback against the pound, yen, euro, Swedish krona, Swiss franc and Canadian dollar, climbed for the second time in the past three days.

"The United States of America and no country around the world can devalue its way to prosperity, to competitiveness," Geithner said yesterday in a panel discussion in Palo Alto, California. "It is not a viable, feasible strategy and we will not engage in it." He also said the U.S. will "work very hard to make sure that we preserve confidence in a strong dollar."

Brazil stepped up efforts to curb gains in the real by raising inflow taxes and said it may be forced to take additional measures as Finance Minister Guido Mantega called for an end to the worldwide "currency war." The nation, Latin America's largest economy, raised the so-called IOF tax on foreigners' investments in fixed-income securities to 6 percent from 4 percent. It also boosted the levy on money brought into the country to make margin deposits for transactions in the futures market to 6 percent from 0.38 percent.

Pound Weakens

The pound weakened against the dollar before the Bank of England releases minutes tomorrow from its latest meeting, while Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne details reductions in government spending plans to tackle the nation's budget deficit. Sterling slipped 0.9 percent to $1.5739.

German bonds fell, with the yield on the 10-year bund rising four basis points to 2.42 percent. Spain sold 4.18 billion euros ($5.82 billion) of 12-month bills at an average yield of 1.842 percent today, compared with 1.908 percent at the last auction on Sept. 21. It sold 2.22 billion euros of 18-month bills at a yield of 2.009 percent, compared with 2.146 percent in September, the Bank of Spain said.

Greece auctioned 1.17 billion euros of 13-week securities at a yield of 3.75 percent, down from 3.98 percent at a sale on Sept. 21.

Credit-default swaps insuring European junk-rated bonds declined, signaling an improvement in investor perceptions of credit quality, with the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index declining 8.6 basis points to 464.6, according to Markit Group Ltd.

To contact the reporter on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Sillitoe in London at psillitoe@bloomberg.net

Find out more about Bloomberg for iPhone: http://m.bloomberg.com/iphone/


Víctor Lei

(BN) China Central Bank Unexpectedly Raises Key Rate for First Time Since 2007

Bloomberg News, sent from my iPod touch.

China Raises Benchmark Rates for First Time Since 2007

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) -- China unexpectedly raised its benchmark lending and deposit rates for the first time since 2007 ahead of data that may show inflation accelerated to the fastest pace in almost two years.

The one-year lending rate will increase to 5.56 percent from 5.31 percent, effective tomorrow, the People's Bank of China said on its website today. The deposit rate will increase to 2.5 percent from 2.25 percent.

Data to be released in Beijing on Oct. 21 may show that inflation climbed to 3.6 percent in September even as economic growth moderated, median forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey show. Higher interest rates may encourage inflows of speculative capital from abroad, complicating management of the fastest- growing major economy as the government seeks to prevent real- estate bubbles.

The central bank "wants to stay ahead of the inflation curve," said David Cohen, a Singapore-based economist at Action Economics. "China's economy seems to be getting back on track and the inflation rate seems to be creeping up." He expects another rate increase before year-end.

Yuan forwards were little changed. The 12-month non-deliverable contract traded at 6.4425 at 7:47 p.m. local time in Hong Kong, compared with 6.4358 before the announcement. That indicates traders are betting on a 3.2 percent appreciation against the dollar in the coming 12 months.

Bull Market

The government may announce that gross domestic product grew 9.5 percent in the third quarter, according to a Bloomberg News survey of 25 economists. The Shanghai Composite Index is in a so-called bull market, up 27 percent from a low in July. Officials this month extended curbs on property, including tougher down-payment requirements and more restrictions on home loans, in a clampdown after record price gains this year.

China last raised benchmark rates in December 2007, with central bank Deputy Governor Zhu Min saying on March 25 that rates are a "heavy-duty weapon" and alternative measures were working well.

Today's move may be because the economic data due this week is "too strong" for the government, said Dariusz Kowalczyk, a Hong Kong-based economist and strategist for Credit Agricole CIB. He said policy makers will be under less pressure to strengthen the yuan "given that inflation is now tackled through rates."

