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Monthly Archives: October 2011

Flash: S&P Futures Worse Than They Appear

Futures finished 7 points above fair value. Therefore, with futures now flat,that means they are really off by 7.

Related: The Heng Seng is trading at session lows, off by 220.

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NY TIMES: Fannie Mae Knew as Early as 2003!

Fannie Mae, the mortgage finance giant, learned as early as 2003 of extensive foreclosure abuses among the law firms it had hired to remove troubled borrowers from their homes. But the company did little to correct the firms’ practices, according to a report issued Tuesday.

Only after news reports in mid-2010 began to describe the dubious practices, like the routine filing of false pleadings in bankruptcy courts, did Fannie Mae’s overseer start to scrutinize the conduct. The report was critical of that overseer, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, and was prepared by the agency’s inspector general.

In one notable lapse, even after the agency reported problems to Fannie Mae in late 2010 about some of the approved law firms, it did not request a response from the company, the report said.

“American homeowners have been struggling with the effects of the housing finance crisis for several years, and they shouldn’t have to worry whether they will be victims of foreclosure abuse,” said Steve Linick, inspector general of the finance agency. “Increased oversight by F.H.F.A. could help to prevent these abuses.”

The report is the second in two weeks in which the inspector general has outlined lapses at both the Federal Housing Finance Agency and the companies it oversees — Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The agency has acted as conservator for the companies since they were taken over by the government in 2008. Its duty is to ensure that their operations do not pose additional risk to the taxpayers who now own them. The companies have tapped the taxpayers to cover mortgage losses totaling about $160 billion.

Elijah E. Cummings, the Maryland Democrat who is the ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and who requested the inspector general’s report, said in a statement, “As a member of Congress and an attorney, I find the systemic failures by F.H.F.A. and Fannie Mae to adequately oversee these foreclosure law firms to be a breach of the public trust and an assault on the integrity of our justice system.”

The new report from the inspector general tracks Fannie Mae’s dealings with the law firms handling its foreclosures from 1997, when the company created its so-called retained attorney network. At the time, Fannie Mae was a highly profitable and powerful institution, and it devised the legal network to ensure that borrower defaults would be resolved with efficiency and speed.

The law firms in the network agreed to a flat-rate fee structure and pricing model based on the volume of foreclosures they completed. The companies that serviced the loans for Fannie Mae, were supposed to monitor the law firms’ performance and practices, the report noted

After receiving information from a shareholder in 2003 about foreclosure abuses by its law firms, Fannie Mae assigned its outside counsel to investigate, according to the report. That law firm concluded in a 2006 analysis that “foreclosure attorneys in Florida are routinely filing false pleadings and affidavits,” and that the practice could be occurring elsewhere. “It is axiomatic that the practice is improper and should be stopped,” the law firm said.

The inspector general’s report said that it could not be determined whether Fannie Mae had alerted its regulator, then the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, to the legal improprieties identified by its internal investigation.

Amy Bonitatibus, a Fannie Mae spokeswoman, declined to comment on the inspector general’s report, but said that the 2006 legal analysis identified a specific issue with the practice of filing lost-note affidavits, which the company immediately addressed.

The inspector general said that both Fannie Mae and its regulator appear to have ignored other signs of problems in their foreclosure operations. For example, the Federal Housing Finance Agency did not respond to borrower complaints about improper actions taken by law firms in foreclosures received as early as August 2009, even though foreclosure abuse poses operational and financial risks to Fannie Mae.

The report cited a media report from early 2008 detailing foreclosure abuses by law firms doing work for Fannie Mae.

Nevertheless, a few months later and just before its takeover by the government, Fannie Mae began requiring the banks that serviced its loans to use only those law firms that were in its network. By then, 140 law firms in 31 jurisdictions were in the group. Among the largest firms in the network was the David J. Stern firm in Plantation, Fla., which was handling more than 75,000 foreclosure actions a year before Fannie Mae terminated it because of vast problems with its legal work.

