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Business Headlines For September 11, 2009

Asia Trades Higher With The Exception of Japan & Australia


By Patrick Rial and Shani Raja

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) — Asian stocks rose and the MSCI Asia Pacific Index had its biggest weekly advance since July after Chinese economic data beat economist estimates. Japanese shares dropped on a worse-than-expected economic growth report.

Poly Real Estate Group Co., China’s second-largest developer by market value, advanced 3.7 percent in Shanghai after government reports showed industrial production and investment growth accelerated. Cnooc Ltd., China’s third-biggest oil company, rose 2.2 percent in Hong Kong as crude oil rose to the highest in more than a week. Dentsu Inc., Japan’s largest advertising agency, dropped 2.7 percent after the government revised economic growth figures lower and the yen strengthened.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 0.4 percent to 117.59 as of 7:14 p.m. in Tokyo. It advanced 4.2 percent in the past five days, the most since the week ended July 24. The gauge has surged 60 percent in the past six months as economies recovered from the first global recession since World War II.

“There’s a lot of expectation priced in after the recent rally,” said Matt Riordan, who helps manage about $4.1 billion at Paradice Investment Management in Sydney. “Still, the economic data globally and earnings have tended to surprise on the upside.”

China’s Shanghai Composite Index rose 2.2 percent, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index added 0.4 percent as Chinese industrial production climbed 12.3 percent in August from a year earlier. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average lost 0.7 percent while the Topix dropped 0.8 percent, the only key indexes in Asia to drop. Singapore’s Straits Times Index was little changed…..



Europe Trades Higher

By Sarah Jones

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) — European and Asian stocks rose, sending the MSCI World Index higher for a seventh day, as Chinese economic data that exceeded estimates and increased forecasts for oil demand bolstered the earnings outlook for commodity producers.

BG Group Plc, Repsol YPF SA and BHP Billiton Ltd. climbed more than 1.5 percent as crude traded above $71 barrel in New York and reports showed industrial production and investment growth in China accelerated. Air France-KLM Group surged 6.9 percent after a report the airline is planning to restructure its cargo activities. Fiat SpA climbed 4.8 percent as Credit Suisse Group recommended the Italian carmaker.

The MSCI World of 23 developed countries gained 0.3 percent at 11:07 a.m. in London, while Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index added 0.6 percent. The regional gauge has climbed 3.5 percent this week, the biggest advance since July. The rally has driven valuations on the index to 46.7 times profit, the highest level since 2003, weekly Bloomberg data show.

“I don’t think the equity rally has to end at the current time,” Stephen Pope, chief global market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald in London, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “The economic numbers are looking a lot more healthy. The market still has a lot of scope to move forward.”…..

Oil Trades Unch @ $72pb

Oil prices hovered near $72 a barrel Friday as a drop in U.S. crude inventories suggested demand may be picking up and the dollar continued to slump against other currencies, boosting commodities.

By midday in Europe, benchmark crude for October delivery was down 19 cents at $71.75 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. On Thursday, the contract rose 63 cents to settle at $71.94.

Crude has traded between $65 and $75 for a few months as investors struggle to gauge the strength of the global economic recovery.

Evidence of a sustained rebound in crude consumption could trigger a break out of that price range, although many analysts predict oil prices will likely remain near current levels for some time.

“We continue to favor a range rather than a trend,” said Olivier Jakob from Petromatrix in Switzerland.

The Energy Information Administration said Thursday that crude inventories fell by 5.9 million barrels last week, more than three times estimates of analysts surveyed by Platt’s, the energy information arm of McGraw-Hill Cos.

Oil has jumped $4 this week as investors eyed rising stock markets and a slumping U.S. dollar. Some investors buy into commodities such as oil and gold as a hedge against inflation and dollar weakness.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.8 percent Thursday for its fifth day of gains. On Friday, the euro rose to $1.4596 from $1.4574 late Thursday in New York and the British pound rose to $1.6709 from $1.6665, while the dollar slid to 90.90 Japanese yen from 91.74 yen.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which decided to leave output levels unchanged at a meeting Thursday in Vienna, said it was cautious about the outlook for an economic recovery.

“There remains great concern about the magnitude and pace of this recovery,” said OPEC, which pumps about 40 percent of the world’s oil production

In other Nymex trading, gasoline for October delivery fell 0.22 cent to $1.8014 a gallon, and heating oil retreated 0.77 cent to $1.79 a gallon. Natural gas was down 2.1 cents to $3.235 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, Brent crude lost 14 cents to $69.72 on the ICE Futures Exchange.


U.S. Dollar Continues To Tank

During early deals on Friday, the US dollar plunged to new multi-month lows against its Swiss, European and Japanese counterparts as a stronger than expected Chinese data added to economic recovery hopes, prompting investors to keep shifting funds to riskier and growth-linked currencies and thus reducing demand for the safe-haven greenback.

The dollar dropped to a 1-month low against the British pound, one-year trough versus the New Zealand dollar and a 2-day low versus its Australian and Canadian counterparts.


Roach Puts Odds of Global Relapse to 1 in 3

By Bloomberg News

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) — Odds of a U.S.-led “relapse” into global recession may be as high as one-in-three if any shock to the world’s biggest economy adds to depressed consumer demand, according to Stephen Roach of Morgan Stanley.

Economies emerging from recession need a “growth cushion” to avoid the possibility of a repeated slump, Roach, chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, said in an interview in Dalian, China, yesterday, where he was attending a World Economic Forum event.

“The consumer is still dead money, the consumer is not coming back,” Roach said. “I’d put the relapse odds one in four, maybe as high as one in three,” he said, referring to the danger of a renewed global slowdown stemming from a shock to the U.S. economy.

U.S. household incomes decreased in 2008 and the poverty rate rose to the highest since 1997, boosting concern that consumer spending will play a limited role in leading any recovery from the worst recession since the 1930s. Plunging home values and stock prices have fueled a record $13.9 trillion loss in household wealth in the U.S. since the middle of 2007.

The Federal Reserve this week said 11 of its 12 regional banks reported signs of a stable or improving economy in July and August, adding anecdotal evidence that the worst U.S. recession in seven decades is over.

The world’s largest economy contracted 1 percent from April through June, according to the Commerce Department. The drop was the fourth in a row, making it the longest contraction since quarterly records began in 1947.

‘Anemic’ Recovery

Roach said that the “anemic” recovery in the U.S. will make the economy more vulnerable to shocks — anything from storms to strikes — that could drag down global economic growth next year. While he didn’t rule out the possibility of a relapse into recession, he said he wasn’t “calling for a double-dip because I’m not calling for a shock.”

“The recovery is going to be so anemic, especially in the U.S., that the economy on an underlying basis is going to be a lot closer to the stall speed than would be the case in a normal V-shaped recovery,” Roach said. “Stall-speed economies are risky economies because if you have one of these shocks out of the blue and you’re barely growing at the stall speed or a little bit faster, you can have a relapse pretty darned quickly.”

Officials from the Group of 20 nations this month expressed caution on the world economic outlook and judged it premature to start unwinding record-low interest rates and about $2 trillion in fiscal stimulus.

U.S. Savers

“Over the next three to five years, given the savings imperatives of the American household sector, I think that the growth rate is going to be cut in half,” Roach said, referring to U.S. consumption. “For export-led economies in China and elsewhere in the region, the biggest source of external demand is going to be growing at best, half the clip.”

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Sept. 9 said the U.S. savings rate climbed to an average of 5 percent during the second quarter of this year from 1.2 percent at the beginning of 2008.

The U.S. has a “fair chance” of becoming a net saver as households are saving more, Gail Fosler, president of New York- based research group Conference Board, said in a speech in Singapore today.



China’s Industrial Production & Lending Advances

By Bloomberg News

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) — China’s industrial production rose more than forecast in August, lending unexpectedly climbed and retail sales advanced, indicating growth in the world’s third- biggest economy is likely to accelerate.

Output at the nation’s factories gained 12.3 percent from a year earlier, the most since August 2008, the statistics bureau said in Beijing today. Local-currency new loans were 410.4 billion yuan ($60 billion), up from 355.9 billion yuan in July, the central bank reported.

Chinese shares rose as today’s figures showed that stimulus efforts are more than compensating for a collapse in exports, which dropped further in August. At the same time, faster credit growth may stoke concern about asset-price inflation. Bank of China Ltd. Vice President Zhu Min yesterday warned liquidity may cause “bubbles in commodities, stocks and real estate.”

“Policy stimulus is driving the recovery and China is poised to get more support from exports in coming months,” said Brian Jackson, Hong Kong-based senior strategist for emerging markets at Royal Bank of Canada. “That will give growth an extra push and allow policy makers to ease back on stimulus early next year.”

The Shanghai Composite Index closed 2.2 percent higher, helping pare losses last month that were stoked by concern about a slowdown in new lending from a record $1.1 trillion in the first half. The index is up 64 percent this year….



Japan’s GDP Grew Less Than Expected, But Still Positive @ 2.3%

By Jason Clenfield and Tatsuo Ito

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) — Japan’s economy unexpectedly grew less than initially estimated in the second quarter as companies cut spending and stockpiles fell.

Gross domestic product expanded at an annual 2.3 percent pace in the three months ended June 30, slower than the 3.7 percent reported last month, the Cabinet Office said today in Tokyo. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast the figure to be unchanged from the preliminary estimate.

Today’s report shows Japan’s recovery from its deepest postwar recession is even weaker than previously thought, and intensifies pressure on the incoming government, led by Yukio Hatoyama, to resuscitate household demand. With unemployment at a record high and one-third of factory capacity idle, Japanese growth may depend on overseas demand.

“It’s hard to say when the economy will return to where it was before the unprecedented contractions in previous quarters,” said Yoshiki Shinke, a senior economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo. “The DPJ will be forced to come up with more specific growth strategies to help the economy.”

The Nikkei 225 Stock Average fell 0.4 percent at the lunch break in Tokyo. The yen traded at 91.41 per dollar from 91.65 before the report was published.

From the previous quarter, the world’s second-largest economy grew 0.6 percent, less than the 0.9 percent the Cabinet Office estimated last month. That compares with a 0.1 percent contraction in Europe and a 0.3 percent drop in the U.S.