The size of the increase -- 25 basis points, rather than 27 -- may suggest that the central bank is shifting towards following the conventions of international counterparts, Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. said in an e-mail.

Credit Boom

Peter Redward, an analyst at Barclays Plc in Singapore, said the increase may reflect growing concern that negative real interest rates, where inflation outstrips returns on savings, will push more money into asset markets.

Chinese officials are grappling with the risk created by last year's record 9.59 trillion yuan ($1.4 trillion) credit boom that fueled the nation's comeback from the global recession. Inflows of capital contributed to a record gain in the nation's foreign-exchange reserves last quarter, highlighting the risk of excess liquidity fueling price gains.

Today's move comes after the central bank also separately drained money from the financial system. Officials raised the reserve requirements for six banks for a two-month period, three people with knowledge of the matter said last week.

China's property prices in 70 cities rose 9.1 percent in September from a year earlier, according to the statistics bureau.

Property Crackdown

China will speed up the introduction of a trial property tax in some cities and then expand the levy to the whole country, the government said Sept. 29, without giving a timetable. The state also told commercial banks to stop offering loans to buyers of third homes and extended a 30 percent down payment requirement to all first-home buyers.

China follows Asian economies including South Korea, Taiwan, Malaysia and India in raising borrowing costs from crisis levels. In a Bloomberg News survey after August economic data, most economists forecast China's lending and deposit rates to remain unchanged this year.

Today's move contrasts with central Bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan indicating this month that current "quantitative tools" such as bill sales and reserve requirements were sufficient in containing inflation expectations.

To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Li Yanping in Beijing at yli16@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Chris Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net

Find out more about Bloomberg for iPhone: http://m.bloomberg.com/iphone/


Víctor Lei

Monday, October 18, 2010

(BN) U.S. Futures Drop, Stocks Fluctuate; Dollar Strengthens on Risk Avoidance

Bloomberg News, sent from my iPod touch.

Treasuries, Dollar, Yen Gain; U.S. Index Futures Trim Losses

Oct. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Treasuries rebounded from the biggest weekly drop this year amid speculation the Federal Reserve will buy more securities, while the dollar rallied as currency traders bet the purchases will be gradual. U.S. futures trimmed losses as Citigroup Inc.'s earnings topped estimates.

The advance in Treasuries sent the 10-year yield down three basis points to 2.53 percent at 9:11 a.m. in New York. The Dollar Index climbed as much as 0.8 percent, the biggest gain since Sept. 15, while the yen appreciated against all 16 of its most-traded counterparts. Copper fell for the first time in a week in London. Standard & Poor's 500 Index futures lost 0.2 percent after tumbling 0.9 percent earlier. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose 0.2 percent.

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Charles Evans said Oct. 16 that the U.S. is in a "liquidity trap" and needs "much more" monetary accommodation. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled last week more so-called quantitative easing is likely. International Business Machines Corp. and Apple Inc. are due to report earnings today.

"There is little more benefit to be gained at this juncture talking up the prospects of more quantitative easing," Greg Gibbs, a currency strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in Sydney, wrote in a report today. "Risk assets are going to struggle to push forward from here."

Financial-services companies led gains in Europe's Stoxx 600. BlueBay Asset Management Plc, the London based manager of fixed-income funds, jumped 30 percent after agreeing to be bought by Royal Bank of Canada. Royal Philips Electronics NV, the world's largest lighting company, slid 4.3 percent after saying it was "cautious" on its sales outlook because the economic climate is "uncertain" and consumer sentiment "fragile."

BHP, Rio Venture

BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group sank 1.2 percent and 1.6 percent respectively in London as the mining companies abandoned a plan to create the world's largest iron-ore exporter after regulators from Europe to Asia said it would limit competition. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped 0.6 percent.

The decline in U.S. equity futures indicated the S&P 500 will pare two straight weeks of gains.