Finally last fall, after an outcry over apparently forged foreclosure documents and other improprieties, the Federal Housing Finance Agency began investigating the company’s process. In a report issued early this year, it determined that Fannie Mae’s management of its network of lawyers did not meet safety and soundness standards. Among the reasons: the company’s controls to prevent or detect foreclosure abuses were inadequate, as was the company’s monitoring of the law firms. “If a law firm self-reported no issues as it processed cases,” the inspector general said, “then Fannie Mae presumed the firm was doing a good job.”

The agency is still deciding how to handle the lawyer network, the inspector general said.

Mr. Cummings has asked the federal housing agency to consider terminating the program.

Officials at the housing agency agreed, however, with the recommendations in the inspector general’s report. Corinne Russell, a spokeswoman for F.H.F.A. said the agency was concluding its supervisory work in this area and would direct Fannie Mae to take necessary action when the work was completed.

In a response, the agency said that by Sept. 29, 2012, it would review its existing supervisory practices and act to resolve “deficiencies in the management of risks associated with default-related legal services vendors.”

SOURCE

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Brazil’s Government Decides on Oil Policy

Brazil’s government is racing to forge adeal in Congress this week that it hopes will prevent a lengthy legal and political battle over its huge offshore oil reserves.

Brazil’s states and cities have been quarreling for years over how to distribute the expected multi-trillion-dollar windfall from one of the world’s biggest recent oil finds. Former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva called the so-called “subsalt” fields, discovered in 2007, “a gift from God” that could make Brazil a rich country.

President Dilma Rousseff’s government is now trying to defuse the arguments by offering a cut of its own take in future royalties from the fields. Officials are confident Congress will approve the government proposal in coming days or weeks.

“We’re at ease. The interested sides are hard at work … and by the looks of it, they’re forging a quite significant majority,” Gilberto Carvalho, general-secretary of the president’s office, told Reuters.

Yet some leading politicians are still balking at the proposal or threatening legal action. The final outcome is up in the air at a time when Rousseff’s relationship with Congress has been poisoned by budget cuts and other problems.

At stake is Brazil’s plan to become one of the world’s largest suppliers of oil outside of OPEC and to ensure revenue to finance improvements in infrastructure, health programs and education, which are crucial to entering the ranks of developed nations.

The final outcome will have major implications for state oil company Petrobras (PETR4.SA)(PBR.N), and possibly for multinational energy companies such as Italy’s (ENI.MI) and Norway’s Norsk Hydro (NHY.OL), who have expressed interest in helping Brazil develop the fields.

So far Brazil is pumping only a small fraction of the subsalt fields and requires tens of billions of dollars to develop the remaining reserves.

An agreement on distributing oil revenues is needed for the government to go ahead with a planned auction next year for the rights to develop the vast oil fields.

The so-called subsalt region is believed to hold more than 50 billion barrels of oil buried under a thick layer of salt. At current prices that would be about $4 trillion in revenue.

Failure to reach agreement on the bill would spark a drawn-out legal battle, potentially stalling fresh investments for several years. Without a compromise, Congress would almost certainly overrule last year’s veto by Lula of a law that would have distributed more revenue to non-producer states.

The three largest oil producing states — Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo and Espirito Santo — are keen to uphold the veto.

Sergio Cabral, governor of Rio de Janeiro, said he would go all the way to the Supreme Court to ensure his state’s oil income. Losing it would generate a political backlash for him and President Dilma Rousseff, Cabral warned.

“The electoral tragedy in Rio would be dramatic,” said Cabral, wary of losing cash before hosting the 2016 Olympics.

Rio de Janeiro pumps the vast majority of Brazil’s roughly 2 million barrels per day of crude.

TAX RISK

Cabral proposes hiking a separate oil excise tax, which state oil company Petrobras in turn has said would violate existing contracts and force it to go to court.

New framework legislation passed last year heightened state control over the subsalt region and made state-led oil company Petrobras (PETR4.SA). But private investors can still take a stake of up to 70 percent in joint-ventures.

