Treasury “Out” Of GM For $10.5 Billion Loss (Claims 768% ROI)

The spin does not get any better than this… As they reported they would,

  • *LEW SAYS U.S. SOLD ALL REMAINING SHARES OF GENERAL MOTORS RECOUPING $39 BLN OF ORIGINAL GM INVESTMENT

That is a $10.5 Billion loss! But, The Center for Automotive Research, a Michigan nonprofit organization that analyzes auto industry issues, those funds saved or avoided the loss of $105.3 billion in transfer payments and the loss of personal and social insurance tax collections — or 768% of the net investment.”

 

Via LA Times,

 

Additionally, the center said the bailouts and financial restructurings saved about 2.6 million jobs in the U.S. economy in 2009 and $284.4 billion in personal income over 2009 and 2010.

 

In the report, “The Effect on the U.S. Economy of the Successful Restructuring of General Motors,” researchers Sean McAlinden and Debra Maranger Menk wrote that the value of the bailouts can’t be considered just by what the taxpayers will lose in the sale of GM’s stock.

 

If you only count the things that make you look good and don’t count the things that make you look bad, any investment will look good and any investment will be profitable,” said Dan Mitchell, senior fellow at the libertarian-leaning Cato Institute.

 

He said the analysis doesn’t place a value on the adjustments that the auto industry would have been forced to make in the absence of a bailout.

 

“Those adjustments, more meaningful concessions in labor costs and work rules, would have put the auto industry on a sounder footing,” he said.
 

We can't wait to hear how much Bill Ackman made or saved on his Herbalife investment…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/uCXvvCFfmNE/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Treasury "Out" Of GM For $10.5 Billion Loss (Claims 768% ROI)

The spin does not get any better than this… As they reported they would,

  • *LEW SAYS U.S. SOLD ALL REMAINING SHARES OF GENERAL MOTORS RECOUPING $39 BLN OF ORIGINAL GM INVESTMENT

That is a $10.5 Billion loss! But, The Center for Automotive Research, a Michigan nonprofit organization that analyzes auto industry issues, those funds saved or avoided the loss of $105.3 billion in transfer payments and the loss of personal and social insurance tax collections — or 768% of the net investment.”

 

Via LA Times,

 

Additionally, the center said the bailouts and financial restructurings saved about 2.6 million jobs in the U.S. economy in 2009 and $284.4 billion in personal income over 2009 and 2010.

 

In the report, “The Effect on the U.S. Economy of the Successful Restructuring of General Motors,” researchers Sean McAlinden and Debra Maranger Menk wrote that the value of the bailouts can’t be considered just by what the taxpayers will lose in the sale of GM’s stock.

 

If you only count the things that make you look good and don’t count the things that make you look bad, any investment will look good and any investment will be profitable,” said Dan Mitchell, senior fellow at the libertarian-leaning Cato Institute.

 

He said the analysis doesn’t place a value on the adjustments that the auto industry would have been forced to make in the absence of a bailout.

 

“Those adjustments, more meaningful concessions in labor costs and work rules, would have put the auto industry on a sounder footing,” he said.
 

We can't wait to hear how much Bill Ackman made or saved on his Herbalife investment…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/uCXvvCFfmNE/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Healthcare.gov Incorrectly Signs People Up for Medicaid, Snowden Addresses the European Parliament, Bob Filner Sentenced to Home Confinement: P.M. Links

Get Reason.com and Reason 24/7 content widgets for your
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PMs Surge As Stocks Slumber On Dow’s Lowest Range In 16 Months

Following Friday's exuberance, US equity markets traded in an extraordinarily narrow range today (Dow's 41 points is lowest in 16 months) as S&P futures had the lowest non-holiday volume day of the year – despite plethora of Fed talking heads. Treasuries were no less un-vibrant with a 2bp range ending with the short-end very modestly higher in yield and long-end -1bps. The USD closed lower with its only sizable move driven by Bullard's dovish comments on inflation credibility; most notably US equities ignored JPY crosses efforts to ignite momentum. VIX closed down modestly (and back to inverted). The big movers on the day were in commodity-land. WTI dipped but Brent was slammed as the spread dropped notably to 6-week lows. Gold (and even more so Silver) were the big winners (relatively speaking) ending the day +1 and +2.2% respectively.