In a sign that overseas demand is holding up, reports from China today showed industrial production rose the most since August 2008 and new lending unexpectedly accelerated.

Stockpiles Decline….


Taiwan’s Shares Expect to Rise As They & China Forge a New Relationship of Cooperation

By Weiyi Lim and Veronica Navarro Espinosa

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) — Taiwan’s stock exchange expects initial share sales to surge for the rest of the year as the island seeks to end six decades of hostility with China.

Taiwan is expected to have 10 to 15 more new listings for the rest of the year, Schive Chi, chairman of the stock exchange, said yesterday at a New York conference. A total of 12 companies have gone public on the Taiwan exchange so far in 2009, according to the island’s bourse.

“The Taiwan Stock Exchange is attractive to investors,” Lawrence Shan, a senior vice president at the exchange, said by phone today. “Our price-earnings ratio is so strong now because of warming relations with China.”

Cross-strait ties reached their warmest in six decades under President Ma Ying-jeou, as his efforts led to the start of direct commercial flights with China, where mainland tourists have made 375,000 trips across the Taiwan Strait. Both sides are also in talks to open up industries ranging from banking to technology.

Taiwan’s benchmark Taiex index is valued at 24.15 times this year’s earnings, the second highest in Asia after Japan, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The news listings will come from companies that already trade on other exchanges, Schive added…..



Flu Pandemic Gives Vaccine Makers A Boost

By Julie Steenhuysen – Analysis

CHICAGO (Reuters) – Tiny companies with big ideas for making flu vaccines have captured the attention of investors and governments looking for a quicker way to make a vaccine against the pandemic of swine flu.

But while the vaccine rush has given companies new opportunities for grants and some the chance to test their technologies on people, few will actually have an H1N1 vaccine any time soon, analysts and vaccine experts said on Tuesday.

The World Health Organization forecasts that as much as a third of the world’s population, or 2 billion people, will eventually become infected with the new H1N1 virus, a tempting market for many companies.

“There’s a lot of companies that put out these press releases because they’re looking for investor money,” said Dr. Greg Poland, a vaccine researcher at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, who tests new vaccines….


Geithner Looks For Less Government Involvement

By Glenn Somerville and David Lawder

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Thursday a strengthening economy means the government can end some of the extraordinary support it put in place for markets and prepare for a slow recovery.

Appearing before the Congressional Oversight Panel for the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, Geithner said the economy was in far better shape now than a year ago when it was “on the verge of collapse,” though it still had problems.

“As we enter this new phase, we must begin winding down some of the extraordinary support we put in place for the financial system,” he said. “We are now in a position to evolve our strategy as we move from crisis response to recovery.”

Geithner faced a grilling from the TARP panel members, who wanted to know why taxpayer-provided aid was so available for financial firms but not to other types of businesses. He suggested the decision to aid banks was paying off.

At a later town hall meeting carried by CNBC television, Geithner told questioners that he was confident China will remain a big buyer of U.S. debt securities because it also wants to see the global economy regain its balance.

But he said there must be tighter controls over risk-taking by banks, calling that “a critical part of creating a more effective financial system.” He also said they will include tying executives’ pay more tightly to performance in future.

Geithner said banks that received capital injections have repaid more than $70 billion, reducing the government’s total investment to $180 billion. and estimated another $50 billion will be repaid over the next 12 to 18 months.

STILL A ROCKY ROAD…..


OECD Indicator Points to A Stronger Recovery

PARIS (Reuters) – The economic outlook improved in most countries in the 30-nation OECD area and clear signs of recovery can be seen in the major seven economies, an OECD survey said on Friday.

The Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said its composite leading indicator (CLI) for the OECD-area rose to 97.8 in July from 96.3 in June.

The indicator for the major seven economies rose to 97.5 from 95.9.

The report is in line with other recent data and comments from officials that the outlook for world economy has improved.

“OECD composite leading indicators for July 2009 show stronger signs of recovery in most of the OECD economies,” the report said.

While recovery was expected in most economies, France and Italy were faring better and might expand, it said.

The indicator for Japan rose to 94.9 in July from 93.5 in June and in the United States, it climbed to 96.0 from 94.4.

Britain’s leading indicator rose to 100.6 from 99.3 and the OECD also forecast a recovery.

The CLIs for China, India and Russia all rose.

Brazil’s indicator moved up only slightly, to 97.4 from 97.2 in June and was the only country facing a possible trough.

However, the OECD noted: “The signs from Brazil, where a trough is emerging, are also more encouraging than in last month’s assessment.”

For a link to the full report on the OECD website, please click on: here


A Rising Market Has People Spending Again

The NYT reports that small investors are believing in the stock market, after recently getting clobbered. Of course, if they’re only getting back in now, they’ve missed a ton of the upside.

What’s more interesting, though, is the way the market has a pro-cyclical effect on the broader economy. Even if the benefit is mainly psychological, the rising market has people spending money again:

Daniel Kelhoffer, 67, an investor in Georgia, visited his son in Germany this summer and cruised the lake near his house in his wooden 1959 Chris-Craft motorboat, encouraged by the steady rise in his monthly account statements. Joseph Fredrick, an investor in Cincinnati, exulted that, largely because of his financial adviser, his portfolio had fallen only 12 percent since the market tanked.

In North Carolina, a retired Wachovia executive, Robert Paynter, lost tens of thousands of dollars when his stock options and Wachovia shares hit the skids. In October, he told The New York Times that he felt as if he were witnessing his own death with each plunge of the stock market. This summer, he bought a year-old Corvette convertible. And while he and his wife canceled a trip to Europe, they are contemplating a Mediterranean cruise next year.

“I’m feeling a whole lot better,” he said. “As ugly as it got, I never got to a point where I thought I was going to have to go back to work or miss a meal. I can take a lot bigger hit than I thought I could.”

Read the whole thing >




Will Baltic Dry Index Forecast The Next Leg Down ?

Excellent chart here from the Trader’s Narrative blog.  Is the Baltic Dry Index foreshadowing the next leg down in the bear market?

 CHART OF THE DAY: DOES THE BALTIC DRY INDEX LEAD EQUITY MARKETS?

* All information on this website is provided for general purposes and should not be misconstrued as financial advice. Always consult your financial advisor before acting on any of the information herein. You should always assume that the author(s) could have a vested interest in topics described and may or may not own securities and instruments discussed.



Some Say We Still Risk Deflation

Despite a 50% rally in equities and the recent surge in gold prices there continue to be little to no signs of inflation in the economy.  Consumer credit is still collapsing and banks are still hoarding cash.  Perhaps most importantly, the velocity of money actually continues to decline:

 ARE WE ABOUT TO SINK INTO A DEFLATIONARY HOLE?

SocGen’s Albert Edwards believs the ECRI’s leading indicators are forecasting a drastic and devastating decline in core inflation:

But it is collapsing core inflation that poses the greatest risk to the global economy going forward. We highlighted last week that core CPI inflation descends rapidly, with a lag, after the recession ends. If core US CPI inflation falls by around the 3% shown in the chart below over the next year, that will take the yoy rate to minus 1.5%! Hence the growth in nominal
quantities (e.g. corporate revenues) is set to see disappointing lower highs in this upturn after lower lows. And that, in our view, is just a prelude to a 2010 collapse into outright deflation.

 ARE WE ABOUT TO SINK INTO A DEFLATIONARY HOLE?

All of this makes you wonder just how real the rally in stocks has been and how much of it has been purely based on government stimulus and the return of confidence – perhaps overconfidence.

Source: SocGen

* All information on this website is provided for general purposes and should not be misconstrued as financial advice. Always consult your financial advisor before acting on any of the information herein. You should always assume that the author(s) could have a vested interest in topics described and may or may not own securities and instruments discussed.



Chinese Trade Balance Still Shows Problems

In what should be one of the largest periods for the Chinese exports it is actually one of the worst. This is the peak time for worldwide retaillers to be receiving goods from China for the upcoming holiday shopping season.

Either retailers are waiting for the last minute to determine what (and how much) they will commit money to, or they just don’t see the demand to justify ordering large quantities of goods.

Just released were the figures for August 2009:

(CH) CHINA AUG TRADE BALANCE: $15.7B V $13.6BE ($10.6B PRIOR)

Exports Y/Y: -23.4% v -19%e (-23% prior)
– Imports Y/Y: -17% v -10.5%e (-15% prior)
That speaks loudly of where the global economy is… still depressed severly. Even the Chinese imports data paints a different picture that a ‘booming’ Chinese economy. Even they are not buying as much, down 17%.

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Editorial: Sick & Wrong

Taibbi breaks it down for you

Let’s start with the obvious: America has not only the worst but the dumbest health care system in the developed world. It’s become a black leprosy eating away at the American experiment — a bureaucracy so insipid and mean and illogical that even our darkest criminal minds wouldn’t be equal to dreaming it up on purpose.

The system doesn’t work for anyone. It cheats patients and leaves them to die, denies insurance to 47 million Americans, forces hospitals to spend billions haggling over claims, and systematically bleeds and harasses doctors with the specter of catastrophic litigation. Even as a mechanism for delivering bonuses to insurance-company fat cats, it’s a miserable failure: Greedy insurance bosses who spent a generation denying preventive care to patients now see their profits sapped by millions of customers who enter the system only when they’re sick with incurably expensive illnesses.

The cost of all of this to society, in illness and death and lost productivity and a soaring federal deficit and plain old anxiety and anger, is incalculable — and that’s the good news. The bad news is our failed health care system won’t get fixed, because it exists entirely within the confines of yet another failed system: the political entity known as the United States of America.

Just as we have a medical system that is not really designed to care for the sick, we have a government that is not equipped to fix actual crises. What our government is good at is something else entirely: effecting the appearance of action, while leaving the actual reform behind in a diabolical labyrinth of ingenious legislative maneuvers.

Over the course of this summer, those two failed systems have collided in a spectacular crossroads moment in American history. We have an urgent national emergency on the one hand, and on the other, a comfortable majority of ostensibly simpatico Democrats who were elected by an angry population, in large part, specifically to reform health care. When they all sat down in Washington to tackle the problem, it amounted to a referendum on whether or not we actually have a functioning government.