Mauricio Pedrosa, a partner with asset management group Queluz Asset in Rio de Janeiro, said any changes to existing contracts would be a blow to the company.

“If the royalty agreement alters existing contracts it could affect Petrobras’ cash flow. It’s another risk factor for the company,” said Pedrosa, who helps manage around 300 million reais ($158 million in assets).

The proposal by Rousseff’s administration would cut the federal government’s cut of royalties by almost a third and distribute that to non-producer states.

Producer states like Rio de Janeiro would see a small cut.

The offer was rebuffed by some players, particularly by municipal governments, which would see the biggest losses.

“We don’t understand why the government is punishing the municipalities. We are the ones who suffer the economic and social effects of oil operations,” said Riverton Mussi, mayor of the city of Macae — the country’s main oil hub.

Mussi, who estimates Macae would lose a quarter of its annual budget under the government’s plan, also said he would defend his city’s oil income in court.

“Right now this debate is holding hostage the whole development of the sector,” said Latin America analyst Christopher Garman of the Eurasia consultancy in Washington.

REUTERS 

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Mitsubishi Comments on Morgan Stanley

?In response to recent market volatility MUFG wishes to reiterate that we are firmly committed to our long-term strategic alliance with Morgan Stanley. The special relationship we have formed remains core to our global business strategy. We will continue to work to leverage Morgan Stanley’s superior franchise strengths in institutional securities and wealth management with our substantial deposit base and global corporate banking business to add value to both franchises over the decades to come.”

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Today’s ETF Winners

No. Ticker % Change
1 SRTY 16.49
2 TZA 16.29
3 TVIX 15.44
4 FAZ 14.52
5 DRV 14.27
6 MWN 11.74
7 BGZ 11.21
8 SOXS 11.13
9 TWM 11.03
10 SPXU 10.35
11 SRS 10.22
12 YANG 10.06
13 ERY 9.79
14 MZZ 9.27
15 SKK 9.03
16 SKF 8.98
17 EDZ 8.94
18 TMF 8.21
19 LHB 7.96
20 VIIX 7.91
21 VIXY 7.91
22 VXX 7.79
23 SDD 7.75
24 VZZB 7.24
25 TYP 7.00

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Today’s Massive List of Double Digit Losers

No. Ticker % Change
1 FST -38.30
2 MEG -35.08
3 AMR -33.78
4 GTIV -33.33
5 SGMO -30.34
6 WHRT -28.21
7 GOK -27.69
8 DEXO -26.79
9 AUDC -26.28
10 FFHL -26.09
11 LPR -24.70
12 YRCW -24.00
13 USU -23.60
14 FEED -23.08
15 VISN -22.95
16 NEWN -22.78
17 TIV -22.22
18 STP -22.08
19 HSOL -21.99
20 SPMD -21.94
21 LNG -21.84
22 REVU -21.43
23 GBE -21.40
24 ZHNE -21.18
25 DHT -21.08
26 KIOR -20.88
27 SIFY -20.80
28 ZLC -20.70
29 ONP -19.70
30 CHLN -19.46
31 BPOP -19.33
32 MBLX -19.29
33 KGJI -19.20
34 GMR -19.19
35 BLDR -18.90
36 VTSS -18.64
37 IOC -18.58
38 VHC -18.48
39 ZZ -18.24
40 SHZ -18.18
41 CX -18.04
42 PNX -18.03
43 SQI -17.94
44 ATRN -17.78
45 QPSA -17.73
46 URRE -17.65
47 FRZ -17.60
48 ZIXI -17.60
49 FTEK -17.53
50 MHR -17.52
No. Ticker % Change
51 OMX -17.42
52 EXAM -17.24
53 MOTR -17.16
54 CPSL -17.12
55 QUIK -17.09
56 ANW -17.07
57 CBAK -17.07
58 AMSC -16.79
59 GNK -16.77
60 MILL -16.67
61 NBG -16.67
62 SUNH -16.30
63 REDF -16.29
64 GMO -16.21
65 BSPM -16.18
66 NOR -16.17
67 BBX -16.13
68 BONT -16.10
69 YONG -16.00
70 END -15.79
71 ADY -15.74
72 JASO -15.73
73 TNK -15.65
74 LCC -15.64
75 NOA -15.64
76 LEAP -15.63
77 TPCG -15.59
78 CPE -15.50
79 MTSN -15.38
80 VRML -15.33
81 QTWW -15.20
82 ALU -15.19
83 ROIAK -15.13
84 ACHN -15.04
85 BPHX -15.00
86 PCX -14.89
87 DYN -14.81
88 CTC -14.78
89 CHOP -14.73
90 JBLU -14.67
91 TAT -14.63
92 CSUN -14.60
93 PLM -14.52
94 GRO -14.40
95 AEN -14.39
96 RODM -14.29
97 XOMA -14.29
98 ZLCS -14.28
99 BMTI -14.24
100 MU -14.19

