• 30Apr

     

    50 Million Retirees to Get $250 Checks in May
    $250 government stimulus checks going to 50 million retirees in May

    More than 50 million retirees can expect to receive $250 payments from the government in the next few weeks as their share of the economic stimulus package enacted in February.

    Economists say the payments will be a timely boost just as the recession is showing signs of easing a little.

    The payments are part of the $787 billion package of spending and tax cuts enacted in February to help boost the economy. They will go to people who receive Social Security, Supplemental Security Income, railroad retirement or veteran’s disability benefits.

    Mary Glenn-Croft, deputy commissioner of the Social Security Administration, told a congressional panel Tuesday that the payments are intended to inject more than $13 billion into the economy while helping beneficiaries of the four programs meet everyday living expenses.

    The payments are meant for people who did not qualify for the new “Making Work Pay” tax credit that provides up to $400 to individuals and $800 to couples. Taxpayers who would otherwise qualify for both will have the $250 payments deducted from their tax credits.

    The tax credits started flowing to most workers in weekly paychecks this month. The $250 payments will be delivered in May, Glenn-Croft said.

    The effect on the economy should be known in the next few months, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com.

    “We are at the moment of truth for the tax cuts and probably the stimulus more broadly,” Zandi said. “If we don’t see an improvement in retailing and if the job cutting doesn’t abate in response this summer and fall … it either hasn’t worked or it wasn’t enough.”

    The U.S. economy has shed more than 5 million jobs since the recession began, and unemployment remains high in most of the country, but there are signs that investors, shoppers and home buyers are less jittery.

    Zandi said the economy is still in decline. But, he added, “The rate of decline is slowing; the free fall is over.”

    The goal of the stimulus package is to get people to spend money at a time when most are reducing spending and saving more. It makes sense to be frugal when the economy is in such bad shape, but it hurts the economy when everyone does it.

    The extra Social Security payments should boost spending because retirees on fixed incomes are more likely to spend them than workers earning more money, said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial.

    “The people who live closer to paycheck-to-paycheck are more likely to spend it,” Swonk said.

    The payments are also expected to provide relief to many struggling seniors. Glenn-Croft said the bad economy — coupled with aging baby boomers nearing retirement age — has more Americans applying for Social Security and disability benefits.

    The agency expects retirement claims to increase by 300,000, or 9 percent, this year, Glenn-Croft said. The agency expects disability claims to increase by 30,000, or 12 percent, she said.

    Swonk said some aging baby boomers are being forced into early retirement through layoffs and they are using Social Security benefits as an “alternative form of unemployment insurance.”

    “You’re 62, you’re eligible, you just lost your job,” Swonk said. “It’s better to get something than nothing.”

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  • 29Apr

    Swine flu cases on the rise

     The number of people infected with swine flu increased rapidly across the world on Wednesday, as health officials scramble to get more information about the virus for which there is no vaccine.

    “It’s a virus that we’ve never seen before,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

    “There’s no background immunity in the population and it is spreading from human to human, all of which has the potential for a pandemic.”

    The World Health Organization will convene an emergency session on Thursday in which it will consider raising its threat level from 4 to 5, which would indicate widespread human infection.

    Germany and Austria became the latest European countries to report swine flu on Wednesday, while the number of cases increased in the United Kingdom and Spain.

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  • 27Apr

    STOCKSHAKERS.com Breaking News: WHO raises swine-flu alert level

     

    ***STOCKSHAKERS.com Breaking News***
    Mexico says the World Health Organization has raised its pandemic alert for swine flu by one level, two steps short of declaring a full-blown pandemic. WHO says the phase 4 alert is defined as sustained human-to-human transmission causing outbreaks in at least one country. It signals a significant increase in the risk of a global epidemic, but doesn’t mean a pandemic is inevitable. WHO has confirmed human cases of swine flu in Mexico, the United States, Canada and Spain.

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  • 26Apr

    STOCKSHAKERS.COM BULLETIN
    Hang Seng Index tumbles more than 2%, with flu worries weighing

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  • 25Apr

    Idaho bank is fourth closed in a single day

    Idaho-based First Bank of Idaho became the fourth bank closed by regulators Friday, as the credit crisis continued claiming victims. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said Minneapolis-based U.S. Bank has assumed the failed bank’s deposits. First Bank of Idaho had $374 million in deposits as of Dec. 31, the FDIC said. The bank’s closure follows that of other banks in Georgia, Michigan and California on Friday.

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  • 22Apr

    U.S. credit card bill advances on eve of Obama meet

    Legislation to curb credit card fees and limit consumer penalties cleared a congressional panel on Wednesday, a day ahead of a meeting between industry executives and President Barack Obama at the White House.

    The bill is an early test of political will for Democrats pushing for regulatory reform amid the economic crisis and would mean sweeping changes for card-issuing banks, many of which have received government bailout money.

    Members of the House Financial Services Committee voted 48 to 19 for the Credit Cardholders’ Bill of Rights which in practice would codify into law restrictions on deceptive practices issued by the Federal Reserve in December.

    The legislation would stop credit card issuers from imposing arbitrary interest rate increases and penalties, and halt certain billing practices.

    Nine Republicans, or almost a third of that party’s members on the committee, voted in favor of the measure.

    Committee chairman Barney Frank told reporters after the vote he was not surprised the measure attracted bipartisan support. “The mood in the country has changed,” he said.

