Failing to plan makes Atlanta look bad

Let’s dub our Tuesday weather excursion “Freakslick.” Just like the party of the same name, it led to gridlock on Atlanta highways and roads. Heck, our roads here too in Fayette County to a fair extent.

Unleashing that volume of traffic on Atlanta without snow and ice would’ve been bad enough on the finest of summer days. But pile on a heaping helping of nonexistent planning on top of snow and ice … and you have a national embarrassment for the Atlanta area, and sadly yes that includes you and me.

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Bankruptcy In The USSA: Detroit Bondholders About To Be GM'ed In Favor Of Pensioners

First, the Obama administration showed during the course of the GM and Chrysler bankruptcy proceedings, that when it comes to Most Preferred Voter classes, some unsecured creditors – namely labor unions, and the millions of votes they bring – are more equal than other unsecured creditors – namely bondholders, and the zero votes they bring. Five years later we are about to get a stark reminder that under the superpriority rule of a community organizer for whom “fairness” trumps contract law any day, it is now Detroit’s turn to make a mockery of the recovery waterfall. As it turns out, bankrupt Detroit is proposing to favor pension funds at roughly double the rate of bondholders to resolve an estimated $18 billion in long-term obligations, according to a draft of a debt-cutting plan reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

The breakdown to unsecured stakeholders would be as follows: 40% recovery for pension funds, 20% for unsecured bondholders – all this to the same pari class of unsecured creditors. Because just like in Europe when cashing out on CDS in insolvent nations is prohibited as it would suggest that the entire Eurozone experiment is one epic farce, regardless of how much “political capital” Goldman Sachs has invested in it, so in the US municipal creditors are realizing that in the worst case scenario, they will be layered first and foremost by all those whose votes are critical in keeping this crony administration in power.

According to the WSJ the plan calls for recovery to be divided among the unsecureds amounting to $4.2 billion, more than the originally planned $2 billion to settle claims which included about $11 billion in unsecured debt, including $6 billion in health and other benefits for retirees; $3.5 billion for retiree pensions; and about $530 million in general-obligation bonds.

There is a possibility that final “math” in the Plan of Reorg is changed before the final draft.

It was unclear from the plan reviewed by the Journal whether the city is using all of the same estimates for the money owed to unsecured creditors in its draft plan. A person familiar with the draft plan said the recovery rate for the pension funds could end lower than the balance sheet shows.

 

Details of the plan sent to creditors on Wednesday have been kept under wraps as the city and its debtholders continue to talk in closed-door mediation. The city sent its working draft to creditors in the hopes that the plan with a richer payout might spur some of them to settle with the city individually or, in the least, offer their own suggestions toward modifying the overall proposal, according to another person familiar with the matter.

 

The formal plan is expected to be filed in federal court in Detroit within two weeks, officials said. Creditors will vote on the plan, but the final decision rests with the court.

Still, the probability is that Kevyn Orr has finally gotten cold feet on playing hard ball with the unions. “The proposed plan provides the road map for all parties to resolve all outstanding issues and facilitate the city’s efforts to achieve long-term financial health,” Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr said in a statement Wednesday. Mr. Orr’s spokesman declined Thursday to comment on the plan’s details. Several creditors, who were opposed to the city’s early plans to offer creditors, including bondholders and pension funds, less than 20 cents on the dollars owed to them, also declined to comment.”

One can only imagine the amount of “Steve Rattnering” that must have gone on behind the scenes, and how much more is still set to happen, for such a skewed plan to pass the bankruptcy judge over creditor objections. Which it will once the president makes a phone call.

Then again, with contract law abrogated as was made very clear with this administration’s first steps into the “Fairness Doctrine” back in 2009 and the bankruptcy of GM and Chrysler, nothing can, or should, surprise one any more.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1nwMTSH Tyler Durden

Bankruptcy In The USSA: Detroit Bondholders About To Be GM’ed In Favor Of Pensioners

First, the Obama administration showed during the course of the GM and Chrysler bankruptcy proceedings, that when it comes to Most Preferred Voter classes, some unsecured creditors – namely labor unions, and the millions of votes they bring – are more equal than other unsecured creditors – namely bondholders, and the zero votes they bring. Five years later we are about to get a stark reminder that under the superpriority rule of a community organizer for whom “fairness” trumps contract law any day, it is now Detroit’s turn to make a mockery of the recovery waterfall. As it turns out, bankrupt Detroit is proposing to favor pension funds at roughly double the rate of bondholders to resolve an estimated $18 billion in long-term obligations, according to a draft of a debt-cutting plan reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

