marți, 5 iulie 2011

Behind-the-Scenes Video: Salute The Troops Independence Day Celebration

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
 

Behind-the-Scenes Video: Salute The Troops Independence Day Celebration

Last night, the First Family celebrated the Fourth of July by hosting more than 1,200 military heroes and their families for a barbeque, a USO show featuring Train and Amos Lee, and an extraordinary view of national capital fireworks from the South Lawn. 

See behind-the-scenes video of the event.



The President and the First Lady watch the fireworks over the National Mall (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

In Case You Missed It

Here are some of the top stories from the White House blog.

Happy 4th from @VP
The Office of the Vice President launched an official Twitter account – @VP – with a call from Vice President Biden and Dr. Jill Biden asking all Americans to remember our troops and military families on Independence Day. 

Weekly Address: Cutting the Deficit and Creating Jobs
President Obama addresses the need to reduce the nation's deficit while creating jobs across the country and wishes Americans a happy Fourth of July.

What You Can Do to Support Military Families
The First Lady sends a message to the White House email list, wishing them a Happy Independence Day and encouraging all Americans to honor our brave men and women in uniform by volunteering to give back to military families.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

9:45 AM: The President receives the Presidential Daily Briefing

10:15 AM: The President meets with senior advisors

11:30 AM: The President and the Vice President meet with Ambassador Crocker and Lieutenant General Allen

12:30 PM: Press briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney WhiteHouse.gov/live

4:30 PM: The President and the Vice President meet with Secretary of Defense Panetta

WhiteHouse.gov/live Indicates events that will be live streamed on WhiteHouse.Gov/Live

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Seth's Blog : Paying attention to the attention economy

Paying attention to the attention economy

Most of us are happily obsessed with the economy of money. We earn it and we spend it and we generally pay attention to what things cost.

Certainly, salespeople and marketers are truly focused on the price of things, on commissions and shelving allowances and net margin and the cost of goods sold.

With all of these easily measured activity, it's easy to overlook the fast-growing and ever more important economy based around attention.

"If I alert my entire customer base, how much will this cost me in permission?"

"How much time do we save our customers with a better written manual?"

"When we fail to ask for (and reward) the privilege of following up, are we wasting permission?"

"Does launching this product to an audience of stangers waste the attention we're going to have to buy?"

Attention is a bit like real estate, in that they're not making any more of it. Unlike real estate, though, it keeps going up in value.

 

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luni, 4 iulie 2011

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


S&P Warns Greek Bailout Plan Constitutes Default; Greece at Risk of Missing June Target; Spoon Feeding will Continue Until Greece Dies

Posted: 04 Jul 2011 11:52 AM PDT

Before receiving the next bailout tranche, Greece May Have Missed June Primary Balance Target
Greece is at risk of missing a key budget target in June, European Union experts said in a report, a sign of the uphill struggle the country faces as it tries to get its deficit reduction plans back on track.

The report, prepared by European Commission budget experts with input from European Central Bank officials and published over the weekend, says that Greece could miss its June target for its primary budget balance, a measure of the government deficit that excludes interest payments on outstanding debt.

Government revenue faces "significant" shortfalls that have only partially been offset by lower spending and delayed payments, the report says. "As a result, the quarterly performance criterion on the primary balance could be missed already in June."
Spoon Feeding will Continue Regardless of Shortfalls

Short of telling the ECB, EU, and IMF to go to hell, nothing will stop the Plan to Spoon-Feed Greece to Death
The original bailout was 110 billion Euros, now it takes another $85 billion (and counting). When the fire sale of Greek assets does not bring in enough money, the banks and IMF will place even harsher terms on Greece.

Notice the plan to spoon-feed payments to Greece in 12 billion-euro bites while demanding "progress". This will ensure Greece is sucked dry (at fire sale prices) of any government assets worth owning by the time the "bailout" is over.

Portugal, and Ireland should make note of the process. The same "bailout" plan will be used on them unless they tell the IMF and EU to go to hell.
French Plan to "Save Greece" Constitutes Default

The New York Times reports S.&P. Warns Bank Plan Would Cause Greek Default
Greece risks being judged in default on its debt obligations if banks are forced to bear part of the pain, Standard & Poor's said Monday, suggesting that current proposals for rescuing the euro zone's weakest member may have to be reconsidered.

In particular, a plan proposed by the French government and banks "could require private sector debt restructuring in a form that we would view as an effective default," S.&P. said in a statement.

The rating agency also said it was cutting its long-term rating on Greece three notches deeper into junk territory, to CCC from B.