Citigroup Inc. reported profit of 7 cents a share, compared with 5 cents a share forecast by analysts in a Bloomberg survey. The stock rose 0.8 percent in pre-market trading. Halliburton Co. reported net income jumped to 60 cents a share in the third quarter from 29 cents a year earlier. Twelve members of the 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average are due to post earnings this week.

Of the 24 companies in the S&P 500 that have announced results since Oct. 7, 18 have beaten analyst estimates for per- share income, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Emerging Markets

The MSCI gauge of 21 developing countries lost 1.1 percent, heading for the biggest drop since August. Investors should start to "scale back" their holdings of emerging market stocks after this year's rally lifted valuations and the economic outlook worsened, Jonathan Garner, the chief Asia and emerging- market strategist at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong, wrote in a report today. The Bloomberg-JPMorgan Asia Dollar Index slipped 0.3 percent on concern regional central banks will seek to counter currency appreciation to protect export industries.

The dollar strengthened against all of its 16 most-traded counterparts except for the yen and Swiss franc, appreciating 0.5 percent to $1.3905 per euro and rising 1.3 percent versus the Norwegian kroner. The yen advanced 0.2 percent to 81.3 per dollar and climbed 0.8 percent to 113.02 per euro.

Stimulus Debate

The yield on the 30-year Treasury slipped five basis points to 3.94 percent, while the 10-year German bund yield was little changed at 2.38 percent. The similar-maturity U.K. gilt yield was little changed at 2.95 percent. Credit-default swaps insuring European junk-rated bonds increased, with the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index climbing 5 basis points to 475, according to Markit Group Ltd. Default swap rise as the perception of creditworthiness deteriorate.

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet rejected Bundesbank President Axel Weber's call to end the bond purchase program that has helped European governments and banks try to shore up their finances. Weber, who also sits on the ECB's 22-member decision-making council, said the risk of "exiting too late" from the emergency measures was greater than pulling out too soon.

Copper for delivery in three months declined 0.5 percent on the London Metal Exchange. Gold for immediate delivery slipped 0.4 percent to $1,362.43 an ounce and palladium retreated 1.7 percent. Crude oil futures increased 0.2 percent to $81.40 a barrel in New York.

To contact the reporter on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Michael P. Regan in New York at mregan12@bloomberg.net .

Find out more about Bloomberg for iPhone: http://m.bloomberg.com/iphone/


Víctor Lei

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Week 4 @ EOTB

This week I continued to work in their office for some general assignments. On Tuesday I was first helping the producer on the research of story ideas for the topic of people who are doing weird jobs, whereas unusual occupations. Later, our executive producer Lena asked me to help producer Amanda in logging the Oakland Zoo footage, and the footage is the priority job to get finished ASAP because it needs to be on air by the end of this month. That means by the time around next week, it should be completely logged.

On Thursday, because there were still plenty of footage from several producers unfinished, therefore, all the interns that day including me were helping each producer in logging his/her footage. I continued to log Amanda's Oakland Zoo footage and got them mostly finished by the time I left.

"There're still tons of footage not logged yet." That's what we put on the follow-up report that we generated at the end of our interning day. I just wonder how come only a few people were working on that?


Víctor Lei

(BN) Asian Stocks Slip, Dollar Gains on Fed Stimulus Speculation; Oil Declines

Bloomberg News, sent from my iPod touch.

Asian Stocks Slip, Dollar Gains on Fed Speculation; Oil Falls

Oct. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks slumped after reaching their highest since July 2008 and the dollar strengthened on speculation that the Federal Reserve may add less monetary stimulus than some expect. Oil dropped a third day, the worst run in a month, while gold and metals also declined.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 0.3 percent to 130.66 at 12:28 p.m. in Tokyo. Losing shares in the index beating gainers 468 to 396. Standard & Poor's 500 index futures slid 0.6 percent. Oil for November delivery lost 0.7 percent to $80.72 a barrel.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said on Oct. 15 that the U.S. central bank may expand asset purchases to sustain the recovery in the world's largest economy, hurting the dollar last week. The U.S. currency advanced today against all its major counterparts except the yen.

