As we come to the end of an endless fight on health care reform, it’s worth asking whether the bill Congress appears to be on the verge of passing will actually reform health care.Melissa Rodgers, the Associate Director of the Berkeley Center on Health, E
Daily Archives: March 19, 2010
Bove: Thanks to Hank Paulson, Citi Shares Set to Double From Here
The U.S. government may unload its 27% stake in Citigroup as early as next month. The Wall Street Journal reports that the Treasury Department may dump its 7.7 billion shares in the bank after the company releases its first-quarter earnings on April 19.On
Don’t Stop Believing: Stock Market Rally is “Sustainable,” Dick Bove Says
Even with stocks mixed Friday morning, all seems well in the world. Eight consecutive days of gains and indexes at or near their highest levels since October 2008 will do that.Is it a false sense of security or is this bull market for real?Rochdale Securi
Dick Bove: Housing Market Will Fall 10%-15% When Fed Stops Subsidizing Home Prices
For the past year, the Fed has been buying mortgage-backed securities in an effort to keep mortgage rates low and provide some support to the housing market. On March 31, the Fed says, it will stop buying mortgage-backed securities.So what will happ
The Greece Bailout Is Falling Apart
Provided by the Business Insider, March 19, 2010:The Greek premiere is now threatening to go to the IMF for help if the Eurozone won’t come up with hard bail out numbers soon.These are pretty tough words for someone asking for money:Telegraph:”We hav
DealZone Daily
Time Warner is considering making a second-round bid of up to $1.5 billion for Hollywood studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, a source tells us. The March 19 deadline for the bids for MGM — whose film library includes the James Bond and Pink Panther franchises — may well be extended.
Shares in Arrow Energy have been suspended — the suspicion is that Royal Dutch Shell and Petrochina will sweeten their joint $3 billion offer for the Australian gas producer. Read the Reuters story here.
And as I am writing this, London-listed Gulfsands Petroleum is saying that it has rejected a preliminary takeover approach. The suitor is Indian, it has also said, but it’s not ONGC. To be continued.
For all other news on deals from Reuters, click here. In rival media:
Zhejiang Geely Holding Group chairman Li Shufu indicated talks to buy Ford’s Volvo car unit had hit a snag due to problems at Ford, but continues to expect to complete the deal, says a story in the Wall Street Journal.
Takeover target Arriva is refusing to open its books to Deutsche Bahn unless the German firm increases its almost 1.4 billion pounds ($2.1 billion) bid for the train and bus operator, according to UK newspaper The Times.
India’s second-largest listed developer Unitech is looking to spin off non-core businesses that include power, hotels, telecom and special economic zones, the DNA Money newspaper reports.
The race to buy the British national lottery operator Camelot has narrowed to two contenders and a decision on the preferred bidder could come as early as next week, says the Financial Times.
Spitzer: S.E.C. still asleep at the switch
Former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer at a September 2009 conference
Seems like old times.
Eliot Spitzer, who rose to national prominence in 2002 when he forced a sleepy S.E.C. to crack down on conflicted analyst research, is none too pleased to hear that his old rivals recently joined 12 Wall Street banks in seeking to knock big holes in that wall.
Asked for his thoughts on this Wall Street Journal article that broke the news, this is what he had to tell Reuters in an exclusive interview:
“For the S.E.C. to join with the banks to diminish consumer protections with respect to the quality of advice and research is absolutely and fundamentally violative of their duty to the public. This one more example of the S.E.C. being in in the tank.”
It’s almost as if we turned the clocks back seven years. Spitzer gained his crusading “Elliot Ness” reputation in 2002 when he took the unprecedented step of probing banks and threatening to prosecute Wall Street executives, stepping around a passive S.E.C.
Yet even after Mary Schapiro replaced the ineffective Christopher Cox as the agency’s chairman, the Feds still appear reluctant to get tough, he said.
“Where has the SEC been in the last year? Are they dropping subpoenas and making the case for the accounting frauds we know are there, with respect to misleading statements? There’s been lot of talk at the SEC of ’We’re rebuilding. We don’t have enough people.’ Where have they been?”