 

The Dow saw its smallest intraday range in 16 months…

 

Silver jumped over 2% on the day and gold lifted over $1240…

 

The crude complex was busy with WTI trading down but Brent hammered – narrowing the spread to $11.70

no matter how hard they tried – EURJPY coul dnot bring stocks higher this afternoon…

 

as FX markets were dominated by German macro data and the Bullard comments this afternoon…

 

And again – for clarity from the NFP print… some context

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/nicuwRGB5lM/story01.htm Tyler Durden

PMs Surge As Stocks Slumber On Dow's Lowest Range In 16 Months

Following Friday's exuberance, US equity markets traded in an extraordinarily narrow range today (Dow's 41 points is lowest in 16 months) as S&P futures had the lowest non-holiday volume day of the year – despite plethora of Fed talking heads. Treasuries were no less un-vibrant with a 2bp range ending with the short-end very modestly higher in yield and long-end -1bps. The USD closed lower with its only sizable move driven by Bullard's dovish comments on inflation credibility; most notably US equities ignored JPY crosses efforts to ignite momentum. VIX closed down modestly (and back to inverted). The big movers on the day were in commodity-land. WTI dipped but Brent was slammed as the spread dropped notably to 6-week lows. Gold (and even more so Silver) were the big winners (relatively speaking) ending the day +1 and +2.2% respectively.

 

The Dow saw its smallest intraday range in 16 months…

 

Silver jumped over 2% on the day and gold lifted over $1240…

 

The crude complex was busy with WTI trading down but Brent hammered – narrowing the spread to $11.70

no matter how hard they tried – EURJPY coul dnot bring stocks higher this afternoon…

 

as FX markets were dominated by German macro data and the Bullard comments this afternoon…

 

And again – for clarity from the NFP print… some context

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/nicuwRGB5lM/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Ohio Bill Sparks Debate About Religious Freedom

A piece of legislation in Ohio
is causing some controversy as it aims to affect the practice of
religion. The bill’s proponents say it will reinforce the First
Amendment’s protection of religious freedom, whereas its detractors
are concerned that it will blur the line between church and
state.

State Representatives Tim Derickson (R-Oxford) and Bill Patmon
(D-Cleveland) introduced the
Ohio Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA)
last Wednesday.
The bill would require that the state demonstrate “compelling
government interest” to create any laws, policies, or regulations
that place burdens on the exercise of religion.

Patmon
announced
at a press conference that “this legislation will
help reassert the foundation upon which this country was founded
and has grown and prospered on—freedom of religion and the practice
of it.”

However, various groups are arguing about the legality of the
bill, and whether it would protect religion or push it on others.
At odds on the issues are the American Civil Liberties Union’s
communications coordinator, Nick Worner, and the Alliance Defending
Freedom’s legal counsel, Joseph LaRue. The Columbus
Dispatch

reports
:

“The Constitution is the supreme law of the land. Whatever a
piece of state legislation does, it’s not going to trump the U.S.
Constitution,” Worner said. “Individual religious freedom is
extremely important, but it’s never been a free pass to impose your
religious beliefs on other people.”

LaRue, who helped draft the Ohio bill, agrees with the ACLU that
the U.S. Constitution is the law of the land, but adds, “That’s
only part of the story.”

“The U.S. Constitution is a baseline,” he said. “States can go
above and beyond what the U.S. Constitution provides.”

[…]

“What we’ve seen in states without RFRA is an increasing and
creeping reduction in religious freedom,” LaRue said. “They are
taking away rights of individuals to live their lives in public
consistent with their faith.”

Another Dispatch article
quotes
Patrick Elliott of the Freedom From Religion Foundation.
He warns that “the wording is so broad that all aspects of state
enforcement, state statutes, and local ordinances would be
impacted.”

On the other hand, Patmon’s and Derickson’s bill finds
precedence in the federal
RFRA
, which passed twenty years ago, and 17 similar state-based
pieces of legislation, none of which have resulted in the cataclysm
against which Elliot warns.

How exactly the bill will play out if passed is unknown.
Responding to a recent incident in which the ACLU persuaded an Ohio
public school to remove religious artwork, LaRue and Patmon – who
are on the same side of the debate over the Ohio Religious Freedom
Restoration Act – expressed contradictory opinions in the
Dispatch about how the legislation would affect such
situations.

With 45
cosponsors
, nearly half of the state’s representatives have
expressed support for the bill. The vast majority of cosponsors are
Republicans.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/09/ohio-bill-sparks-debate-about-religious
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New Mexico Cop Who Shot at Minivan Full of Children Appeals His Firing

respect his authoritahLast month, a cop in New Mexico
shot at a minivan full of children
when the driver, Oriana
Farrell, tried to pull away a second time after being stopped for
going 71 in a 55. Dascham video shows an officer trying to smash
the passenger side window before Farrell drove away the second
time. Police said they were trying to shoot out the minivan’s
tires, but as Jess Remington noted then, police experts don’t
consider that a safe practice. Police eventually arrested Farrell,
charging her with fleeing an officer, child abuse, and possession
of drug paraphernalia (two marijuana pipes were allegedly found in
the minivan). Her attorney has claimed Farrell drove away fearing
for the safety of her children in the presence of police, and that
if anyone ought to be charged with child abuse it should be the
officer who shot.