The breakdown to unsecured stakeholders would be as follows: 40% recovery for pension funds, 20% for unsecured bondholders – all this to the same pari class of unsecured creditors. Because just like in Europe when cashing out on CDS in insolvent nations is prohibited as it would suggest that the entire Eurozone experiment is one epic farce, regardless of how much “political capital” Goldman Sachs has invested in it, so in the US municipal creditors are realizing that in the worst case scenario, they will be layered first and foremost by all those whose votes are critical in keeping this crony administration in power.

According to the WSJ the plan calls for recovery to be divided among the unsecureds amounting to $4.2 billion, more than the originally planned $2 billion to settle claims which included about $11 billion in unsecured debt, including $6 billion in health and other benefits for retirees; $3.5 billion for retiree pensions; and about $530 million in general-obligation bonds.

There is a possibility that final “math” in the Plan of Reorg is changed before the final draft.

It was unclear from the plan reviewed by the Journal whether the city is using all of the same estimates for the money owed to unsecured creditors in its draft plan. A person familiar with the draft plan said the recovery rate for the pension funds could end lower than the balance sheet shows.

 

Details of the plan sent to creditors on Wednesday have been kept under wraps as the city and its debtholders continue to talk in closed-door mediation. The city sent its working draft to creditors in the hopes that the plan with a richer payout might spur some of them to settle with the city individually or, in the least, offer their own suggestions toward modifying the overall proposal, according to another person familiar with the matter.

 

The formal plan is expected to be filed in federal court in Detroit within two weeks, officials said. Creditors will vote on the plan, but the final decision rests with the court.

Still, the probability is that Kevyn Orr has finally gotten cold feet on playing hard ball with the unions. “The proposed plan provides the road map for all parties to resolve all outstanding issues and facilitate the city’s efforts to achieve long-term financial health,” Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr said in a statement Wednesday. Mr. Orr’s spokesman declined Thursday to comment on the plan’s details. Several creditors, who were opposed to the city’s early plans to offer creditors, including bondholders and pension funds, less than 20 cents on the dollars owed to them, also declined to comment.”

One can only imagine the amount of “Steve Rattnering” that must have gone on behind the scenes, and how much more is still set to happen, for such a skewed plan to pass the bankruptcy judge over creditor objections. Which it will once the president makes a phone call.

Then again, with contract law abrogated as was made very clear with this administration’s first steps into the “Fairness Doctrine” back in 2009 and the bankruptcy of GM and Chrysler, nothing can, or should, surprise one any more.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1nwMTSH Tyler Durden

"Suspicious White Powder" Found At 5 Superbowl Hotels

While joking about potential terrorist plots is below us, the fact that New Jersey police are investigating the appearance of suspicious white powder at several hotels near the site of the Superbowl was too close to an “Onion” headline for us to ignore. As AP reports, the FBI is investigating the substance (found in envelopes – which we suspect were not marked with player’s names). No injuries or overnight bouts of unexplained euphoria have been reported.

 

Via AP,

The FBI and other law enforcement are investigating a suspicious white powder that was mailed to at least five New Jersey hotels near the site of Sunday’s Super Bowl.

 

Carlstadt Police Det. John Cleary says someone at an Econo Lodge found the substance in an envelope on Friday.

 

Cleary says similar mailings arrived at the Homestead Inn in East Rutherford and a Renaissance Inn in Rutherford. He says investigators intercepted additional envelopes from a mail truck before it reached a Holiday Inn Express and Hampton Inn in Carlstadt.

 

Hazardous materials teams are checking out the substance. The FBI says it is investigating and no injuries have been reported.

We hope this is not a replay of Washington’s Anthrax issues but otherwise suggest NJ’s blow-dealers consider other forms of delivery (e.g. McDonalds Happy Meal or Amazon Drone)


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1jTtHOC Tyler Durden

“Suspicious White Powder” Found At 5 Superbowl Hotels

While joking about potential terrorist plots is below us, the fact that New Jersey police are investigating the appearance of suspicious white powder at several hotels near the site of the Superbowl was too close to an “Onion” headline for us to ignore. As AP reports, the FBI is investigating the substance (found in envelopes – which we suspect were not marked with player’s names). No injuries or overnight bouts of unexplained euphoria have been reported.