"Investors are in a wait-and-see mood as they look to see what's coming in the way of policy stimulus in the U.S. and elsewhere," said Stephen Halmarick, who helps manage about $135 billion as head of investment markets research at Colonial First State Global Asset Management in Sydney. "The data is mixed."

The MSCI Asia declined for a second day after peaking on Oct. 14 at 132.42. The Hang Seng Index fell 0.8 percent. Equity benchmarks in Australia, Taiwan and South Korea also dropped.

In Sydney, BHP Billiton Ltd. slipped 1.2 percent after abandoning a plan with Rio Tinto Group to create the world's largest iron-ore exporter, following opposition from regulators in Europe and Asia. Rio retreated 0.2 percent.

HSBC Holdings

HSBC Holdings Plc led banks lower in Hong Kong, dropping as much as 2.2 percent.

"In a volatile market funds tend to make their way into the financial sector so once a correction takes place, money pulls out first from this sector," said Castor Pang, research director at Cinda International Holdings Ltd.

The yen rose against all 16 of its major peers on speculation Japan will refrain from intervening to weaken its currency ahead of this week's meeting policy makers from Group of 20 nations. The yen traded at 81.37 per dollar in Tokyo from 81.45 in New York on Oct. 15 when it touched 80.88, the strongest level since April 1995 and near its post-World War II high of 97.75 yen.

Oil declined for a third day in New York as the dollar gained against the euro, curbing the appeal of commodities as an alternative investment. The November contract dropped on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the longest pullback since a four-day drop through Sept. 17.

Gold Falls

Gold for immediate delivery fell for a second day after reaching a record last week, the first two-day drop in more than a month. The precious metal, which typically trades inversely to the dollar, declined as much as 0.9 percent to $1,356.41 an ounce.

Industrial metals declined as the dollar rallied. Nickel for three-month delivery dropped for a third day on the London Metal Exchange, tumbling as much as 1.3 percent to $23,725 a metric ton, while copper lost as much as 0.6 percent to $8,351 a ton. Zinc, tin, aluminum and lead also fell.

The cost of protecting Asia-Pacific corporate and sovereign bonds from non-payment rose, according to traders of credit- default swaps. The Markit iTraxx Asia index of 50 investment- grade borrowers outside Japan increased two basis points to 105 basis points.

To contact the reporter for this story: Jake Lloyd-Smith in Singapore at jlloydsmith@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Patrick Chu in Tokyo at pachu@bloomberg.net

Find out more about Bloomberg for iPhone: http://m.bloomberg.com/iphone/


Víctor Lei

49ers get first win of season over Raiders

49ers get first win of season over Raiders

Story posted 2010.10.17 at 04:20 PM PDT

ABC7 NEWS TO GO News

Alex Smith threw second-half touchdown passes to Michael Crabtree and Vernon Davis and the San Francisco 49ers finally won their first game, beating the Oakland Raiders 17-9 on Sunday in a sloppy, penalty-filled game.

Crabtree made a go-ahead 32-yard TD reception on the last play of the third quarter and Smith hit Davis on a 17-yard score with 7:14 remaining. Frank Gore ran for 149 yards, including a 64-yard scramble that set up Davis' third touchdown of the season.

Smith overcame a slow start to go 16 of 33 for 196 yards in his first turnover-free game of 2010, though San Francisco still committed 11 penalties for 143 yards. The Niners, whose 1-5 start is the franchise's worst since Bill Walsh's first team lost its initial seven games in 1979, denied Oakland its first back-to-back wins since 2008.

Sebastian Janikowski kicked field goals of 27, 24 and 40 yards for the Raiders (2-4).
Story posted 2010.10.17 at 04:20 PM PDT


All material © 2010 ABC Inc., KGO-TV Inc. & 2004-2010 LSN, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

...



Víctor Lei