Now, after a disciplinary hearing, that officer, Elias Montoya,
has been
fired
, a decision made by the state’s police chief, who said
the “buck stops” with him. But, because he’s a public sector
employee with public union privileges, Montoya is
appealing
that decision. His attorneys provided no comment to
the AP on the merits of the case, only that they intended to appeal
on their client’s behalf. And being afforded that privilege, why
wouldn’t he?

h/t to sarcasmic, who pointed this out in my
earlier post
about a sexually inappropriate middle school
teacher it’s taken too long to fire thanks to generous privileges
afforded public sector employees.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/09/new-mexico-cop-who-shot-at-minivan-full
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Fed's Fisher Blasts "Flaccid" Monetary Policy, Says More CapEx Needed

We warned here (and here most recently), the most insidious way in which the Fed's ZIRP policy is now bleeding not only the middle class dry, but is forcing companies to reallocate cash in ways that benefit corporate shareholders at the present, at the expense of investing prudently for growth 2 or 3 years down the road. It seems the message is being heard loud and very clear among 'some' of the FOMC members; most notably Richard Fisher:

"Without fiscal policy that incentivizes rather than discourages U.S. capex (capital expenditure), this accommodative monetary policy aimed at reducing unemployment (especially structural unemployment) or improving the quality of jobs is rendered flaccid and less than optimally effective… I would feel more comfortable were we to remove ourselves as soon as possible from interfering with the normal price-setting functioning of financial markets."

Perhaps Yellen (and others) will listen this time?

 

Excerpted from Richard Fisher's speech on Monetary Policy:

In my view, the Federal Reserve has supplied more than sufficient liquidity to fuel economic recovery above and beyond a reduction of unemployment from its current level of 7 percent. As I just said, money is cheap and liquidity is abundant. Indeed, it is coursing over the gunwales of the ship of our economy, placing us at risk of becoming submerged in financial shenanigans rather than in conducting business based on fundamentals.

Monetary Policy Rendered Flaccid

To be sure, the job creators in our economy—private companies—have used this period of accommodative monetary policy to clean up the liability side of their balance sheets and fine-tune their bottom lines by buying shares and increasing dividends. They have also continued achieving productivity enhancement and relentless reduction in SG&A (selling, general and administrative expenses). Running tight ships, they are now poised to hire as they become more confident about nonmonetary matters that remain unresolved.

I used to say that the United States was the best-looking horse in the global glue factory. Now, I firmly believe we are the most fit stallion or filly on the global racetrack: Our companies are the most financially prepared and most productively operated they have been at any time during the nearly four decades since I graduated from business school. What is holding them back is not the cost or the availability of credit and finance. What is holding them back is fiscal and regulatory policy that is, at best, uncertain, and at worst, counterproductive.

Against that background, I believe that the current program of purchasing $85 billion per month in U.S. Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities comes at a cost that far exceeds its purported benefits. Presently, there is no private or public company that I know of, including many CCC-rated credits, that does not now have access to sufficient, cheap capital. There is no private or public company I know of that considers monetary policy to be deficient. Instead, to a company, every CEO I talk to feels that uncertainty derived from fiscal policy and regulatory interference is the key government-induced deterrent to more robust economic growth and profitability.

The FOMC has helped enable a sharp turn in the housing market and roaring stock and bond markets. I would argue that the former benefited the middle-income quartiles, while the latter has primarily benefited the rich and the quick. Though the recent numbers are encouraging, easy money has failed to encourage the robust payroll expansion that is the basis for the sustained consumer demand on which our economy depends. It cannot do so in and of itself. Without fiscal policy that incentivizes rather than discourages U.S. capex (capital expenditure), this accommodative monetary policy aimed at reducing unemployment (especially structural unemployment) or improving the quality of jobs is rendered flaccid and less than optimally effective. And as to the housing markets, prices are now appreciating to levels that may be hampering affordability in many markets.

What About Inflation?

As to the issue of inflation, the run rate for personal consumption expenditure (PCE) prices in the third quarter was 2 percent, according to recently revised data. The Dallas Fed computes a Trimmed Mean analysis of the PCE, which we feel provides a more accurate view of inflationary developments. The 12-month run rate for the Trimmed Mean PCE has been steady at 1.3 percent for the past seven months.