No. Ticker % Change
101 ALTI -14.18
102 TA -14.16
103 URG -14.16
104 UAN -14.15
105 DVR -14.14
106 PETD -14.13
107 GTN -14.10
108 NCTY -14.05
109 FRO -14.02
110 LEXG.OB -13.98
111 HRZ -13.95
112 PWAV -13.95
113 ACAD -13.94
114 SQNS -13.94
115 DRWI -13.94
116 CPST -13.90
117 CHINA -13.86
118 JSDA -13.85
119 PNSN -13.79
120 SCEI -13.79
121 HTCH -13.78
122 ZQK -13.77
123 CETV -13.70
124 DRYS -13.68
125 LCRY -13.67
126 CONN -13.65
127 ATPG -13.62
128 CVM -13.51
129 FFCH -13.47
130 CSIQ -13.45
131 GMXR -13.44
132 KOG -13.44
133 SCON -13.33
134 PAL -13.33
135 LDK -13.30
136 ASIA -13.28
137 CEDC -13.27
138 HW -13.19
139 IDI -13.17
140 ZIOP -13.15
141 GKNT -13.13
142 GPOR -13.11
143 KIPS -13.11
144 MTG -13.10
145 HEES -13.09
146 PANL -13.08
147 CKEC -13.01
148 REE -12.99
149 CIGX -12.99
150 OPTT -12.96

No. Ticker % Change
151 TAOM -12.93
152 CDY -12.90
153 AXAS -12.88
154 FCH -12.88
155 JRCC -12.87
156 PVA -12.84
157 ZINC -12.80
158 NAT -12.77
159 THC -12.77
160 EVC -12.75
161 ARR -12.72
162 MXL -12.69
163 ODP -12.62
164 WLL -12.59
165 AUTH -12.58
166 CYTX -12.54
167 BWEN -12.50
168 CHRM -12.50
169 CXZ -12.50
170 KTOS -12.50
171 FNGN -12.48
172 AUTC -12.45
173 LOCM -12.40
174 KV-A -12.40
175 OME -12.33
176 MCRI -12.32
177 INO -12.28
178 UAL -12.23
179 DNN -12.21
180 KBX -12.12
181 CT -12.11
182 MGM -12.06
183 AVII -12.05
184 WG -11.99
185 SWFT -11.96
186 AKS -11.93
187 CNIT -11.93
188 AONE -11.92
189 CDR -11.90
190 SODA -11.89
191 CDII -11.88
192 TITN -11.84
193 BPAX -11.84
194 CISG -11.79
195 GKK -11.78
196 GSI -11.76
197 SPWRA -11.74
198 URZ -11.68
199 CDTI -11.64
200 CENX -11.63