It’s a situation that one would have thought would be sobering enough to snap Congress into real action for once. Instead, they did the exact opposite, doubling down on the same-old, same-old and laboring day and night in the halls of the Capitol to deliver us a tour de force of old thinking and legislative trickery, as if that’s what we really wanted. Almost every single one of the main players — from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Blue Dog turncoat Max Baucus — found some unforeseeable, unique-to-them way to fuck this thing up. Even Ted Kennedy, for whom successful health care reform was to be the great vindicating achievement of his career, and Barack Obama, whose entire presidency will likely be judged by this bill, managed to come up small when the lights came on.

We might look back on this summer someday and think of it as the moment when our government lost us for good. It was that bad.

Here’s where we are right now: Before Congress recessed in August, four of the five committees working to reform health care had produced draft bills. On the House side, bills were developed by the commerce, ways and means, and labor committees. On the Senate side, a bill was completed by the HELP committee (Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, chaired by Ted Kennedy). The only committee that didn’t finish a bill is the one that’s likely to matter most: the Senate Finance Committee, chaired by the infamous obfuscating dick Max Baucus, a right-leaning Democrat from Montana who has received $2,880,631 in campaign contributions from the health care industry.

The game in health care reform has mostly come down to whether or not the final bill that is hammered out from the work of these five committees will contain a public option — i.e., an option for citizens to buy in to a government-run health care plan. Because the plan wouldn’t have any profit motive — and wouldn’t have to waste money on executive bonuses and corporate marketing — it would automatically cost less than private insurance. Once such a public plan is on the market, it would also drive down prices offered by for-profit insurers — a move essential to offset the added cost of covering millions of uninsured Americans. Without a public option, any effort at health care reform will be as meaningful as a manicure for a gunshot victim. “The public option is the main thing on the table,” says Michael Behan, an aide to Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont. “It’s really coming down to that.”

The House versions all contain a public option, as does the HELP committee’s version in the Senate. So whether or not there will be a public option in the end will likely come down to Baucus, one of the biggest whores for insurance-company money in the history of the United States. The early indications are that there is no public option in the Baucus version; the chairman hinted he favors the creation of nonprofit insurance cooperatives, a lame-ass alternative that even a total hack like Sen. Chuck Schumer has called a “fig leaf.”

Even worse, Baucus has set things up so that the final Senate bill will be drawn up by six senators from his committee: a gang of three Republicans (Chuck Grassley of Iowa, Olympia Snowe of Maine, Mike Enzi of Wyoming) and three Democrats (Baucus, Kent Conrad of North Dakota, Jeff Bingaman of New Mexico) known by the weirdly Maoist sobriquet “Group of Six.” The setup senselessly submarines the committee’s Democratic majority, effectively preventing members who advocate a public option, like Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia and Robert Menendez of New Jersey, from seriously influencing the bill. Getting movement on a public option — or any other meaningful reform — will now require the support of one of the three Republicans in the group: Grassley (who has received $2,034,000 from the health sector), Snowe ($756,000) or Enzi ($627,000).

This is what the prospects for real health care reform come down to — whether one of three Republicans from tiny states with no major urban populations decides, out of the goodness of his or her cash-fattened heart, to forsake forever any contributions from the health-insurance industry (and, probably, aid for their re-election efforts from the Republican National Committee).

This, of course, is the hugest of long shots. But just to hedge its bets even further and ensure that no real reforms pass, Congress has made sure to cover itself, sabotaging the bill long before it even got to Baucus’ committee. To do this, they used a five-step system of subtle feints and legislative tricks to gut the measure until there was nothing left.

Heading into the health care debate, there was only ever one genuinely dangerous idea out there, and that was a single-payer system. Used by every single developed country outside the United States (with the partial exceptions of Holland and Switzerland, which offer limited and highly regulated private-insurance options), single-payer allows doctors and hospitals to bill and be reimbursed by a single government entity. In America, the system would eliminate private insurance, while allowing doctors to continue operating privately.

In the real world, nothing except a single-payer system makes any sense. There are currently more than 1,300 private insurers in this country, forcing doctors to fill out different forms and follow different reimbursement procedures for each and every one. This drowns medical facilities in idiotic paperwork and jacks up prices: Nearly a third of all health care costs in America are associated with wasteful administration. Fully $350 billion a year could be saved on paperwork alone if the U.S. went to a single-payer system — more than enough to pay for the whole goddamned thing, if anyone had the balls to stand up and say so.

Everyone knows this, including the president. Last spring, when he met with Rep. Lynn Woolsey, the co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, Obama openly said so. “He said if he were starting from scratch, he would have a single-payer system,” says Woolsey. “But he thought it wasn’t possible, because it would disrupt the health care industry.”

Huh? This isn’t a small point: The president and the Democrats decided not to press for the only plan that makes sense for everyone, in order to preserve an industry that is not only cruel and stupid and dysfunctional, but through its rank inefficiency has necessitated the very reforms now being debated. Even though the Democrats enjoy a political monopoly and could have started from a very strong bargaining position, they chose instead to concede at least half the battle before it even began.

Obama wasn’t the only big Democrat to mysteriously abandon his position on single-payer. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Henry Waxman, the influential chair of the House commerce committee, have both backed away from their longtime support of single-payer. Hell, even Max-freaking-Baucus once conceded the logic of single-payer, saying only that it isn’t feasible politically. “There may come a time when we can push for single-payer,” he said in February. “At this time, it’s not going to get to first base in Congress.”

And helping it not get to first base was … Max Baucus. It was Baucus’ own committee that held the first round-table discussions on reform. In three days of hearings last May, he invited no fewer than 41 people to speak. The list featured all the usual industry hacks, including big insurers like America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), Blue Cross and Aetna. It’s worth noting that several of the organizations invited — including AHIP and Amgen — employ several former Baucus staffers as lobbyists, including two of his ex-chiefs of staff.

Not one of the 41 witnesses, however, was in favor of single-payer — even though eliminating the insurance companies enjoys broad public support. Leading advocates of single-payer, including doctors from the Physicians for a National Health Program, implored Baucus to allow them to testify. When he refused, a group of eight single-payer activists, including three doctors, stood up during the hearings and asked to be included in the discussion. One of the all-time classic moments in the health care reform movement came when the second protester to stand up, Katie Robbins of Health Care Now, declared, “We need single-payer health care!”

To which Baucus, who looked genuinely frightened, replied, “We need more police!”

The eight protesters were led away in handcuffs and spent about seven hours in jail. “It’s funny, the policemen were all telling us their horror stories about health care,” recalls Dr. Margaret Flowers, one of the physicians who was jailed. “One was telling us about his mother who was 62 and lost her job and was uninsured, waiting to get Medicare when she was 65.” The protesters were sentenced to six months’ probation. Baucus later met with them and conceded that not including single-payer advocates in the discussion had been a mistake, although it was “too late” to change that.

Single-payer advocates have had an equally tough time getting a hearing with the president. In March, the White House refused to allow Rep. John Conyers to invite two physicians who support single-payer to the health care summit that Obama was holding to kick off the reform effort. Three months later, a single-payer advocate named David Scheiner, who served as Obama’s physician for 22 years, was mysteriously bumped from a prime-time forum on health care, where he had been invited to ask the president a question.

Many of the health care advisers in Obama’s inner circle, meanwhile, are industry hacks — people like Nancy-Ann DeParle, the president’s health care czar, who has served on the boards of for-profit companies like Medco Health Solutions and Triad Hospitals. DeParle is so unthreatening to the status quo that Karen Ignagni, the insurance industry’s leading lobbyist-gorgon, praised her “extensive experience” and “strong track record.”

Behind closed doors, Obama also moved to cut a deal with the drug industry. “It’s a dirty deal,” says Russell Mokhiber, one of the protesters whom Baucus had arrested. “The administration told them, ‘Single-payer is off the table. In exchange, we want you on board.'” In August, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America announced that the industry would contribute an estimated $150 million to campaign for Obamacare.

Even the Congressional Progressive Caucus, whose 80-plus members have overwhelmingly supported single-payer legislation in the past, decided not to draw a line in the sand. They agreed to back down on single-payer, seemingly with the understanding that Pelosi would push for a strong public option — a sort of miniversion of single-payer, a modest, government-run insurance plan that would serve as a test model for the real thing. But one of the immutable laws of politics in the U.S. Congress is that progressives will always be screwed by their own leaders, as soon as the opportunity presents itself. And with a bill the size and scope of health care, there was plenty of opportunity.

Once single-payer was off the table, the Democrats lost their best bargaining chip. Rather than being in a position to use the fear of radical legislation to extract concessions from the right — a position Obama seemingly gave away at the outset, by punting on single-payer — Republicans and conservative Blue Dog Democrats suddenly realized that they had the upper hand. Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid would now give away just about anything to avoid having to walk away without a real health care bill.

The situation was made worse as the flagging economy ate away at Obama’s political capital. Polls showed the percentage of “highly engaged” Democrats plummeting, while the percentage of “highly engaged” Republicans — inspired by idiotic scare stories from Rush Limbaugh and Sarah Palin about socialized medicine and euthanasia — rose rapidly. By late summer, “the depth of Republican support was starting to rival the breadth of Democratic support,” said noted statistician Nate Silver. The more the Republicans and Blue Dogs fidgeted and fucked around, the easier it would be for them to kill the public option. Democrats, who on the morning after Election Day could have passed a single-payer system without opposition, were now in a desperate hurry to make a deal.

The public option is hardly a cure-all: Among other things, it does nothing to reduce the $350 billion a year in unnecessary paperwork and administrative overhead that makes the current system so expensive and maddening. “That’s one of the big issues,” says an aide to a member of the progressive caucus. “None of this addresses the paperwork issue. It might even make it worse.” But the basic idea of the public option is sound enough: create a government health plan that citizens could buy through regulated marketplaces called insurance “exchanges” run at the state level. Simply by removing the profit motive, the government plan would be cheaper than private insurance. “The goal here was to offer the rock-bottom price, the Walmart price, so that people could buy insurance practically at cost,” says one Senate aide.

The logic behind the idea was so unassailable that its opponents often inadvertently found themselves arguing for it. “Assurances that the government plan would play by the rules that private insurers play by are implausible,” groused right-wing douchebag George Will. “Competition from the public option must be unfair, because government does not need to make a profit and has enormous pricing and negotiating powers.” In other words, if you offer a public plan that doesn’t systematically fuck every single person in the country by selling health care at inflated prices and raking in monster profits, private insurers just won’t be able to compete.