As measured by surveys and financial market indicators, expected inflation five or more years out is anchored firmly at levels consistent with the 2 percent rate that modern central bankers now cotton to as appropriate. These surveys and indicators also show expected price increases over 2014 only modestly below 2 percent.

Against this background, I am not of the school of thought that monetary policy need continue to be hyperaccommodative or be made even more so in order to bring medium-term inflation expectations closer to target. I certainly don’t see any justification for seeking to raise medium-term expectations above 2 percent as an inducement for businesses to pour on capex and expand payrolls or for policy to act as an incentive for consumers to go out and spend more money now rather than later. To me, this would just undermine the slowly improving confidence we have begun to see.

Especially given that we have a surfeit of excess liquidity sloshing about in the system, the idea of ramping up inflation expectations from their current tame levels strikes me as short-sighted and even reckless. We already have enough kindling for potential long-term inflation, which will sorely test our capacity to manage policy going forward. I do not wish to add further wood to that pile.

It Is Time to Taper

In my view, we at the Fed should begin tapering back our bond purchases at the earliest opportunity. To enable the markets to digest this change of course with minimal disruption, we should do so within the context of a clearly articulated, well-defined calendar for reducing purchases on a steady path to zero. We should make clear that, barring some serious economic crisis, we will stay the course of reduction rather than give an imprecise nod as we did after the May and June meetings that led markets to believe the program might end as unemployment reached 7 percent.

Only then can we at the Fed return to focusing on management of the overnight rate that anchors the yield curve. To be sure, we may wish to keep overnight rates low for a prolonged period, depending on economic developments. But we need to return to conducting monetary policy that is more in keeping with the normal role of a central bank. We need to break away from trying to manipulate term premia and stop prolonging the distortions that accrue from our massive long-term bond purchases and the risks we incur in building an ever-expanding balance sheet that is now approaching $4 trillion.

Becoming Dentists Once Again

I consider this strategy desirable on its own merit: I would feel more comfortable were we to remove ourselves as soon as possible from interfering with the normal price-setting functioning of financial markets. And I consider it desirable from the standpoint of protecting our limited
franchise. As Chairman (Ben) Bernanke has pointed out politely, and I have argued less diplomatically, good monetary policy is necessary—but certainly not sufficient—to return the nation to full employment. Acting as though we can go it alone only builds expectations that far exceed our capacity. And it could lead us to believe that we have a greater capacity to control economic outcomes than we actually have.

If I may paraphrase a sainted figure for many of my colleagues, John Maynard Keynes: If the members of the FOMC could manage to get themselves to once again be thought of as humble, competent people on the level of dentists, that would be splendid. I would argue that the time to reassume a more humble central banker persona is upon us.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/nzz7ybyq7J8/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Fed’s Fisher Blasts “Flaccid” Monetary Policy, Says More CapEx Needed

We warned here (and here most recently), the most insidious way in which the Fed's ZIRP policy is now bleeding not only the middle class dry, but is forcing companies to reallocate cash in ways that benefit corporate shareholders at the present, at the expense of investing prudently for growth 2 or 3 years down the road. It seems the message is being heard loud and very clear among 'some' of the FOMC members; most notably Richard Fisher:

"Without fiscal policy that incentivizes rather than discourages U.S. capex (capital expenditure), this accommodative monetary policy aimed at reducing unemployment (especially structural unemployment) or improving the quality of jobs is rendered flaccid and less than optimally effective… I would feel more comfortable were we to remove ourselves as soon as possible from interfering with the normal price-setting functioning of financial markets."

Perhaps Yellen (and others) will listen this time?

 

Excerpted from Richard Fisher's speech on Monetary Policy:

In my view, the Federal Reserve has supplied more than sufficient liquidity to fuel economic recovery above and beyond a reduction of unemployment from its current level of 7 percent. As I just said, money is cheap and liquidity is abundant. Indeed, it is coursing over the gunwales of the ship of our economy, placing us at risk of becoming submerged in financial shenanigans rather than in conducting business based on fundamentals.

Monetary Policy Rendered Flaccid

To be sure, the job creators in our economy—private companies—have used this period of accommodative monetary policy to clean up the liability side of their balance sheets and fine-tune their bottom lines by buying shares and increasing dividends. They have also continued achieving productivity enhancement and relentless reduction in SG&A (selling, general and administrative expenses). Running tight ships, they are now poised to hire as they become more confident about nonmonetary matters that remain unresolved.