    Frank said Obama, who campaigned for credit card reforms, wants to make changes to the bill. Frank provided no details.

    Later on Wednesday, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs told reporters that Obama wanted to make sure the legislation codified the Fed’s rules into law.

    Executives from Bank of America Corp, American Express Co, Citigroup Inc, Wells Fargo & Co, JPMorgan Chase & Co, Capital One Financial Corp, Visa Inc and MasterCard Inc will be among 13 credit card executive due to meet Obama early on Thursday afternoon at the White House.

    “We are working closely with Congress on legislation that will promote simplicity, require transparency, demand fairness, and ensure accountability — so that we can strengthen consumer protections against abusive and deceptive practices,” White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.

    Banks say the legislation would hurt fee income at a time when they are trying to climb out of a financial hole created by the collapse of the housing boom.

    The American Bankers Association trade group, which represents the biggest credit card issuers, said it is concerned the House bill could reduce the availability of consumer credit and make it more expensive.

    Ed Mierzwinski, consumer program director at the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, said consumer groups supported making the Fed rules law, but wanted to go further.

    “We hope the president will also support further reforms, such as the… Senate’s stronger ban on ‘no reason’ fee increases and its protection for college students from unfair credit card marketing,” Mierzwinski said.

    BILLING PRACTICES

    “It’s a new era in Washington,” said Rep. Carolyn Maloney, a New York Democrat and chief sponsor of the House bill. “It’s taken three years of hard work, but I’m delighted that we’re on the brink of real protections for consumers.”

    The bill would give companies at least one year or until July 2010, whichever comes first, to comply. However a provision would require them to implement sooner a 45-day period to notify cardholders of higher rates when they are late making payments.

    Frank said he plans to introduce Obama’s proposals, possibly during a full House vote next week on the bill.

    While the reform legislation appears to face clear sailing in the House, it remains unclear whether Democrats in the Senate can muster the 60 votes needed in that chamber to advance their version of credit card legislation amid stiff opposition from the banking industry.

    In the Senate, Democrats hold 56 seats and two independents routinely side with Democrats. A win by Al Franken in the undetermined election in Minnesota could give Democrats 59 votes, one shy from the 60 needed to overcome a procedural hurdle that could block a vote on a legislative measure.

    “I’m more confident than I’ve every been,” Frank said of chances the Senate will pass its own credit card bill.

    BAILED OUT BANKS

    U.S. banks that issue credit cards have received more than $120 billion in taxpayer funds since October, money the government has asked them to use to expand lending.

    But with U.S. credit card defaults at record highs, lenders are protecting themselves by tightening credit limits and closing accounts, actions angering lawmakers and consumers, and triggered an inquiry by the New York state attorney general.

    U.S. lawmakers also are unhappy that the same banks, such as Bank of America, Citi and Chase, with big credit card operations, charge high interest rates and fees while getting bailouts from taxpayers who are credit card users.

    Maloney initially wanted to force credit card companies to adopt the stricter terms within 90 days of the bill becoming law, but a House subcommittee rejected that.

    The July 2010 compliance date in the House bill is the same deadline set by the Federal Reserve last December to implement changes to curb what Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke called “unfair and deceptive” practices.

    Banks, citing the need for time to develop software, train staff and work with vendors on new printing procedures, say they cannot implement these changes overnight.

    “Banks are working aggressively to implement the rules by the date set by the regulators,” said Kenneth Clayton, senior vice president for credit card policy at the ABA.

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  • 19Apr

    Long stocks here? read this from Richard Russell
    From Richard Russell in Dow Theory Letters:

    …Was March 9 the ultimate bear market low?

    The essence of Dow Theory has to do with VALUES. At the March low the price/earnings ratio for the Dow was 25.79 and the dividend yield for the Dow was 3.99%. For the S&P 500 the P/E was 28.38 while the dividend yield was 2.98%. Consider the following — this bear market has, so far, qualified as a MAJOR bear market. Stock values, across the board, are down 50%. Most major bear markets in history have taken stocks down to the point where price/earnings for both the Dow and the S&P are below 7, while at the same time dividend yields are at 6% or higher.

    I would expect this bear market, regardless of intervening rallies, to end with stocks selling at “great values,” meaning P/E ratios well below 10 and dividend yields in the 5-6% area. We’ve seen nothing like that so far. All of which makes me believe that we are now simply in a bear market correction

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  • 18Apr
    Any sanctions or pressure applied to North Korea following its rocket launch this month will be considered “a declaration of war,” according to an announcement on state-controlled North Korean television Saturday.

    “The revolutionary armed forces of the DPRK are always keeping themselves fully ready to go into action any moment to mercilessly punish anyone who encroaches upon the sovereignty and dignity of the DPRK even a bit,” the announcement said, using the initials for the country’s full name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

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  • 18Apr

    Missouri-based American Sterling Bank closed by regulators

    Mo. based American Sterling Bank was closed by regulators Friday, marking the 24th bank failure of the year as the credit crunch continues to spread through the economy. American Sterling Bank had $181 million in total assets and $171.9 million in total deposits as of March 20, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The FDIC said Metcalf Bank of Lee’s Summit, Mo. will assume the failed bank’s deposits. The FDIC estimated the failure of American Sterling Bank will cost its deposit insurance fund $42 million.

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  • 16Apr

    WOW

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxPZh4AnWyk#

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