Will wasn’t the only prominent opponent of reform openly arguing in favor of the insurance industry’s right to continue doing business inefficiently. Sen. Ben Nelson, who together with Baucus are the Laverne and Shirley of turncoat Democrats, complained that the public option “would win the game.” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell admitted that “private insurance will not be able to compete with a government option.” This is a little like complaining that Keanu Reeves was robbed of an Oscar just because he can’t act.

For a while, the public option looked like it might have a real chance at passing. In the House, both the ways and means committee and the labor committee passed draft bills that contained a genuine public option. But then conservative opponents of the plan, the so-called Blue Dog Democrats, mounted their counterattack. A powerful bloc composed primarily of drawling Southerners in ill-fitting suits, the Blue Dogs — a gang of puffed-up political mulattos hired by the DNC to pass as almost-Republicans in red-state battlegrounds — present themselves as a quasi-religious order, worshipping at the sacred altar of “fiscal responsibility” and “deficit reduction.” On July 9th, in a harmless-sounding letter to Pelosi, 40 Blue Dogs expressed concern that doctors in the public option “must be fairly reimbursed at negotiated rates, and their participation must be voluntary.” Paying doctors “using Medicare’s below-market rates,” they added, “would seriously weaken the financial stability of our local hospitals.”

The letter was an amazing end run around the political problem posed by the public option — i.e., its unassailable status as a more efficient and cheaper health care alternative. The Blue Dogs were demanding that the very thing that makes the public option work — curbing costs to taxpayers by reimbursing doctors at Medicare rates plus five percent — be scrapped. Instead, the Blue Dogs wanted compensation rates for doctors to be jacked up, on the government’s tab. The very Democrats who make a point of boasting about their unwavering commitment to fiscal conservatism were lobbying, in essence, for a big fat piece of government pork for doctors. “Cost should be the number-one concern to the Blue Dogs,” grouses Rep. Woolsey. “That’s why they’re Blue Dogs.”

In the end, the Blue Dogs won. When the House commerce committee passed its bill, the public option no longer paid Medicare-plus-five-percent. Instead, it required the government to negotiate rates with providers, ensuring that costs would be dramatically higher. According to one Democratic aide, the concession would bump the price of the public option by $1,800 a year for the average family of four.

In one fell swoop, the public plan went from being significantly cheaper than private insurance to costing, well, “about the same as what we have now,” as one Senate aide puts it. This was the worst of both worlds, the kind of take-the-fork-in-the-road nonsolution that has been the peculiar specialty of Democrats ever since Bill Clinton invented a new way to smoke weed. The party could now sell voters on the idea that it was offering a “public option” without technically lying, while at the same time reassuring health care providers that the public option it was passing would not imperil the industry’s market share.

Even more revolting, when Pelosi was asked on July 31st if she worried that progressives in the House would yank their support of the bill because of the sellout to conservatives, she literally laughed out loud. “Are the progressives going to take down universal, quality, affordable health care for all Americans?” she said, chuckling heartily to reporters. “I don’t think so.”

The laugh said everything about what the mainstream Democratic Party is all about. It finds the notion that it has to pay anything more than lip service to its professed values funny. “It’s a joke,” complains one Democratic aide. “This is all a game to these people — and they’re good at it.”

The concession to the Blue Dogs comes at a potentially disastrous price: Without a public option that drives down prices, the cost of other health care reforms being considered by Congress will almost certainly skyrocket. The trade-off with conservatives might be understandable, if those other reforms were actually useful. But this is Congress we’re talking about.

STEP THREE: PACK IT WITH LOOPHOLES

Even seasoned congressional aides, who are accustomed to sitting through long and boring committee meetings, have found the debate over health care reform uniquely torturous. Unlike other congressional matters, where there is at least a feeling that the process might at some point be completed, the endless sessions over health care have led many staffers to fear that they will be locked in hearing rooms for the rest of their lives, listening to words like “target” and “mandate” and “doughnut hole” being repeated ad nauseam by weary, gray-faced, saggy-necked legislators — who begin, after weeks of self-inflated posturing, to look like the ugliest people in the universe. “You come out of these hearings,” says Behan, the aide to Sen. Sanders, “and the number of interconnected, moving pieces going in and out of these bills is insane — the case for single-payer health insurance makes itself.”

For those looking to fuck up health care reform — or to load it up with goodies for their rich pals — the tedium actually serves a broader purpose. Given that five different committees are weighing five different and often competing paths to reform, it’s not surprising that all sorts of bizarre crap winds up buried in their bills, stuff no one could possibly have expected to be in there. The most glaring example, passed by Ted Kennedy’s HELP committee, would allow the makers of complex drugs known as “biologics” to keep their formulas from being copied by rivals for 12 years — twice as long as the protection for ordinary pharmaceuticals. The notion that an effort ostensibly aimed at curbing health care costs would grant the pharmaceutical industry lucrative new protections against generic drugs is even weirder when you consider that earlier proposals, including one supported by Obama, would have protected brand-name drugs for only seven years.

Another favor to industry buried in the bills involves the issue of choice. From the outset, Democrats have been careful to make sure that a revamped system would not in any way force citizens to give up their existing health care plans. As Obama told the American Medical Association in June, “If you like your doctor, you will be able to keep your doctor, period. If you like your health care plan, you’ll be able to keep your health care plan, period. No one will take it away, no matter what.”

That sounds great, particularly in conjunction with the new set of standards for employer-provided insurance outlined in the House version of reform. Under the bill — known as HR 3200 — employers must provide “essential benefits” to workers or face a stiff penalty. “Essential benefits” includes elements often missing in the fly-by-night plans offered by big employers: drug benefits, outpatient care, hospitalization, mental health, the works. If your employer does not offer acceptable coverage, you then have the right to go into one of the state-run insurance “exchanges,” where you can select from a number of insurance plans, including the public option.

There’s a flip side, though: If your employer offers you acceptable care and you reject it, you are barred from buying insurance in the insurance “exchange.” In other words, you must take the insurance offered to you at work. And that might have made sense if, as decreed in the House version, employers actually had to offer good care. But in the Senate version passed by the HELP committee, there is no real requirement for employers to provide any kind of minimal level of care. On the contrary, employers who currently offer sub-par coverage will have their shitty plans protected by a grandfather clause. Which means …

“If you have coverage you like, you can keep it,” says Sen. Sanders. “But if you have coverage you don’t like, you gotta keep it.”

This grandfather clause has potentially wide-ranging consequences. One of the biggest health care problems we have in this country is the technique used by large employers — Walmart is the most notorious example — of offering dogshit, bare-bones health insurance that forces employees to take on steep co-pays and other massive charges. Low-wage workers currently offered these plans often reject them and join Medicaid, effectively shifting the health care burden for Walmart employees on to the taxpayer. If the HELP committee’s grandfather clause survives to the final bill, those workers who did the sensible thing in rejecting Walmart’s crap employer plan and taking the comparatively awesome insurance offered via Medicaid will now be rebuffed by the state and forced to take the dogshit Walmart offering.

This works out well for the states, who will get to purge all those Walmart workers from their Medicaid rolls. It also works great for Walmart, since any new competitors who appear on the horizon will be forced to offer genuine and more expensive health insurance — giving Walmart a clear competitive advantage. This little “glitch” is the essence of the health care reform effort: It changes things in a way that works for everyone except actual sick people.

Veteran legislators speak of this horrific loophole as if it were an accident — something that just sort of happened, while no one was looking. Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon was looking at an early version of the bill several months ago, when he suddenly realized that it was going to leave people stuck with their employer insurance. “I woke up one morning and was like, ‘Whoa, people aren’t going to have choices,'” he recalls.

As a means of correcting the problem, Wyden wrote up a thing called the Free Choice Act, which like many of the prematurely sidelined ideas in this health care mess is actually quite sensible. The bill would open up the insurance “exchanges” to all consumers, regardless of who is offered employer-based insurance and who isn’t. But Wyden has little hope of having his proposal included in later versions of the bill. Like Sanders, who hopes to correct the committee’s giveaway to drugmakers, Wyden won’t get a real shot at having an impact until the House and Senate meet to hammer out differences between their final bills. In a legislative sense, the bad ideas are already in the barn, and the solutions are fenced off in the fields, hoping to get in.

STEP FOUR: PROVIDE NO LEADERSHIP

One of the reasons for this chaos was the bizarre decision by the administration to provide absolutely no real oversight of the reform effort. From the start, Obama acted like a man still running for president, not someone already sitting in the White House, armed with 60 seats in the Senate. He spoke in generalities, offering as “guiding principles” the kind of I’m-for-puppies-and-sunshine platitudes we got used to on the campaign trail — investment in prevention and wellness, affordable health care for all, guaranteed choice of doctor. At no time has he come out and said what he wants Congress to do, in concrete terms. Even in June, when congressional leaders desperate for guidance met with chief of staff (and former legislative change-squelcher) Rahm Emanuel, they got no signal at all about what the White House wanted. On the question of a public option, Emanuel was agonizingly noncommittal, reportedly telling Senate Democrats that the president was still “open to alternatives.”

On the same day Emanuel was passing the buck to senators, Obama was telling reporters that it’s “still too early” to have a “strong opinion” on a public option. This was startling news indeed: Eight months after being elected president of the United States is too early to have an opinion on an issue that Obama himself made a central plank of his campaign? The president conceded only that a “public option makes sense.”

This White House makes a serial vacillator like Bill Clinton look like Patton crossing the Rhine. Veterans from the Clinton White House, in fact, jumped on Obama. “The president may have overlearned the lesson of the Clinton health care plan fiasco, which was: Don’t deliver a package to the Hill, let the Hill take ownership,” said Robert Reich, who served as labor secretary under Clinton. There were now so many competing ideas about how to pay for the plan and what kind of mandates to include that even after the five bills are completed, Congress will not be much closer to reform than it was at the beginning. “The president has got to go in there and give it coherence,” Reich concluded.

