Monthly Archives: April 2007

Monday remainders

Brad Setser notes that Brazil just issued a new 10-year bond at 122bp over Treasuries. “I remember when…” he writes – I’ll finish the sentence for him – “Brazil was at 2,400bp over Treasuries”. The official JP Morgan Brazil index now stands at 164bp over.

Chase wants its borrowers to pony up $295 plus $5.42 per month for the privilege of paying down their mortgage more quickly. “Only a bank would figure out a way to charge you for something you can do yourself and make you think it’s a smart decision!”

The NYT’s flash-based executive compensation chart, nicking its look-and-feel from Gapminder.

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Monday remainders

Brad Setser notes that Brazil just issued a new 10-year bond at 122bp over Treasuries. “I remember when…” he writes — I’ll finish the sentence for him — “Brazil was at 2,400bp over Treasuries”. The official JP Morgan Brazil index … Continue reading

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How does zero-cost default protection work?

Can you really buy default protection and yet pay absolutely nothing if nobody defaults?
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Lose money on your house, get a monster tax bill!

There’s a lot of muttering in Washington about legislation to reign in predatory subprime lenders. (And yes, you’d be right in thinking that that horse bolted long ago.) Much more useful would be legislation to reduce the income-tax consequences of short sales.
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How does zero-cost default protection work?

Via Alea, a Reuters story about a new Citigroup product where you can apparently buy default protection at zero initial cost, paying only if and when the defaults start happening. There’s just enough information in the article for it to … Continue reading

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Lose money on your house, get a monster tax bill!

Gretchen Morgenson had another dreadful column this weekend: the housing “nightmare grows darker,” according to the headline, but Morgenson adduces not a single piece of evidence to that effect. If Morgenson wanted to find real reasons for worry, as opposed … Continue reading

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Zell doesn’t get the web

Sam Zell seems to want to set up a Tribune vs Google fight. That’s just stupid.
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In defense of socially responsible investing

There are many flavors of SRI, and investors can and should be able to choose between them.
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Let’s have more bank consolidation

Reducing the number of banks has no adverse impact on the number of bank branches, but would help address the present regulatory nightmare.
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Zell doesn’t get the web

Employees at Tribune are now the main owners of Tribune, thanks to Sam Zell’s innovative ways with ESOPs. Their problem is that although they own the company, they don’t control it: Zell does. And so they have to simply cross … Continue reading

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Hedge funds get the New York Magazine treatment

New York magazine loves its special issues, and this week it’s alighted on hedge funds. The conceit is “Behind the Hedge,” which is illustrated with a picture of… a guy behind a hedge. Really. Is there anything new or interesting here? Not that I can see. But if you’re looking for contrarian indicators, this issue could be a good sign of the beginning of the end of the hedge-fund craze.

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In defense of socially responsible investing

Joe Nocera is not a fan of socially responsible investing, or SRI: My problem is that socially responsible investing oversimplifies the world, and in so doing distorts reality. It allows investors to believe that their money is only being invested … Continue reading

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Meme of the week: More debt, less equity

How to use leverage to boost earnings.
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Let’s have more bank consolidation

Dan Gross is writing about bank branches in Slate. It seems that in current boom times, the number of branches is expanding even as the number of banks is contracting: According to the Federal Reserve, even as the number of … Continue reading

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Citi eyes Pandit: Does it still care about retail banking?

Three of the four named potential successors to Citi CEO Chuck Prince, including Vikram Pandit, are investment bankers at heart.
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Meme of the week: More debt, less equity

Floyd Norris and Dean Baker and Wcw are all on the case of the good old-fashioned debt arbitrage. As Wcw puts it, either “bonds are overvalued, equities undervalued, or both”. Or, of course, you have to remember the bearish position: … Continue reading

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Hedge funds get the New York Magazine treatment

New York magazine loves its special issues, and this week it’s alighted on hedge funds. The conceit is “Behind the Hedge,” which is illustrated with a picture of… a guy behind a hedge. Really. Is there anything new or interesting … Continue reading

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Citi eyes Pandit: Does it still care about retail banking?

Is Citi going to buy Vikram Pandit’s hedge fund, Old Lane? According to today’s WSJ, yes. The WSJ runs down the list of reasons why such an acquisition would make a lot of sense: Pandit would immediately beef up Citi’s … Continue reading

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Putting that NYT payrolls chart in perspective

Remember that NYT chart from earlier today? Well, one of my favorite chart-makers, Wcw, or West-Coast Whiner, has helpfully converted it into a line chart, which does kinda put it in perspective. Here’s Wcw’s chart, with the NYT chart underneath: … Continue reading

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Does microcredit work?

An article in Newsweek says that microcredit doesn’t work. It does.
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Does microcredit work?

Blogs such as MicroCapital and Poverty News Blog are reprinting a Newsweek article by Mac Margolis which is summed up in the standfirst: “Critics put trendy poverty lenders to the test,” it says, “and find they’re neither a real business … Continue reading

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Are payrolls actually falling?

The New York Times runs a chart showing payrolls going down, not up.
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Are payrolls actually falling?

The NYT has an interesting chart accompanying its payrolls story today. While the text is as upbeat as you’d expect given the excellent figures, and despite the fact that the WSJ is running a story headlined “Economists Wonder if March … Continue reading

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Is the US exploiting its military strength in trade negotiations?

Are “free trade” agreements like the recent one with South Korea really trade-for-security agreements?
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Is the US exploiting its military strength in trade negotiations?

The US knows how it likes its trade negotiations. It’s a simple rubric: the US puts its proposal on the table, and its interlocutors accept. In the Doha round of the WTO talks, as we know, this hasn’t worked very … Continue reading

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