Monday, November 5, 2007

Citigroup's CEO Quits


Citigroup's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Charles Prince resigned Sunday and will be replaced by former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin.

This decision was expected due to the increasingly poor state of the nation's largest banking company. Citigroup lost billions of dollars from investing in bad debt. In the third quarter alone, the company reported the loss of $6.5 billion from "asset writedowns and other credit-related losses". It expects an additional $8-10 billion in writedowns. Writedowns reduce a company's net income.

An emergency meeting by Citi's board determined the end of Prince's role in the company. The group also decided that Sir Win Bischoff, chairman of Citi Europe and a Member of Citi's management and operating committees, would serve as CEO until Rubin takes over the role. It was also expected that Prince would be replaced by Rubin, due to his many leading positions in the economic world. Citi's board hopes that replacing Prince will end the losses and possibly help the company regain substantial profits.

Prince will join former Merrill Lynch and Co. CEO Stan O'Neal, who resigned from the investment bank last month. Both CEO's dealt with billion dollar losses due to debt crises.
Prince had been the CEO of Citigroup for four years. The company's shares closed 20 percent below where they were when he started as Chief Executive.

Charles Prince Resigned

Sunday, November 4, 2007

What is the World Bank

  • Definition:The World Bank (the Bank), a part of the World Bank Group (WBG), is a bank that makes loans to developing countries for development programs with the stated goal of reducing poverty. The World Bank differs from the World Bank Group in that the former only comprises the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the International Development Association, while the latter incorporates these entities in addition to three others.[1]
  • The World Bank was formally established on December 27, 1945, following the ratification of the Bretton Woods agreement. The concept was originally conceived in July 1944 at the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference. Two years later, the Bank issued its first, and largest, loan: $250 million to France for post-war reconstruction; an issue which has remained a primary focus, alongside reconstruction after natural disasters, humanitarian emergencies and post-conflict rehabilitation needs affecting developing and transition economies.
  • What it does;
    Capacity Building – Strengthening governments and educating government officials
    Infrastructure creation – implementation of legal and judicial systems for the encouragement of business, the protection of individual and property rights and the honoring of contracts
    Development of Financial Systems – the establishment of strong systems capable of supporting endeavors from micro credit to the financing of larger corporate ventures
    Combating corruption – Eradicating corruption to ensure optimal effect of actions
  • What are they doing now? Debt burden relief in the most indebted and poverty struck countries
    Amelioration of sanitation and water supply
    Support of vaccination and immunization programs for the reduction of communicable diseases such as malaria
    Combating the HIV/AIDS pandemic
    Support civil society organizations
    Creating initiatives for the reduction of greenhouse gases
  • The Bank not only provides financial support to its member states, but also analytical and advisory services to facilitate the implementation of the lasting economic and social improvements that are needed in many under-developed countries, as well as educating members with the knowledge necessary to resolve their development problems while promoting economic growth.

US falls to #15

US FALLS TO NUMBER 15

The OECD ranked the after-tax income of the average worker in the United States as 15th among its member nations. The richest middle class, if measured in terms of the purchasing power of their income, was Britain.
That ranking would surprise most Americans, who likely consider their nation the most prosperous in the world.
In one fell swoop, OECD statisticians lowered the estimated income of the average American worker by more than 10 percent and raised average incomes of other rich nations by as much as 30 percent, notes Mr. Kirkegaard.
It may well be that the comparative US standard of living is slipping. The price of oil has risen more dramatically in the United States than in other nations because of the dollar's large devaluation.
The reason for the drop is also statistical. In the past, the OECD had been using a proxy for the middle class based on the "average production worker." This concept focused on full-time workers in the relatively declining manufacturing sector, which tends to be unionized in the US and better paid on average. The OECD's new measure is based on the "average worker," which captures all sorts of private-sector jobs including mining, utilities, construction, retail, hotel/restaurants, financial services, real estate, and other areas.
So this new system ought to provide a fairer comparison.
But 15th place?
Not likely, figures David Grubb, an OECD economist in Paris. He points out that the US and Canada included in the statistics that it sent to Paris the wages of nonsupervisory workers, and not those of higher paid supervisory workers and salaried professionals. When that statistical difference is corrected, the rank of the American middle class would move up from 15th. How far is uncertain.
In the newest OECD Economic Outlook, the average annual wage in the total economy of the US was $45,563 for 2005. That's exceeded only by Luxembourg, a wealthy banking duchy, with $50,634. Britain, Ireland, and Australia, are not far behind the US with incomes above $40,000.
The problem is that this is a measure of total wages, not just the middle class, and it includes the richest Americans whose incomes have risen enormously in recent years. Outside of Hungary, the US has the most extreme income inequality in the OECD.
Kirkegaard figures middle- and lower-income Americans are being squeezed by the flood of money going to the superwealthy. Democrats in Congress have the same view, and their tax proposals would shift the tax burden up the income ladder.
After the early 1990s, the incomes of "very well-off Americans increased much faster than those of both the middle class and the poor," figures Gary Burtless, an expert at the Brookings Institution in Washington. For example, top corporate officers got pay increases of 9.5 percent a year in the 1990s, on top of high levels to start with.
This doesn't mean that Middle America incomes have been entirely flat. An analysis by Terry Alexander, an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, concludes that a "broad swath of Middle America experienced notable hourly wage gains" since 1975. In other words, children can still assume they have a better living standard, on average, than their parents did.
To reach that conclusion, Mr. Fitzger­ald had to disentangle a "confusing web of data." Two data series on individual hourly wage rates showed little, or even negative, growth over the past 30 years. But labor income for the entire national economy was shown to have grown 39 percent in that time span.
To square this apparent contradiction, Fitzgerald applied to the two wage series a broader price index (personal consumption expenditures), which covers the basket of final goods and services that people consume each year. The new result: Average hourly earnings rose 10 percent, rather than declining 4 percent, from 1975 to 2005. Median hourly wages also rose 20 percent rather than 12 percent. Then he factored fringe benefits into the wage calculation, since they have become increasingly expensive and "contribute to workers' well-being."
That combination accounted for 28 percent of the 39 percent growth of total labor income. "This does not contradict the claim that wage inequality increased over this period – it did," writes Fitzgerald in a bank publication. In other words, the rich are still getting proportionately richer.