No. Ticker % Change
201 TRID -11.54
202 MRGE -11.49
203 WPRT -11.48
204 GTLS -11.44
205 ETM -11.43
206 CERP -11.43
207 TNCC -11.41
208 TESO -11.38
209 PIP -11.36
210 CYCC -11.36
211 LMLP -11.36
212 GST -11.33
213 WINN -11.32
214 NEI -11.30
215 VOXX -11.29
216 DAL -11.27
217 USEG -11.26
218 ALIM -11.25
219 NATR -11.22
220 IVAN -11.21
221 NUVA -11.20
222 FOLD -11.20
223 MOSY -11.20
224 MPEL -11.19
225 SCSS -11.17
226 DQ -11.14
227 FTK -11.13
228 AOB -11.11
229 CHUX -11.11
230 CPWM -11.11
231 EMKR -11.11
232 MTEX -11.11
233 CBOU -11.08
234 LSE -11.08
235 NEXS -11.03
236 VVTV -11.02
237 PCRX -10.98
238 TACT -10.97
239 VRNT -10.95
240 SCHS -10.94
241 TWER -10.94
242 AMD -10.93
243 MPG -10.90
244 PGI -10.90
245 SHO -10.90
246 SPAR -10.90
247 OXGN -10.90
248 FFN -10.87
249 NOAH -10.87
250 AFAM -10.85

No. Ticker % Change
251 SBLK -10.85
252 ACPW -10.85
253 ACLS -10.83
254 KND -10.79
255 LAVA -10.77
256 CUR -10.77
257 YZC -10.76
258 KWK -10.75
259 BRD -10.74
260 ZN -10.71
261 IGLD -10.71
262 BORN -10.70
263 CSU -10.70
264 WFR -10.69
265 HOV -10.66
266 ANAD -10.65
267 MIND -10.63
268 PHM -10.63
269 PLXT -10.63
270 PKT -10.63
271 ACXM -10.62
272 SYUT -10.62
273 ATSG -10.62
274 HSTM -10.60
275 DRRX -10.56
276 S -10.53
277 WRES -10.50
278 PKD -10.48
279 SFI -10.48
280 KITD -10.48
281 ENS -10.46
282 ALJ -10.44
283 SFY -10.44
284 OCLR -10.44
285 AMCC -10.43
286 MTW -10.43
287 YTEC -10.42
288 AMLN -10.40
289 LIZ -10.40
290 SIGA -10.40
291 LUFK -10.39
292 MKTG -10.39
293 SYKE -10.37
294 SVA -10.31
295 BDN -10.30
296 CRZO -10.30
297 MGI -10.30
298 PDFS -10.29
299 FTWR -10.28
300 CCIX -10.28
No. Ticker % Change
301 EMAN -10.27
302 ARWR -10.26
303 EXEL -10.26
304 PRFT -10.25
305 GY -10.24
306 ZEUS -10.24
307 TWIN -10.24
308 DMND -10.23
309 RTI -10.21
310 HMPR -10.21
311 NEWP -10.18
312 UQM -10.18
313 FPP -10.14
314 SAAS -10.14
315 STVI -10.14
316 ISTA -10.14
317 ENZ -10.12
318 C -10.11
319 NGSX -10.11
320 CWEI -10.11
321 DNDN -10.11
322 AZC -10.10
323 CATM -10.10
324 HWAY -10.07
325 CNH -10.06
326 KOPN -10.06
327 BTN -10.06
328 RYL -10.05
329 AVL -10.04
330 CPX -10.03
331 PDC -10.03
332 STRL -10.03
333 SWS -10.02
334 BEAT -10.00
335 LDL -10.00
336 NVAX -10.00
337 STV -10.00

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Shorts Are Screaming

As my shorts scream higher I will play this tune as loud as possible. Not wanting to be a pig; I shall take half off inot the bell….

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBiFWoY69cE&feature=related 450 300]

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AMR Shares Plunge on Bankruptcy Talk

Shares of American Airlines parent AMR plunged on Monday, as analysts debated the prospects for a bankruptcy filing for the third-largest U.S. airline, which lags its industry peers. But the company quickly denied to CNBC that it is considering a pre-packaged bankrutptcy filing.

READ MORE HERE

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