 

Via AP,

The FBI and other law enforcement are investigating a suspicious white powder that was mailed to at least five New Jersey hotels near the site of Sunday’s Super Bowl.

 

Carlstadt Police Det. John Cleary says someone at an Econo Lodge found the substance in an envelope on Friday.

 

Cleary says similar mailings arrived at the Homestead Inn in East Rutherford and a Renaissance Inn in Rutherford. He says investigators intercepted additional envelopes from a mail truck before it reached a Holiday Inn Express and Hampton Inn in Carlstadt.

 

Hazardous materials teams are checking out the substance. The FBI says it is investigating and no injuries have been reported.

We hope this is not a replay of Washington’s Anthrax issues but otherwise suggest NJ’s blow-dealers consider other forms of delivery (e.g. McDonalds Happy Meal or Amazon Drone)


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1jTtHOC Tyler Durden

Hoops schedule shuffled due to snow

The recent snow storm has created some scheduling issues for varsity basketball teams, with only one week left in the regular season.

None of the Jan. 28 games were played, and only one Jan. 31 game was to go ahead as scheduled. That means a lot of extra games in the coming week leading up to the region playoffs.

McIntosh was scheduled to host Whitewater Jan. 31, and those games were to proceed, according to representatives from both schools and the district’s central office.

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via The Citizen http://ift.tt/1ihzgDB

Massachusetts, Model for Obamacare, Struggles to Comply With Obamacare's Requirements

The health care overhaul passed
in Massachusetts under Gov. Mitt Romney was a state-level model for
the federal reform plan that became Obamacare.

But Massachusetts has had an exceedingly tough time upgrading
its own system to comply with the federal law.
Via The Boston Globe
, the state’s new exchange
technology is still broken:

Connector executive director Jean Yang said Thursday that the
manual systems created to bypass the malfunctioning website are
complicated. The agency has been working to identify stalled
enrollments, so that a crisis management team can address them.

The team was working on between 40 and 50 cases Thursday, Yang
said, though she could not say how many were related to premium
payments that were not properly processed. She said the Connector
is planning to improve customer service with better training.

The fixes have not “happened as fast as we would have liked,”
Yang said. “We won’t stop until it’s all taken care of.”

The Connector website was developed by CGI, the same firm that
created the federal healthcare.gov website that got off to a rocky
start.

But, while the federal site is largely fixed, major components
of the state site still do not work, including those that process
payments, determine whether people are eligible for subsidies, and
transfer information automatically to health insurers.

At Forbes, meanwhile, Josh Archambault
notes
that by some measures Massachusetts has the worst
performing exchange in the nation: The state has enrolled just
5,428 people—0.2% of its first year goal of 250,000. (In response,
the state has lowered its year-one goal to 200,000.) At this point,
the state has failed to enroll a single person through its online
exchange. Every enrollment so far has been via a manual
workaround. 

At least two other states gung-ho about health reform—Maryland
and Oregon
—continue to struggle with their exchanges as
well. 

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Massachusetts, Model for Obamacare, Struggles to Comply With Obamacare’s Requirements

The health care overhaul passed
in Massachusetts under Gov. Mitt Romney was a state-level model for
the federal reform plan that became Obamacare.

But Massachusetts has had an exceedingly tough time upgrading
its own system to comply with the federal law.
Via The Boston Globe
, the state’s new exchange
technology is still broken:

Connector executive director Jean Yang said Thursday that the
manual systems created to bypass the malfunctioning website are
complicated. The agency has been working to identify stalled
enrollments, so that a crisis management team can address them.

The team was working on between 40 and 50 cases Thursday, Yang
said, though she could not say how many were related to premium
payments that were not properly processed. She said the Connector
is planning to improve customer service with better training.

The fixes have not “happened as fast as we would have liked,”
Yang said. “We won’t stop until it’s all taken care of.”

The Connector website was developed by CGI, the same firm that
created the federal healthcare.gov website that got off to a rocky
start.

But, while the federal site is largely fixed, major components
of the state site still do not work, including those that process
payments, determine whether people are eligible for subsidies, and
transfer information automatically to health insurers.