A finding by the credit ratings agencies of default would also require the E.C.B. to impose discounts, known as haircuts, on the Greek debt it has accepted as collateral. That would inflict more financial pain on banks holding that debt.

Euro-zone finance ministers agreed over the weekend to provide Athens with financing of €8.7 billion, or $12.6 billion, from the €110 billion bailout agreed to last year, to help the Greek government function through the summer. The new aid eliminates the prospect of a near-term default.

But the finance ministers put off the question of how to provide a second bailout, reportedly valued at up to €90 billion, to keep the country operating through 2014, when it is hoped that Greece will be able to return to the credit markets.

Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, announced June 27 that French banks had agreed to a plan under which the banks would reinvest most of the proceeds of their holdings of Greek debt maturing between now and 2014 back into new long-term Greek securities.

But Standard & Poor's said Monday that it "views certain types of debt exchanges and similar restructurings as equivalent to a payment default": when a transaction is seen as "distressed rather than purely opportunistic" and when it results "in investors receiving less value than the promise of the original securities."

Both conditions would appear to be met by the French proposal, it said.
Rating Agency Rollover Default Conditions

  1. It's a default if rollovers are distressed rather that opportunistic.
  2. It's a default if "investors receiving less value than the promise of the original securities"

Point number one deals with the "voluntary" nature of the dealing. If banks roll over debt under duress, fearing bigger losses if they don't, the rating agencies will not consider that a "voluntary" rollover.

Even if a voluntary rollover can be constructed, condition number two must still be satisfied. I fail to see how that is possible, at least without destroying Greece.

Making Sense of the French Rollover Plan

There is a nice article on Zero Hedge by Peter Tchir of TF Market Advisors called Making Sense of the French Rollover Plan
The French proposal is slightly complex at best and convoluted at worst. Before digging into the specifics, let's look at what a true rollover would look like. If Participants agreed with Greece to extend the maturity AND reduce the coupon AND do it immediately, that would be a clear example of a rollover that benefited Greece.

There are 3 key elements to a real rollover. The first is that they would agree to the rollover now. That would take away uncertainty. The maturity extension is the rollover, and the longer it is delayed, the better for Greece. The coupon on the new debt should be lower than the coupon Greece is currently paying. If all 3 of these criteria are met, and the new bonds are pari passu with the existing bonds, then I think everyone would agree that Greece benefits, the Troika would benefit, and the Participants would have made a sacrifice.
We need to stop right there. What Tchir says is true, but since when is the plan to benefit Greece? Moreover, even if the plan was to benefit Greece, notice the key phrase "the Participants would have made a sacrifice. "

A sacrifice implies "investors receive less value than the promise of the original securities". That in turn implies default, at least to the rating agencies.

Tchir continues ...
The French proposal, as we will see, potentially does not satisfy any of the 3 aspects listed – it is not immediate, the coupon will be higher than existing debt, and the maturity extension is linked to taking some debt out of the market, so it's not as clearly a benefit as the headlines make it seem.

The ISDA credit derivative definitions for a Restructuring Credit Event have to meet 2 tests. The first part of the test is straightforward and is met if bonds are extended, or the coupon is reduced, for example. This condition would be met. The second condition is effectively that it is involuntary. If the actions of some bondholders can force other bondholders into an agreement then this condition would be met and there would be a CDS Credit Event. In the case of Greek bonds, that looks unlikely. I have only looked at the offering circulars from a couple of bonds, but there does not appear to by anything that could force a bondholder to change the terms of the debt. There is no reason, that on a €1 billion issue, €950 million could be exchanged and €50 million could remain outstanding. If that is the case, then there would be no CDS Credit Event under this true rollover.
The rating agencies have taken the position (right or wrong), that if a rollover is done under duress, the rollover is not voluntary.

However, Tchir goes on to say "The Rating Agencies can be largely ignored".

The plan as it stands is complicated. Tchir does his best to explain it by comparing the rollover to 30 year mortgages.
The Participants are not lending to Greece for 30 years, the duration is much shorter, and the coupon payments start out potentially high, and become usurious in the later years.

The structure is designed in a such a way to make it look like the Participants are being helpful – 30 years at a low coupon, but separating the SPV into its zero coupon component and the loan to Greece clearly demonstrate that the terms being offered to Greece are far worse than the headlines that the Participants are selling to the public.

I would be surprised if Greece agrees to the loan terms as included in the French proposal and wonder if they have even been consulted?
Greece has had no say in this for the simple reason the plan is not to save Greece, but rather save the French banks who are most on hook should Greece default.