But Reich’s comment assumes that Obama wants to give the bill coherence. In many ways, the lily-livered method that Obama chose to push health care into being is a crystal-clear example of how the Democratic Party likes to act — showering a real problem with a blizzard of ineffectual decisions and verbose nonsense, then stepping aside at the last minute to reveal the true plan that all along was being forged off-camera in the furnace of moneyed interests and insider inertia. While the White House publicly eschewed any concrete “guiding principles,” the People Who Mattered, it appeared, had already long ago settled on theirs. Those principles seem to have been: no single-payer system, no meaningful public option, no meaningful employer mandates and a very meaningful mandate for individual consumers. In other words, the only major reform with teeth would be the one forcing everyone to buy some form of private insurance, no matter how crappy, or suffer a tax penalty. If the public option is the sine qua non for progressives, then the “individual mandate” is the counterpart must-have requirement for the insurance industry.

“That was their major policy ‘ask,’ and it looks like they’re going to get it,” says Dr. Steffie Woolhandler, a Boston physician who is a prominent single-payer advocate.

The so-called “individual mandate” is currently included in four of the five bills before Congress. The most likely version to survive into the final measure resembles the system in Massachusetts designed by Mormon glambot Mitt Romney, who imposed tax penalties on citizens who did not buy insurance. Several of Romney’s former advisers are involved in the writing of Obamacare, including a key aide to Ted Kennedy who was instrumental in designing the HELP committee legislation. The federal version of the Massachusetts plan would slap the uninsured with a hefty tax penalty — making the HELP committee clause barring people from opting out of their employer-provided plan that much more outrageous.

If things go the way it looks like they will, health care reform will simply force great numbers of new people to buy or keep insurance of a type that has already been proved not to work. “The IRS and the government will force people to buy a defective product,” says Woolhandler. “We know it’s defective because three-quarters of all people who file for bankruptcy because of medical reasons have insurance when they get sick — and they’re bankrupted anyway.”

STEP FIVE: BLOW THE MATH

Health care is a beast — a monster. The House 3200 bill alone is 1,017 pages long and contains countless inscrutable references to other pieces of legislation, meaning that in order to fully comprehend even those thousand pages one really has to read upward of 9,000 or 10,000 pages. There are five different versions of this creature, each with its own nuances and shades, and solving a highly complex mathematical challenge like reconciling the costs of each of the five plans would be beyond even minds who were (a) expert at such things and (b) motivated to get it right. Imagine the same problem in the hands of a bunch of second-rate country lawyers and mall owners, and you about get the idea of what the congressional picture looks like.

For instance: All five of the bills envision a significant expansion of Medicaid. As it stands, the LBJ-era program, which celebrated its 44th birthday on the day before Nancy Pelosi laughed at the progressives, awards benefits according to a jumbled series of state-by-state criteria. Some states, like Vermont, offer Medicaid to citizens whose income is as high as 300 percent of the federal poverty level, while others, like Georgia, only offer Medicaid to those closer to or below the poverty level.

The House plan would expand Medicaid eligibility to automatically include every American whose income is 133 percent of the poverty level or less. For those earning somewhat more — up to 400 percent of the poverty level — federal subsidies would help pay for the cost of a public or private plan purchased via the insurance “exchanges.” That worries state governments, which currently pay for almost half of Medicaid — and which are already seeing their Medicaid rolls swelled by the economic meltdown. A massive surge in new Medicaid members — as many as 11 million Americans under the current proposals, according to the Congressional Budget Office — might literally render many big states insolvent overnight.

Democrats pointed out that under the House plan, the federal government would pay the costs of any “newly eligible” members of Medicaid. But that phrasing, it turns out, was a semantic trick designed to undersell the cost to the states. When Massachusetts imposed a similar mandate under Romney, thousands of people who were already eligible for Medicaid, but had not enrolled, immediately joined the program in order to avoid the tax penalty for being uninsured. So while the House plan would pay for “newly eligible” patients, it won’t cover the “oldly eligible.”

Congress in this instance is behaving like corporations in the Enron age, orphaning hidden costs and complications through clever wording and accounting. Another neat trick involves the federal subsidies for low-income people who make up to 400 percent of the poverty level. The Congressional Budget Office projects that under the House bill, the subsidies will cost upward of $773 billion by 2019. But some aides think that number could end up being much higher. “Without a real public option to drive down costs, the federal support to make sure everyone gets coverage is going to get very expensive very fast,” says Behan, the aide to Sen. Sanders.

Here’s the other thing. By blowing off single-payer and cutting the heart out of the public option, the Obama administration robbed itself of its biggest argument — that health care reform is going to save a lot of money. That has left the Democrats vulnerable to charges that the plan is going to blow a mile-wide hole in the budget, one we’ll be paying debt service on through the year 3000. It also left them scrambling to find other ways to pay for the plan, making it almost inevitable that they would step in political shit with seniors everywhere by trying surreptitiously to whittle down Medicare. As a result, the Democrats have become so oversensitive to charges of fiscal irresponsibility that they’re taking their frustrations out on people who don’t deserve it. Witness Nancy Pelosi’s bizarre freakout over the Congressional Budget Office. When the CBO questioned Obama’s projected cost savings, Pelosi blasted them for “always giving you the worst-case scenario” — which, of course, is exactly what the budget office is supposed to do. When you start asking your accountant to look on the bright side, you know you’re not dealing from a position of strength.

To recap, here’s what ended up happening with health care. First, they gave away single-payer before a single gavel had fallen, apparently as a bargaining chip to the very insurers mostly responsible for creating the crisis in the first place. Then they watered down the public option so as to make it almost meaningless, while simultaneously beefing up the individual mandate, which would force millions of people now uninsured to buy a product that is no longer certain to be either cheaper or more likely to prevent them from going bankrupt. The bill won’t make drugs cheaper, and it might make paperwork for doctors even more unwieldy and complex than it is now. In fact, the various reform measures suck so badly that PhRMA, the notorious mouthpiece for the pharmaceutical industry which last year spent more than $20 million lobbying against health care reform, is now gratefully spending more than seven times that much on a marketing campaign to help the president get what he wants.

So what’s left? Well, the bills do keep alive the so-called employer mandate, requiring companies to provide insurance to their employees. A good idea — except that the Blue Dogs managed to exempt employers with annual payrolls below $500,000, meaning that 87 percent of all businesses will be allowed to opt out of the best and toughest reform measure left. Thanks to Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama, we can now be assured that the 19 or 20 employers in America with payrolls above $500,000 who do not already provide insurance will be required to offer good solid health coverage. Hurray!

Or will they? At the end of July, word leaked out that the Senate Finance Committee, in addition to likely spiking the public option, had also decided to ditch the employer mandate. It was hard to be certain, because even Democrats on the committee don’t know what’s going on in the Group of Six selected by Baucus to craft the bill. Things got so bad that some Democrats on the committee — including John Kerry, Chuck Schumer and Robert Menendez — were reduced to holding what amounts to shadow hearings on health care several times a week, while Baucus and his crew conducted their meetings in relative secrecy. The chairman did not even bother to keep his fellow Democrats informed of the bill’s developments, let alone what he has promised Republicans in return for their support of the bill. “The Group of Six has hijacked the process,” says an aide to one of the left-out senators.

This leaves Democrats on the committee in the strange position of seriously considering pulling their support for a bill that will emerge from a panel on which they hold a clear majority. Other Democrats are also weighing an end run around their own leadership, hoping to sneak meaningful reforms back into the process. In the House, Rep. Anthony Weiner of New York refused to support the bill passed by the commerce committee unless he was allowed to attach an amendment that will enable Congress to vote on replacing the entire reform bill with a single-payer plan (Bernie Sanders is working on a similar measure in the Senate). On the labor committee, Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio took a more nuanced tack, offering an amendment that would free up states to switch to a single-payer system of their own.

It’s highly unlikely, though, that the party’s leaders will agree to include such measures when the five competing reform bills are eventually combined. On the House side, “Pelosi has unfettered discretion to combine the bills as she pleases,” observes one Democratic aide. Which leaves us where we are today, as Congress enjoys its vacation, and the various sides have taken to the airwaves in an advertising blitz to make sure the population is saturated with idiotic misconceptions before the bill is actually voted on in the fall.

The much-ballyhooed right-wing scare campaign, with its teabagger holdovers ridiculously disrupting town-hall meetings with their belligerent protests and their stoneheaded memes (the sign raised at a town hall held by Rep. Rick Larson of Washington — keep the guvmint out of my medicare — is destined to become a classic of conservative propaganda), has proved to be almost totally irrelevant to the entire enterprise. Aside from lowering even further the general level of civility (teabaggers urged Sen. Chris Dodd to off himself with painkillers; Rep. Brad Miller had his life threatened), the Limbaugh minions have accomplished nothing at all, except to look like morons for protesting as creeping socialism a reform effort designed specifically to change as little as possible and to preserve at all costs our malfunctioning system of private health care.

All that’s left of health care reform is a collection of piece-of-shit, weakling proposals that are preposterously expensive and contain almost nothing meaningful — and that set of proposals, meanwhile, is being negotiated down even further by the endlessly negating Group of Six. It is a fight to the finish now between Really Bad and Even Worse. And it’s virtually guaranteed to sour the public on reform efforts for years to come.

“They’ll pass some weak, mediocre plan that breaks the bank and even in the best analysis leaves 37 million people uninsured,” says Mokhiber, one of the single-payer activists arrested by Baucus. “It’s going to give universal health care a bad name.”

It’s a joke, the whole thing, a parody of Solomonic governance. By the time all the various bills are combined, health care will be a baby not split in half but in fourths and eighths and fractions of eighths. It’s what happens when a government accustomed to dealing on the level of perception tries to take on a profound emergency that exists in reality. No matter how hard Congress may try, though, it simply is not possible to paper over a crisis this vast.

Then again, some of the blame has to go to all of us. It’s more than a little conspicuous that the same electorate that poured its heart out last year for the Hallmark-card story line of the Obama campaign has not been seen much in this health care debate. The handful of legislators — the Weiners, Kuciniches, Wydens and Sanderses — who are fighting for something real should be doing so with armies at their back. Instead, all the noise is being made on the other side. Not so stupid after all — they, at least, understand that politics is a fight that does not end with the wearing of a T-shirt in November.

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A Podcast With Meredith Whitney on The Housing Market & Rebuilding Credit

M. Whitney Video:

Home prices in the US could fall by another 25 percent because of high unemployment and another leg down will come for stocks, banking analyst Meredith Whitney told CNBC Thursday.