At Forbes, meanwhile, Josh Archambault
notes
that by some measures Massachusetts has the worst
performing exchange in the nation: The state has enrolled just
5,428 people—0.2% of its first year goal of 250,000. (In response,
the state has lowered its year-one goal to 200,000.) At this point,
the state has failed to enroll a single person through its online
exchange. Every enrollment so far has been via a manual
workaround. 

At least two other states gung-ho about health reform—Maryland
and Oregon
—continue to struggle with their exchanges as
well. 

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via IFTTT

A Not So Subtle Hint That Argentina May Be Un-Fixed

The Argentinian 2015 Boden are getting destroyed!!

They were trading near Par at year-end!!

 

With the IMF frantically scrambling to cover its forecast errors and model-breakdowns amid an emerging market turmoil that no one could have seen coming, the contagion is beginning to spread. With all eyes fixed on Turkey (unfixed again) or Ukraine (never fixed), Argentina’s troubles are exploding. The last few days have seen yields on their 2017 bonds scream higher from 11% to 19%… and 2015 Boden prices collapse.

This is the worst in emerging market bonds and the price/yield is back at the lows/highs since October 2012. With the peso’s dramatic 15% devaluation last week stabilized in the official rate around 8/USD, the blue-dollar rate is back at its worst around 12.80 implying more pain to come.

5Y CDS are trading 2700bps = +1000bps in 2014

These are 3-year maturity bonds!

 

 

As Bloomberg notes,

Argentina is losing foreign currency reserves at the fastest pace in more than a decade as estimated 28 percent inflation and currency controls spur capital flight. The funds, which the country relies on to pay debt and finance energy imports, dropped to a seven-year low of $28.3 billion. The government devalued the peso 15 percent last week and raised benchmark interest rates as much as 6 percentage points. The moves, coupled with less risk appetite for emerging market assets, haven’t settled investor concerns.

 

There is fear and panic about the emerging markets and the news has not been good out of Argentina with reserves dropping $250 million yesterday,” said Russell Dallen, the head trader at Caracas Capital.

Charts: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1hYKAUi Tyler Durden

Watch the Brits Stupidly Force a Newspaper to Destroy Computers Because of Snowden

Your monitor is now tainted. Please destroy after viewing this image.There have been a number of low
points in the tone-deaf responses from government officials in the
wake of Edward Snowden’s whistleblowing. It’s hard to pick the
worst – though the failure to fire Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper for lying to the Senate and anonymous
intelligence officials expressing their desire to
murder Snowden
would certainly be up there (down there?).

Over in Britain, probably one of the stupidest responses to this
mass surveillance scandal so far happened last summer, when the
country’s spy agency went over to the offices of The
Guardian
, the newspaper where journalist Glenn Greenwald first
broke the story, and ordered them to physically destroy computers
that were tainted – so to speak – with the documents Snowden
leaked.

That Greenwald was not in England and the destruction of the
computers would not stop the flow of Snowden’s data didn’t seem to
matter. Today The Guardian released video showing the
destruction of the computers, along with more details about the
newspapers’ interactions with the government, which was threating
to
shut them down
:

The government’s response to the leak was initially slow – then
increasingly strident. [Guardian Editor Alan] Rusbridger told
government officials that destruction of the Snowden files would
not stop the flow of intelligence-related stories since the
documents existed in several jurisdictions. He explained that Glenn
Greenwald, the Guardian US columnist who met Snowden in Hong Kong,
had leaked material in Rio de Janeiro. There were further copies in
America, he said.

Days later Oliver Robbins, the prime minister’s deputy national
security adviser, renewed the threat of legal action. “If you won’t
return it [the Snowden material] we will have to talk to ‘other
people’ this evening.” Asked if Downing Street really intended to
close down the Guardian if it did not comply, Robbins confirmed:
“I’m saying this.” He told the deputy editor, Paul Johnson, the
government wanted the material in order to conduct “forensics”.
This would establish how Snowden had carried out his leak,
strengthening the legal case against the Guardian’s source. It
would also reveal which reporters had examined which files.

With the threat of punitive legal action ever present, the only
way of protecting the Guardian’s team – and of carrying on
reporting from another jurisdiction – was for the paper to destroy
its own computers. GCHQ officials wanted to inspect the material
before destruction, carry out the operation themselves and take the
remnants away. The Guardian refused.

You can watch the video
here
. As is obvious by now (and was obvious to everybody at the
time) the destruction did not stop the flow of information from
Snowden to the public.

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