Spitzer noted investors should thank U.S. District Judge William Pauley for striking down a proposal that would have allowed the S.E.C. and the banks to scale back reforms that discourage analysts from writing glowing research only to help their firms win lucrative banking assignments. The news, he said, reinforced his view that the S.E.C. was and remains a lousy cop.
“This has been more of the same. For them to do this is an outrage and thankfully we had a judge who said, ‘No. I wont put my name to that. The S.E.C. didn’t want to make those cases in 2002. These cases went to the heart of the integrity of Wall Street. All the cases we made have been proven to be critically necessary and not nearly enough, and the reason for that is the SEC has been asleep at the switch for a decade.”
Spitzer: S.E.C. still asleep at the switch
Former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer at a September 2009 conference
Seems like old times.
Eliot Spitzer, who rose to national prominence in 2002 when he forced a sleepy S.E.C. to crack down on conflicted analyst research, is none too pleased to hear that his old rivals recently joined 12 Wall Street banks in seeking to knock big holes in that wall.
Asked for his thoughts on this Wall Street Journal article that broke the news, this is what he had to tell Reuters in an exclusive interview:
“For the S.E.C. to join with the banks to diminish consumer protections with respect to the quality of advice and research is absolutely and fundamentally violative of their duty to the public. This one more example of the S.E.C. being in in the tank.”
It’s almost as if we turned the clocks back seven years. Spitzer gained his crusading “Elliot Ness” reputation in 2002 when he took the unprecedented step of probing banks and threatening to prosecute Wall Street executives, stepping around a passive S.E.C.
Yet even after Mary Schapiro replaced the ineffective Christopher Cox as the agency’s chairman, the Feds still appear reluctant to get tough, he said.
“Where has the SEC been in the last year? Are they dropping subpoenas and making the case for the accounting frauds we know are there, with respect to misleading statements? There’s been lot of talk at the SEC of ’We’re rebuilding. We don’t have enough people.’ Where have they been?”
Spitzer noted investors should thank U.S. District Judge William Pauley for striking down a proposal that would have allowed the S.E.C. and the banks to scale back reforms that discourage analysts from writing glowing research only to help their firms win lucrative banking assignments. The news, he said, reinforced his view that the S.E.C. was and remains a lousy cop.
“This has been more of the same. For them to do this is an outrage and thankfully we had a judge who said, ‘No. I wont put my name to that. The S.E.C. didn’t want to make those cases in 2002. These cases went to the heart of the integrity of Wall Street. All the cases we made have been proven to be critically necessary and not nearly enough, and the reason for that is the SEC has been asleep at the switch for a decade.”
The afternoon deal: Hard rock, hard time
Hot news items today include the Teva deal, MGM Mirage’s move out of Atlantic City and a possible Siemens spin off. But the limelight shines elsewhere, on a hard rocking Buffet and inmate number No. 61727-054.
Warren Buffett Rocks Out (NYT)
“The Oracle of Omaha made a guest appearance in a music video produced by employees of Geico, the insurer he owns through Berkshire Hathaway.”
Madoff Beaten in Prison (WSJ)
“Mr. Madoff was treated for a broken nose, fractured ribs and cuts to his head and face, according to a felon currently at Butner serving time on drug charges who was familiar with his condition at the time.”
The 20 Hot New York City Startups You Need To Watch (Business Insider)
The 20 Cities That Have Completely Missed The Recovery
Provided by The Business Insider, Mach 18, 2010: The Recession never ended in some cities, and the recovery has a long ways to go.
There are cities in Florida where foreclosures are still rising,
blotting out any chance of recovery in home prices. The m
Greenspan Finally Admits He Blew It
From The Business Insider, March 18, 2020: Five years later, Alan Greenspan finally admits he screwed up.
Kind of.
Sewell Chan, NYT:
…the former
Policymakers Fiddle as Derivatives Keep Burning Investors Worldwide
There’s been a lot of talk in Washington about regulating derivatives but very little action so far. In the meantime, more derivatives transactions are being place every day — even as banks face continued allegations of related abuses.On Wednesday, an It