“No bank underwrote a loan with 10 percent unemployment on the horizon,” Whitney said. “I think there is no doubt that home prices will go down dramatically from here, it’s just a question of when.”

Local governments and states are chronically under-funded and “most states are under water,” adding to the problem of low private consumption, she said.

cnbc.com
Meredith Whitney

“If you look at the drivers for unemployment I don’t see that reversing very soon,” Whitney said.

If consumers were to decide to spend, “that would be a game-changer,” but it would be an unnatural thing to do in a recession, she said.

“A lot of themes are constant, which is the US consumer and the small business doesn’t have any credit, credit is still contracting,” Whitney said.

Consumer debt and consumer credit have dropped according to the latest figures which also show that people have been spending more from their debit cards than from their credit cards.

“Obviously that doesn’t bode well for spending,” Whitney said.

She said another leg down was coming for stocks but that Goldman Sachs cnbc_comboQuoteMove(‘popup_GS_ID0ECAAC15839609’);[GS 170.27 UNCH (0) ]
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still has “gas in the tank” and she kept her ‘buy’ on its stock.

“Goldman is taking a lot of the place that Lehman left,” she said.

But banks are not going to see their earnings rise too much from now on, she warned.

“Banks are taking advantage of what the government is doing by artificially inflating asset prices so they can ride a steep yield curve and they’re going to have a third quarter that reflects that,” Whitney said.

Their shares are unlikely to be uplifted by these results as it happened in mid-July, because then they were under-valued, she added.

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Business Headlines For September 10, 2009

Geithner Gearing Up To Shift Gears

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said on Thursday the economy has regained enough strength to allow a shift in strategy from rescue to preparing for future growth.

“As we enter this new phase we must begin winding down some of the extraordinary support we put in place for the financial system,” he said in prepared remarks for delivery to the Congressional Oversight Panel for the bank bailout fund.

Geithner said banks that got capital injections in the form of taxpayer-provided funds have repaid more than $70 billion, reducing the government’s total investment to $180 billion. “We now estimate that banks will repay another $50 billion over the next 12 to 18 months,” he added.

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PG To Slash Prices In Order To Boost Sales

Procter & Gamble Co. said it will cut prices and increase promotions across nearly 10% of its portfolio, and the consumer-products company expects the moves to drive sales growth.

Speaking at a Barclays conference, P&G executives said the company is likely to return to organic sales growth in its second quarter, which ends in December. For the second quarter, P&G expects organic sales growth of 1% to 4%.

That follows two quarters of organic sales declines. Organic sales are a closely watched measure that exclude the impact of acquisitions and other items.

Speaking to investors during a conference call, Chief Executive Bob McDonald and Chief Financial Officer Jon Moeller announced measures to boost market share.

The company is being watched closely, particularly on pricing and efforts to revive sales. P&G, which in recent years has increased its emphasis on higher-end products, has been hurt during the recession as consumers shifted to less-expensive competitors and private-label offerings. P&G lost market share in some categories. In particular, the shifts in consumer spending hurt the company’s key laundry category and its higher-priced Tide brand.

On Thursday, the company said it will reposition its Cheer detergent brand to target consumers looking for bargains and will cut prices 13%. P&G already has announced a test for a less-expensive version of Tide called Basic. The company says lower commodity costs and a moderation in pressures from foreign-exchange translation are giving it some financial flexibility to improve marketing and change prices.

For fiscal year 2010, P&G confirmed previous guidance for organic sales growth of 1% to 3%. P&G now expects fiscal 2010 earnings per share in the range of $3.99 to $4.12, including a one-time gain of 44 cents a share from the sale of the company’s pharmaceutical business, which will be partially offset by 10 cents to 12 cents of earnings dilution related to the transaction.

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Stocks Move Higher After Morning Indecision

By Jeff Kearns

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks rose for a fifth day, the longest streak for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index since November, as a raised forecast for oil demand boosted energy shares and jobless claims slid to the lowest level since July.

Chevron Corp. and Exxon Mobil Corp. advanced as the International Energy Agency said Chinese consumption and stronger-than-expected oil use in the U.S. will boost demand. Consumer and technology shares rose as Procter & Gamble Co. forecast earnings that topped estimates and analysts recommended Yahoo! Inc. The S&P 500 advanced above its highest close since Oct. 6 after weekly jobless claims decreased by 26,000 to 550,000, lower than economists forecast.

“The jobs number was another confirmation that the economy may have reached the bottom,” said Wasif Latif, who helps oversee $90 billion at USAA Investment Management Co. in San Antonio.

The S&P 500 added 0.3 percent to 1,036.51 at 12:33 p.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 26.23 points, or 0.3 percent, to 9,573.45. Europe’s benchmark index rose 0.2 percent while Asia’s rallied 1.4 percent.

The S&P 500 jumped to an 11-month high yesterday as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. recommended industrial companies and investor Michael Price said he’s finding value in American equities. The benchmark index for U.S. equities has rebounded 53 percent from a 12-year low on March 9 amid signs the recession is easing and better-than-estimated earnings at companies from Johnson & Johnson to Goldman Sachs…….

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Chart of the Day

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Asian Markets Rise Quite Nicely on Earnings Speculation

By Patrick Rial

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) — Asian stocks rose, sending the MSCI Asia Pacific Index to the highest level since the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., as profit from China Yurun Food Group rose and Texas Instruments Inc. lifted its forecasts.

China Yurun Food Group Ltd., the country’s biggest hog processor, jumped 7.4 percent after first-half profit rose 37 percent. Elpida Memory Inc., Japan’s largest computer memory maker, gained 3.4 percent after chipmaker Texas Instruments raised its third-quarter sales and earnings forecasts. Li & Fung Ltd., the biggest supplier of clothes and toys to Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Target Corp., gained 5 percent after saying it is seeing “pretty strong” re-orders from retailers.

“Investors are looking to upcoming earnings reports where we’re likely to see a fair number of companies lifting forecasts,” said Junichi Misawa, who helps oversee about $3 billion of Japanese equities at STB Asset Management Co. in Tokyo. “The market should stay strong into the end of the year, although after that we could see a pullback as stimulus measures run their course.”

The MSCI Asia Pacific climbed 1.2 percent to 116.88 as of 7:24 p.m. in Tokyo. It earlier touched 117.37, the highest intraday level since Sept. 10, 2008. That date is five days before Lehman filed for bankruptcy, helping to cause the credit market seizure that dragged the global economy into recession. The MSCI gauge has surged 65 percent in the past six months on speculation growth is recovering.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average climbed 2 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index gained 1.1 percent. Benchmark indexes throughout Asia rose, except in Pakistan and China. The Shanghai Composite Index sank 0.7 percent, the first drop in eight days…..


European Markets Trade Lower Led By Retailers & Basic Resource Producers

By Daniela Silberstein

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stock-index futures declined, indicating the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index may drop from an 11- month high, as Monsanto Co. forecast lower earnings. European stocks retreated, while Asian shares advanced.

Monsanto Co., the world’s largest producer of seeds, fell 3 percent. Yahoo! Inc. climbed 2.4 percent after Bank of America Corp. recommended buying shares of the second-most popular U.S. Internet search engine. Schlumberger Ltd. and Exxon Mobil Corp. rose as crude oil gained for a fourth day.

Futures on the S&P 500 expiring this month slipped 0.2 percent to 1,030.7 as of 11:25 a.m. in London, after rising as much as 0.5 percent earlier. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures decreased 0.1 percent to 9,527. Nasdaq-100 Index futures lost less than 0.1 percent to 1,665.5.

The S&P 500 yesterday jumped for a fourth straight day as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. recommended industrial companies and investor Michael Price said he’s finding value in American equities. The benchmark index for U.S. equities has rebounded 53 percent from a 12-year low on March 9 as reports from consumer confidence to home sales signaled the recession is easing and companies from Johnson & Johnson to Goldman Sachs posted earnings that beat analysts’ estimates.

“It’s become clear that the worst is over and we won’t get back to the scenario in spring,” said Urs Eilinger, Zurich- based chief investment officer at Infidar Investment Advisory Ltd., which manages about $3.2 billion. “September will probably end relatively flat but we could see markets gain another 10 percent by the end of the year.”


Oil Trades Narrowly @ Roughly $72

Oil prices rose to almost $72 a barrel Thursday, helped by a weaker U.S. dollar, steady OPEC production levels and a new report predicting a less severe slump this year in global oil demand.

By midday in Europe, benchmark crude for October delivery was up 50 cents to $71.81 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Earlier in the day, the contract peaked at $72.44. On Wednesday, the contract rose 21 cents to settle at $71.31.

Crude has jumped from $68 a barrel in two days as the dollar weakened to its lowest level this year. Because crude is priced in the U.S. currency, it becomes cheaper when the dollar falls. Some investors also use commodities like oil and gold as a hedge against inflation and dollar weakness.

The euro was slightly lower Thursday at $1.4532 after breaking through $1.46 on Wednesday, its highest level in a year. The British pound also fell marginally to $1.6525 compared with $1.6569 late Wednesday in New York.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries confirmed early Thursday at its meeting in Vienna that it would keep crude output unchanged.

OPEC said “market fundamentals have remained weak” and that “whilst there are signs that economic recovery is under way, there remains great concern about the magnitude and pace of this recovery,” especially in the West.

“Since the market remains oversupplied and given the downside risks associated with the extremely fragile recovery, (OPEC) once again agreed to leave current production levels unchanged for the time being,” said an OPEC statement released at the end of the meeting.

Meanwhile in Paris, the International Energy Agency said the slump in global oil demand in 2009 would be less severe than previously forecast and predicted consumption would rise in 2010 as the world economy stabilizes.

The IEA said Thursday that crude demand would reach 84.4 million barrels a day this year, down 2.2 percent from 2008 levels – but better than the 2.7 percent decline the agency forecast previously.

The IEA also raised its forecast for oil demand in 2010 to 85.7 million barrels a day, or half a million barrels a day more than its previous forecast.

In other Nymex trading, gasoline for October delivery was steady at $1.83 a gallon, and heating oil gained 0.95 cent to $1.80 a gallon. Natural gas rose 4.3 cents to $2.87 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, Brent crude was up 62 cents to $70.45 on the ICE Futures exchange.