It will be interesting to see if the plan changes now that the S&P has warned the French plan for Greece constitute default. Even if the plan is modified, I do not see how it can be modified to meet the "voluntary" rollover criteria of the rating agencies.

Unless Tchir is correct that the rating agencies truly are irrelevant, something has to give.

Actually, something has to give anyway. The situation in Greece is so dire, and the economy, politics and riots so messy that Greece is going to default sooner or later anyway.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


"Jobless and Wageless" Recovery in Pictures; Trends in Jobs and Wage Growth

Posted: 04 Jul 2011 09:51 AM PDT

Please consider a collections of charts from The "Jobless and Wageless" Recovery from the Great Recession of 2007-2009. Annotations in red (where present)are by me.

GDP 2007 Q4 - 2011 Q1



GDP made a new high but look at the amount of US fiscal stimulus from Congress, monetary stimulus from the Fed, and global stimulus especially China, that it took to achieve that.

Nonfarm Jobs



Total Civilian Employment



By the "end" of the recession the US economy shed 7 million nonfarm jobs and 6 million civilian jobs. Since the official end of the recession, there has been a small net loss of both nonfarm jobs and civilian jobs.

Mean Weekly Private Sector Hours



Mean weekly hours have risen by .5 hours since the recession ended but are still .2 hours below the start of the recession.

Change in Civilian Jobs vs. Prior Recessions 7 Quarters Later



Private Sector Real Hourly Earnings in Constant 201o Dollars



Thanks to the Fed specifically and central bankers in general, real wages are below where they were when the recession ended.

Real Median Weekly Earnings Full-Time Wage and Salary Employees in Constant 2010 Dollars



Trends in Annualized Wage and Salary Accruals CPI-U Adjusted 2010 Dollars



Annualized Value of Corporate Profits in Constant 2010 Dollars



Snip from the report ....

"To date, through the first quarter of 2011, the nation's recovery from the 2007-2009 recession is both a jobless and a wageless recovery. Aggregate employment still has not increased above the trough quarter of 2009, and real hourly and weekly wages have been flat to modestly negative. The only major beneficiaries of the recovery have been corporate profits and the stock market and its shareholders. Most holders of savings and money market accounts also are net losers due to declining real interest rates which have been in negative territory for many interest bearing and money market accounts."

There are more charts, tables and commentary in the 23 page PDF report.

Given the global economy is clearly weakening (disregarding inventory building and the latest US manufacturing ISM numbers), there is every reason to believe the jobless, wageless, "state of affairs" will last.

Notice I called it "state of affairs". The recovery, if that is what one wants to call what we had, is on its last legs.

For a look at the latest manufacturing ISM numbers and trends in other countries, please see Manufacturing ISM Weaker Than it Looks; Digging Into the Numbers; Inventory Restocking Accounts for Much of the Rise

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Taco Bell In The ’80s

Posted: 04 Jul 2011 04:44 PM PDT

I am sharing with you this Flickr set that was posted on Buzzfeed today. A former Taco Bell worker who used to work in Kansas City Taco Bell has shared his photos of what it was like to work there in the 80s. Taco Bells have changed dramatically since then, and definitely not for the better. Check out the Spanish tile counters and wood grain Formica paneling, sweet!



The stores had Spanish tile on the front of the counters, and lots of wood accents. The Salsa Bar was in full swing. Those didn't last long, as they lost a ton of money.


Original production line.


Uniforms.


Cleaning the production line, after closing.


























Boss, Tony, at the tomato dicer. Tony's folks were from Ecuador, and he was a first-generation American. He put store #1235 on the map, by hiring and retaining good young people, even as the store's volume shot up to nearly unmanageable levels.


Lady Gaga Day in Taiwan

Posted: 04 Jul 2011 04:37 PM PDT

A city in Taiwan declared Sunday "Lady Gaga Day" as the pop diva's first visit to the island sparked a frenzy among dedicated fans and local media.

Lady Gaga, sporting a black and white wig, red trousers and a red dress with leopard-print sleeves, was given a key to Taichung city by the mayor at a ceremony attended by hundreds of enthusiastic supporters.

"On behalf of Taichung, I now declare today 'Lady Gaga Day'...which also belongs to all of her fans," mayor Jason Hu said.

Earlier in the day, hundreds of her fans known as "Little Monsters" defied summer heat to parade on the street dressed in costumes and wigs.







Lady Gaga Day Ceremony


Lady Gaga Taiwanese Concert