I used to say that the United States was the best-looking horse in the global glue factory. Now, I firmly believe we are the most fit stallion or filly on the global racetrack: Our companies are the most financially prepared and most productively operated they have been at any time during the nearly four decades since I graduated from business school. What is holding them back is not the cost or the availability of credit and finance. What is holding them back is fiscal and regulatory policy that is, at best, uncertain, and at worst, counterproductive.

Against that background, I believe that the current program of purchasing $85 billion per month in U.S. Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities comes at a cost that far exceeds its purported benefits. Presently, there is no private or public company that I know of, including many CCC-rated credits, that does not now have access to sufficient, cheap capital. There is no private or public company I know of that considers monetary policy to be deficient. Instead, to a company, every CEO I talk to feels that uncertainty derived from fiscal policy and regulatory interference is the key government-induced deterrent to more robust economic growth and profitability.

The FOMC has helped enable a sharp turn in the housing market and roaring stock and bond markets. I would argue that the former benefited the middle-income quartiles, while the latter has primarily benefited the rich and the quick. Though the recent numbers are encouraging, easy money has failed to encourage the robust payroll expansion that is the basis for the sustained consumer demand on which our economy depends. It cannot do so in and of itself. Without fiscal policy that incentivizes rather than discourages U.S. capex (capital expenditure), this accommodative monetary policy aimed at reducing unemployment (especially structural unemployment) or improving the quality of jobs is rendered flaccid and less than optimally effective. And as to the housing markets, prices are now appreciating to levels that may be hampering affordability in many markets.

What About Inflation?

As to the issue of inflation, the run rate for personal consumption expenditure (PCE) prices in the third quarter was 2 percent, according to recently revised data. The Dallas Fed computes a Trimmed Mean analysis of the PCE, which we feel provides a more accurate view of inflationary developments. The 12-month run rate for the Trimmed Mean PCE has been steady at 1.3 percent for the past seven months.

As measured by surveys and financial market indicators, expected inflation five or more years out is anchored firmly at levels consistent with the 2 percent rate that modern central bankers now cotton to as appropriate. These surveys and indicators also show expected price increases over 2014 only modestly below 2 percent.

Against this background, I am not of the school of thought that monetary policy need continue to be hyperaccommodative or be made even more so in order to bring medium-term inflation expectations closer to target. I certainly don’t see any justification for seeking to raise medium-term expectations above 2 percent as an inducement for businesses to pour on capex and expand payrolls or for policy to act as an incentive for consumers to go out and spend more money now rather than later. To me, this would just undermine the slowly improving confidence we have begun to see.

Especially given that we have a surfeit of excess liquidity sloshing about in the system, the idea of ramping up inflation expectations from their current tame levels strikes me as short-sighted and even reckless. We already have enough kindling for potential long-term inflation, which will sorely test our capacity to manage policy going forward. I do not wish to add further wood to that pile.

It Is Time to Taper

In my view, we at the Fed should begin tapering back our bond purchases at the earliest opportunity. To enable the markets to digest this change of course with minimal disruption, we should do so within the context of a clearly articulated, well-defined calendar for reducing purchases on a steady path to zero. We should make clear that, barring some serious economic crisis, we will stay the course of reduction rather than give an imprecise nod as we did after the May and June meetings that led markets to believe the program might end as unemployment reached 7 percent.

Only then can we at the Fed return to focusing on management of the overnight rate that anchors the yield curve. To be sure, we may wish to keep overnight rates low for a prolonged period, depending on economic developments. But we need to return to conducting monetary policy that is more in keeping with the normal role of a central bank. We need to break away from trying to manipulate term premia and stop prolonging the distortions that accrue from our massive long-term bond purchases and the risks we incur in building an ever-expanding balance sheet that is now approaching $4 trillion.

Becoming Dentists Once Again

I consider this strategy desirable on its own merit: I would feel more comfortable were we to remove ourselves as soon as possible from interfering with the normal price-setting functioning of financial markets. And I consider it desirable from the standpoint of protecting our limited franchise. As Chairman (Ben) Bernanke has pointed out politely, and I have argued less diplomatically, good monetary policy is necessary—but certainly not sufficient—to return the nation to full employment. Acting as though we can go it alone only builds expectations that far exceed our capacity. And it could lead us to believe that we have a greater capacity to control economic outcomes than we actually have.

If I may paraphrase a sainted figure for many of my colleagues, John Maynard Keynes: If the members of the FOMC could manage to get themselves to once again be thought of as humble, competent people on the level of dentists, that would be splendid. I would argue that the time to reassume a more humble central banker persona is upon us.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/nzz7ybyq7J8/story01.htm Tyler Durden