BoK Keeps Rates Unchanged

BoE Keeps Rates Unchanged


China Stays Steadfast on Supporting Stimulus Fpr Economy

By Bloomberg News

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) — China’s Premier Wen Jiabao said the nation “cannot and will not” pull back from policies designed to revive the world’s third-biggest economy.

Stimulus measures have “yielded initial results and we have arrested the downturn in economic growth,” Wen said today in the keynote speech at the World Economic Forum in Dalian, a city in northeastern China.

The Chinese economy is rebounding from its slowest expansion in almost a decade on record lending in the first half and a 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus package. Falling exports, overcapacity in manufacturing and elevated unemployment have restrained the recovery.

“The worst has passed, now it’s about whether China can maintain the strong momentum of a recovery that’s primarily been driven by policy stimulus,” said Wang Qing, chief Asia economist for Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong. “Very weak external demand is the key concern.”

Wen said the government will continue with a moderately loose monetary policy and a “proactive” fiscal policy.

He said he saw “the light of dawn” for a recovering world economy and added that domestic demand is playing a bigger role in China’s economy.

The government said yesterday that the employment situation remains “grave,” underscoring the need to promote economic growth to create jobs and preserve social stability as the Communist Party prepares to celebrate 60 years of rule on Oct. 1…..



Chevron Completes LNG Deal For $60 bln

By Dinakar Sethuraman and Jason Scott

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) — Chevron Corp.’s Gorgon liquefied natural gas project completed agreements to sell stakes in the Western Australian venture and A$70 billion ($60 billion) of the fuel to Japan and South Korea.

Chevron, which has the right to sell half of the output from the 15 million metric ton-a-year plant, will ship almost 3 million tons of LNG annually to Tokyo Gas Co.,Osaka Gas Co. and GS Caltex Corp. starting in 2014, it said in a statement today.

Chevron and its partners in the A$50 billion venture, Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Exxon Mobil Corp., are “just a matter of weeks” from making a final decision on whether to proceed with the project, the head of Chevron’s Australian operations said Sept. 1. The Japanese and South Korean contracts could deliver A$70 billion in exports to Australia, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said in Parliament today.

“Gorgon’s highly likely to go ahead now, and I’d be expecting an announcement with a week from Chevron and its partners that it will proceed,” Mark Greenwood, a Sydney-based energy analyst for JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in a phone interview today. “I think they’ll come out with their final capital cost number. There’s a lot of details I’d like to know, but I’m not sure how much will be revealed. There are a lot of contractors that stand to do well from this.”

Tokyo, Osaka

Tokyo Gas, Japan’s largest natural-gas distributor, will buy 1.1 million tons annually of Gorgon LNG from Chevron and Osaka Gas 1.375 million tons over 25 years. Tokyo Gas agreed to take a 1 percent stake in the project and Osaka Gas 1.25 percent, the San Ramon, California-based company said. South Korea’s GS Caltex Corp. will buy 500,000 tons a year for 20 years, without becoming an investor.

Tokyo Gas, Osaka Gas and Chubu Electric Power Co. agreed in 2005 to buy a combined 4.3 million tons a year of the cleaner- burning fuel from Chevron’s Gorgon venture to secure supplies as competition for the fuel intensifies with China and India. The utilities currently buy LNG from Australia’s North West Shelf LNG project operated by Woodside Petroleum Ltd.

Chubu Electric, Japan’s third-largest generator, is in talks to buy less than 1 percent of the Gorgon project, and aims to complete discussions with Chevron within the year, Yuji Kakimi, general manager at its fuel department, said last month. Chubu agreed to buy 1.6 million tons a year of LNG from Gorgon for 25 years.

Australia’s LNG Growth

Australia, the world’s sixth-biggest LNG supplier last year according to BP Plc’s 2009 energy review, and Papua New Guinea will boost output of LNG to as much as 100 million metric tons from about 20 million tons to together become the world’s biggest LNG producer, Bernstein analyst Neil Beveridge said in a report dated Sept. 9. That would require an investment of about $100 billion, he said.

Exxon has signed a contract to supply gas from Gorgon to PetroChina Co. valued by the Australian government at A$50 billion and will sell the rest of its share of output to India’s Petronet LNG Ltd….



U.K. Home Prices Bounce 0.08%

By Jennifer Ryan

Sept. 10 (Bloomberg) — U.K. house prices rose for a second month in August as low borrowing costs lured homebuyers, a report by Halifax showed.

Home values climbed 0.8 percent to an average of 160,973 pounds ($266,000) after rising 1.2 percent in the previous month, the division of Lloyds Banking Group Plc said in a statement today. The median forecast of 14 economists in a Bloomberg News survey was for a 1 percent increase. Prices were down 7.6 percent from a year earlier.

The report adds to evidence that the property slump is easing. Mortgage approvals rose to a 15-month high in July. The Bank of England will probably continue a plan to buy 175 billion pounds of bonds with newly created money to cement the economy’s recovery from the worst recession in a generation.

“Demand for housing has increased since the start of the year due to better affordability and low interest rates,” Martin Ellis, housing economist at Halifax, said in the statement. “This, together with low levels of property available for sale, has boosted house prices over the last few months.”

The central bank will maintain the size of its bond purchase program, according to all 35 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Policy makers will also keep the benchmark interest rate at a record low of 0.5 percent, all 60 economists in a separate survey said. The bank announces the decision at noon in London today.


WSJ Reports The FDIC Will Wind Down Debt Guarantee For Banks

WASHINGTON — The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is preparing to wind down an emergency program it launched last year, which could become an early test of how the banking industry will fare without extraordinary government assistance.

Tracking the Nation’s Bank Failures

[Bank Failures]

See banks, savings banks and thrifts that have failed since the beginning of 2008.

The FDIC’s program, which guaranteed debt issued by banks, is credited with helping to stabilize the financial system during last year’s turmoil. The agency said it was considering either letting the debt-guarantee program expire on Oct. 31, or continuing it for another six months for “emergency” purposes. The latter would require case-by-case approval from FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair and a hefty fee from participants. “As domestic credit and liquidity markets appear to be normalizing and the number of entities utilizing the Debt Guarantee Program has decreased, now is an important time to make clear our intent to end the program,” Ms. Bair said.

The debt-guarantee program is a part of the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, which Ms. Bair reluctantly agreed to implement last fall under pressure from then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. Many credit it with helping bring the banking industry back from the brink of collapse because it allowed banks, for a fee, to issue new debt with government backing that protects investors in the event of a collapse.

Banks leapt at the opportunity. As of Sept. 4, there was $304.14 billion in FDIC-backed debt outstanding, including promissory notes, commercial paper and unsecured portions of secured debt. To enact the program, the FDIC had to cite a “systemic risk” to the economy. The agency has collected roughly $9.3 billion in fees from banks that have participated, and to date has not faced any guarantee payouts.

Banks need to issue debt to fund their operations. When credit markets seized last year, the cost of issuing debt spiked because of worries that banks would later go bust. Many government officials and bankers believe the FDIC’s program allowed banks to access funding at a time when they otherwise would have been frozen out.

[winding down]

As worries about the stability of the banking system have eased, many financial firms have been able to issue debt relatively cheaply without government backing. The program’s largest users have issued more than $81.3 billion in medium-term debt outside of the program, according to data provider Dealogic. The number of government-backed deals, which hit a high of 60 in the first quarter, fell to eight in the third quarter.

The FDIC discussions represent an early example of how the banking industry and the federal government are gingerly unwinding their interconnected relationship. Next week, a government guarantee protecting investors against losses on money-market mutual funds is also set to expire, and officials say they expect to let it do so. In other areas, such as the housing market, government support will be harder to withdraw.

The biggest users of the debt-guarantee program were General Electric Co. and Citigroup Inc. Others, such as GMAC, the auto and housing lender that is essentially a ward of the state, relied heavily on it. Anne Eisele, a spokeswoman for GE, said the company has issued about $18 billion in debt without government guarantees and had already announced plans to stop using the program.

The FDIC proposed two options Wednesday for its exit strategy. One option is to allow the program to expire as scheduled on Oct. 31. Banks would not be able to issue any new government-backed debt after that date.

The other option is to wind down the program for most banks on Oct. 31, but to allow the FDIC to guarantee debt in “emergency” situations through April 30. Some government officials believe the FDIC might agree to that alternative because it gives the government flexibility if credit markets seize up again. The FDIC said federally insured banks and “certain other entities” participating in the program would be eligible.

The FDIC’s proposal said any company participating in the “emergency” scenario would face an annualized fee of at least 300 basis points, or 3% of the amount of debt issued, substantially more than the 75 basis points initially charged. The FDIC could increase the fee if it felt the case posed a greater risk to the agency.


Automakers Unlikely To Repay Loans

WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department drove a hard bargain but likely won’t recoup taxpayers’ entire investments in General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC, said a report from a congressional panel overseeing government bailouts of the banking and auto sectors.

The panel, though, commended the Treasury’s efforts to function as a tough negotiator for structuring deals to save the ailing auto makers.

“They may have driven the best bargain they could, but it may not be enough,” said Elizabeth Warren, a Harvard University law professor and the panel’s chairwoman.

The report cited remarks from Obama administration manufacturing adviser Ron Bloom, who previously ran the Treasury’s auto-rescue efforts and indicated last month “it was possible but unlikely that taxpayers would recover all of the money they had invested in Chrysler and General Motors.”…..



ASML Raise 3rd Q Guidance

AMSTERDAM — ASML Holding NV raised its third-quarter forecast Thursday, marking the latest sign of recovery in the semiconductor sector after Texas Instruments Inc. Wednesday raised its third-quarter outlook.

The Dutch semiconductor-equipment maker said that it now expects net sales will be above €500 million ($727.7 million) both in the third and the fourth quarter and expects bookings in the third-quarter will be “significantly above that level.” It was the first time ASML gave a concrete forecast for the fourth quarter.

ASML previously expected sales in the third-quarter to be around €450 million, and in the following quarters to be between €400 million and €500 million.

The company’s shares soared on the news, rising 6.7% to €21.45 and strongly outperforming Amsterdam’s AEX.

The rise in third-quarter bookings is mainly a result of chip makers investing in new technology rather than restocking as “inventories at clients appear to remain very healthy,” company spokesman Lucas van Grinsven said.

