• GoldCore
    01/13/2016 - 12:23
    John Hathaway, respected authority on the gold market and senior portfolio manager with Tocqueville Asset Management has written an excellent research paper on the fundamentals driving...

Archive - Mar 11, 2010 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

Labor Unions Preparing To Take Goldman Sachs To Task, Push For Transaction Tax In Upcoming Widespread Rallies





America's labor unions are finally waking up from their deep slumber and noticing the vast schism in American society between the haves and the have nots. The catalyst: Wall Street's $16.2 billion bonus pay day. As a result Richard Trumka, head of the AFL-CIO, the nation's largest union organization, and a firm supporter of the transaction tax which was proposed in late 2009 and then promptly buried after some serious lobbying by Wall Street, will announce today "two weeks of protests aimed at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the most profitable securities firm in U.S. history, and the country’s five other largest banks. The AFL-CIO says it plans 200 events covering all 50 states, starting March 15." Summarizing the mood of increasing populist aggression across the nation against Wall Street's uber-wealthy is labor professor at UC Berkley Harley Shaiken: “Wall Street has become a symbol of greed run amok, and what labor is doing here is seeking to demonstrate that it is speaking for working families generally, union member or non- union member.” Strikes in Greece have already paralyzed the country. Will America soon follow?

 

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Hugh Hendry: "We Hedge Fund Managers Are On Your Side"





Hedge funds are not seeking to dictate economic affairs. Rather we are preoccupied by price. A market-based economy like ours requires a pricing mechanism to allocate resources and ensure that we all prosper. Get it wrong and we endure the calamity of the technology bubble and the sleazy debacle of the American mortgage crisis. It's not that hedge fund managers are bitter and seek to wreak havoc. It's just that we believe that recurring and periodic recessions reveal the economy's winners and losers. And through our endeavours, hedge funds attempt to discover the identity and inadequacies of the poor businesses. During hard times, such businesses typically go bust, allowing us to make an investment profit by betting on that eventuality, and ensuring that successful and prudently managed businesses prosper. - Hugh Hendry

 

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Frontrunning: March 11





  • Bring back the capitalist model (Washington Times)
  • Initial claims at 462,000, higher than consensus, continuing claims higher by 37,000; snow not implicated (Bloomberg, Reuters)
  • Naked swap crackdown in Europe rings hollow without Washington (Bloomberg)
  • Volcker rule gets lift in Senate amid reform talks (Reuters)
  • Greeks strike over budget cuts, stocks decline (NYT, Bloomberg, Reuters)
  • China inflation surges (Bloomberg, Reuters)
 

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Daily Highlights: 3.11.10





  • Asian bourses turn lower after release of higher-than-expected Chinese inflation data.
  • Bank of Korea keeps key interest rate at record low as economic growth slows.
  • China inflation, production accelerate, adding pressure for stimulus exit.
  • Chinese property prices were 10.7% higher than a year earlier in February: Govt agency.
  • Federal Reserve gets a new look as regulator of largest, riskiest firms.
  • Japan's Q4 GDP grew at an annual 3.8% pace - lower than the prelim reports of 4.6%.
  • Oil falls below $82 in Asia as traders look for US crude demand to match growing economy.
  • US Senate passes $150B bill for jobless aid, tax breaks.
 

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RANsquawk 11th March Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 11th March Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

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RANsquawk 11th March Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 11th March Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

RealtyTrac Reports 308,524 Foreclosure Filings In February, 2% Decline From January, Snow Slows Down Foreclosure Activity





RealtyTrac has reported February foreclosure activity, which at 308,524 units, was a 2% decline from January, and a 6% increase year over year. This equates to one in 418 housing units. And not surprisingly, the snow was once again implicated, this time in painting a falsely positive picture of the economy as "severe winter weather temporarily slowed the processing of foreclosure records in Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic states." From Jim Saccacio, CEO of RealtyTrac: “The 6 percent year-over-year increase we saw in February was the smallest annual increase we’ve seen since January 2006, when we began calculating year-over-year increases, but it still marked the 50th consecutive month of year-over-year increases in foreclosure activity. This leveling of the foreclosure trend is not necessarily evidence that fewer homeowners are in distress and at risk for foreclosure, but rather that foreclosure prevention programs, legislation and other processing delays are in effect capping monthly foreclosure activity — albeit at a historically high level that will likely continue for an extended period." In a nutshell, the foreclosure extend and pretend got a snow day holiday in February.

 
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