Friday, November 2, 2007


Bloomberg Orders $1.5 Billion In Budget Cuts


NEW YORK (CBS) ― Prepare for economic pain. That's Mayor Michael Bloomberg's message to the city as he orders his agencies to come up with $1.5 billion in budget cuts over the next two years. But the pain might not hurt as much as it could. Think of the city's economy as suffering from a cold or flu. It needs an over-the-counter remedy, not antibiotics. Just the same, it needs budget cuts, not tax hikes. "At this moment, I don't believe that tax hikes would be necessary," said Mark Page, the city's budget director. Those are heartening words from Page even as the city prepares to deal with a down turn in the real estate industry and Wall Street by slashing spending by $1.5 billion. Wall Street woes play a big part. In 2006, city income from Wall Street was $20.9 billion. This year, the city expects it to be only $14.8 billion -- a 30 percent drop. Wall Street cuts can have a ripple effect on the local economy. According to the state comptroller, the loss of just one job on Wall Street can mean the loss of as many as three jobs in other industries in the city and the suburbs. So how does the loss of a Wall Street job ripple through the economy? "If somebody has lots of money, what do they do with it? Well they probably buy a nice place to live, they probably eat meals in restaurants, they probably buy things, they pay sales tax, the restaurant hires people," Page said. The cuts are not expected to mean a drop in police, firefighters, and teachers. But the workforce will shrink. The agencies have about three weeks to decide what to cut. They'll go into effect in January at City Hall.
** All I have to say is that a lot of money!! **

Frozen Pizzas Recalled Amid E. Coli Concerns


Frozen Pizzas Recalled Amid E. Coli Concerns
General Mills on Thursday recalled almost five million frozen pizzas sold under the Totino's and Jeno's label because of possible E. coli contamination.
The problem may have come pepperoni on pizzas produced at a General Mills plant in Ohio, the suburban Minneapolis-based company said. They said the pepperoni itself came from a separate supplier, not produced at the plant itself.
State and federal authorities have been investigating 21 E coli illnesses in 10 states over about four months.
Eight of the cases were reported in Tennessee, with the other cases found in smaller numbers in Kentucky, Missouri, New York, Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Wisconsin and South Dakota.
Nine of the 21 people reported eating Totino's or Jeno's pizza with pepperoni topping at some point before becoming ill. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that eight of the victims have been been hospitalized, and four have developed a type of kidney failure.
"We took action on that basis as a precaution, because of the possibility that a link might exist," said General Mills spokesman Tom Forsythe. "However, to date we have found no E. coli in our plant, and we have found no E. coli in our products."
General Mills said it was recalling about 414,000 cases of pizza, and that each case contains 12 pizzas.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Exxon has $9.4B in Profits.

No, we're not impressed by flashy revenue numbers. But Exxon's $9.4 billion is not a flashy revenue number, it's a flashy PROFIT number. Many of us can't imagine 9.4B in profits ever, but this is only in the past three months. Even more amazing, is the company is not impressed with their 9.4B, because it falls 10% from last year.

With the price of oil so high, profits are falling. It's costing more to find and produce crude oil, and that's eating into profits.

Gasoline prices have not been rising as fast as oil prices, meaning the company could not pass along this cost to the consumer. The price of crude oil barrels increased by $10 during the quarter, while national gas levels fell, on average, by $.14.

Nope, we're not impressed by flashy revenue numbers, but you must admit, their profit number is something else.

http://money.cnn.com/2007/11/01/news/companies/exxon_mobil/index.htm?postversion=2007110112