Demand for memory chips and data-processors — which are used in mobile phones, DVD’s and video games — has strongly improved and chip makers are now looking to produce faster-working chips at lower costs, Mr. Van Grinsven said.

ASML is the world’s largest maker of lithography systems, which map out tiny electronic circuits on silicon wafers. It counts Intel Corp., Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. among its customers.

ASML’s announcement comes one day after Texas Instruments said it now expects earnings of 37 cents to 41 cents a share on revenue of $2.73 billion to $2.87 billion, driven by chiefly by analog chips used in consumers electronics and automobiles. TI had previously forecast earnings of 29 cents to 39 cents a share on revenue of $2.5 billion to $2.8 billion.

The company also expects to see sequential growth in embedded and wireless chips, though the wireless segment isn’t expected to grow as quickly as its other units. In July, TI made clear that the huge drop in chip purchases seen earlier in the year was over as the supply chain for tech products was returning to normal.

Coupled with Texas Instruments’ improved forecast, ASML’s news helped boost other European semiconductor stocks. STMicroelectronics NV, Europe’s largest chip maker, rose more than 3% while Germany’s Infineon Techologies AG added 3.5%.



Top Economists State The Worst is Over

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. employment picture will stay bleak well into next year long after the recession ends, but the worst of the labor market crisis is over, top private economists said on Thursday.

Private economists polled for the Blue Chip Economic Indicators September survey say the unemployment rate will reach at least 10 percent in early 2010 and “recede from that level only grudgingly over the second half of the year”.

More than 80 percent of the 52 private forecasters polled say the recession that started in December 2007 has ended. They look for gross domestic product to expand at a brisk 3.0 percent annual rate in the third quarter of 2009 and rise 2.4 percent in the fourth quarter.

This compares to growth rates of 2.2 percent and 2.3 percent respectively forecast in the previous survey.

For the year as a whole, the economy is expected to shrink 2.6 percent, the same consensus for July and August. In 2010 the economy will likely expand at a 2.4 percent pace, the survey said.

The latest survey was taken Sept 2-3, just before the release of the government’s monthly report on jobs last week. In that report, the Labor Department put the jobless rate at 9.7 percent during August, the highest since June 1983, while employers cut 216,000 jobs, the smallest since August 2008.

The private forecasters said they anticipate only a very gradual improvement in labor market conditions and that the economy will continue to shed jobs through the end of this year though at a diminishing pace.

The Blue Chip forecasters, including economists from major corporations, banks, business associations and consulting firms, say lengthening workweeks will give way to job growth, lifting household incomes and boosting consumer spending.

“Firms will respond by beginning to rebuild inventories, accelerating growth in industrial production and eventually encouraging stepped up capital spending as excess capacity is eaten away,” the panel of economists said.

The resumption of economic growth in the second half of 2009 is based on restocking of inventories now at record low levels, a modest rebound in consumer spending and an improvement in residential investment, the survey said.

The projected improvement in consumer spending, which accounts for a third of U.S. economic activity, reflected a surge in light vehicle sales in response to the government’s “cash-for-clunkers” program, the survey said.

The government offered consumers up to $4,500 when they traded in gas-guzzling old cars for more fuel efficient new ones, triggering a jump in demand and an increase in production from automakers.


Foreclosures Persist @ New Highs

By Lynn Adler

NEW YORK (Reuters) – U.S. mortgage foreclosure filings in August hovered near July’s record high despite broad efforts to keep borrowers in their homes and will probably rise for another year, according to a report released on Thursday.

Filings — including notices of default, auction and bank repossession — dipped 1 percent last month from July’s all-time high and were up 18 percent in August from the same month a year earlier, real estate data firm RealtyTrac said.

“The pipeline of early stage foreclosures and delinquent loans is still probably going to overwhelm the system’s ability to quickly modify” terms so struggling homeowners can make their monthly mortgage payments, said Rick Sharga, senior vice president at the Irvine, California-based company.

One in every 357 U.S. households with loans got a foreclosure filing in August.

Though lenders are moving in the right direction, Sharga said, RealtyTrac is revising up its estimate for filings this year and now expects a more prolonged foreclosure crisis.

Some 3.4 million households will get a filing this year, up from the prior estimate of 3 million to 3.2 million, and sharply higher than 2.3 million filings last year.

If the forecast is realized, it will be more than four times the filings in 2005, before the deepest housing crash since the Great Depression began.

“We had been thinking that this year would be the peak, but at the rate things are going right now, it’s appearing more likely that late 2010 might be the peak year before things start to moderate,” Sharga said.

A quick recovery is not in the cards, either.

“I don’t expect it to be that 2010 will peak and 2011 will be the wonderful land of Oz,” Sharga added.”

BANK REPOSSESSIONS DOWN BUT FORECLOSURE PIPELINE FULL

Foreclosures that were delayed by various state and federal moratoria that mostly ended in March have been pushing through the system in the summer.

Meantime, the Obama administration’s housing rescue has slowly started taking hold.

Just 12 percent of U.S. homeowners eligible under the loan modification program have had their loans altered, the Treasury Department said on Wednesday. That share has risen in the month, but Treasury still expects millions more foreclosures.

“The reason the numbers are just phenomenally high is that we’re dealing right now with two concurrent problems,” said Sharga, referring to sour loans made when standards were lax as well as the highest U.S. unemployment rate in 26 years.  Continued…



TXN Surprises Market With Upward Guidance Gift

By Gilbert Kreijger and Clare Baldwin

AMSTERDAM/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – European technology shares rose sharply on Thursday after positive outlook comments from chip maker Texas Instruments (TXN.N) and chip equipment firm ASML (ASML.AS)(ASML.O).

Dutch ASML increased its sales outlook on Thursday, citing improved expectations of consumer demand and higher chip prices in some markets, while Texas Instruments on Wednesday raised its forecast for third-quarter earnings and sales.

“Investors are looking for signs to strengthen the underlying positive mood on the market,” said Hannu Rauhala, analyst with Pohjola Bank.

Texas Instruments said it was expecting stronger revenue than it had forecast in July in the third quarter, in every segment — boosting shares in its key client Nokia (NOK1V.HE).

Shares in the world’s top cellphone maker were 1 percent higher at 1040 GMT, with chip makers STMicroelectronics (STM.PA) up 1.8 percent and Infineon (IFXGn.DE) up 3.1 percent, lifting the DJ Stoxx European technology shares index 1.1 percent higher.

Shares in ASML, the world’s largest maker of semiconductor lithography machines, which map out electronic circuits on silicon wafers, rose to the highest level since late 2007 after it raised its sales forecast.

ASML said it expected sales above 500 million euros ($728.9 million) in both the third and fourth quarters this year. It had said in July it expected third-quarter net sales of around 450 million euros.

“The second-half outlook for consumer goods has improved compared with the first half. Expectations are turning positive,” an ASML spokesman said.

Late on Wednesday, Texas Instruments raised its earnings estimate to 37-41 cents per share from a previous 29-39 cents, surpassing forecasts of 36 cents a share, according to Reuters Estimates.

And it hiked its third-quarter revenue forecast to $2.73 billion-$2.87 billion from a previous $2.5 billion-$2.8 billion. Analysts had expected $2.68 billion, according to Reuters Estimates.

The two companies’ improved outlooks were the latest sign of a possible consumer rebound, after top chipmaker Intel Corp (INTC.O) raised its outlook for third-quarter revenue and PC-maker Dell (DELL.O) beat earnings expectations last month.

Chipmakers have suffered as the economic downturn has dried up demand for personal computers, cell phones and other electronics. The Semiconductor Industry Association forecast in June that chip sales would fall 21.3 percent to $195.6 billion in 2009.

The top contract chipmaker TSMC (2330.TW)(TSM.N) posted a 7 percent year-on-year fall in August sales on Thursday, but analysts said the company is on track to reach its third-quarter sales target due to rising technology demand.

On Tuesday, its cross-town rival UMC (2303.TW) (UMC.N) posted an 11 percent annual rise in its August sales.




What Do Insiders See ? Or Are They Just Cash Strapped ?

Insider selling for the latest two week period totaled $254MM while insider buying totaled $163MM.  The headline figure is misleading, however, as $150MM of the buying comes from one purchase by Enterprise Products billionaire Chairman, Dan Duncan.   Minus the Duncan purchase, the selling to buying ratio remains at an extraordinarily high level of nearly 20:1.  All in all, corporate insiders continue to exhibit very little confidence in their own shares via the use of their personal dollars.

dailyBuy INSIDER SELLING CONTINUES TO SOAR, BUYING LOW

 INSIDER SELLING CONTINUES TO SOAR, BUYING LOW

Click for larger image

Sources: Finviz, insidercow.com




Viewers Liked The Obama Speech Last Night

The question is: Were TV viewers watching Barack Obama last night, or were they watching America’s sweetheart Melanie Oudin finally get knocked out of the US Open?

Because if they were watching Obama, they’re probably more inclined to support his healthcare reforms than they were before, per fresh polling.

TalkingPointsMemo: Going into the speech, 53% of the speech-watchers favored Obama’s proposals. Coming out of it, that support has now risen to 67%. More than seven in ten say Obama clearly stated his goals — which was of course a key goal of the speech itself. And three out of four think it’s somewhat or very likely that Obama will pass most of his proposals through Congress.

However, the speech audience polled was 45% Democratic, only 18% Republican, and the remainder independent. And while Democrats certainly do out-number Republicans, it’s not by that much — meaning that the people who chose to tune in were naturally more sympathetic to Obama to start with than the population as a whole.

The partisan split isn’t a big problem, since Obama’s job was not to convince Republicans, but to convince Democrats to support the plan. And if he gained some ground among indies, while consolidating Dems, then that certainly helps.



I’m an ???? Who Can Not Control Emotion

Besides the speech itself, the other big story of the event was Republican Joe Wilson screaming “liar” in the middle of the speech. Democrats are trying to capitalize on it already, as it reinforces the idea that the GOP is interested in shutting down the opposition (see: the townhall protests).

To be honest, it doesn’t sound that horrible, until you remember they’re in the US Congress, and he’s talking to The President. Certainly it wouldn’t raise any eyebrows in the UK parliament though. Have a listen and let us know what you think:

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