Weak Lending Threatens U.K. Recovery

7B9FCEBBD8AB514D1B9E597B7CC5C964547D_United_Kingdom1.gif

%7B9FCEBBD8-AB51-4D1B-9E59-7B7CC5C96454%7D_United_Kingdom[1]

Bank lending to business and home buyers remains critically weak, according to the latest data from the Bank of England, endangering the revival in the housing market and the wider economic recovery.

Bank lending to “real economy” firms rose by just £100m in February – 0.3 per cent – and mortgage approvals fell back again.

The news comes as the revised figures for GDP growth in the fourth quarter of last year are due today. An upgrade from 0.3 per cent to 0.4 per cent is expected, but economists are more concerned about a setback in the early months of this year.

Some of the fallback in mortgages can be attributed to the depressing effects of the rush to borrow before the stamp duty holiday ended on 31 December, but analysts point out that the underlying trend remains feeble.

Read More: – By Sean O’Grady, the Independent

Share

Private sector continues to shed jobs

023_adp1.jpg

023_adp[1]

Private-sector employers continued to cut jobs in March, highlighting the challenges still facing the nation’s job market, according to a report released Wednesday.

Automatic Data Processing, which processes paychecks for one in every six U.S. employees, said private-sector employers cut payrolls by 23,000 jobs in March, marking the smallest monthly decline since February 2008.

The decline surprised many economists. A consensus of economists surveyed by Briefing.com had forecast a gain of 40,000 jobs in the month.

The number of job cuts in February was revised to a loss of 24,000 jobs from the previously reported 20,000.

Read More: – By Ben Rooney, staff reporter, CNNMoney.com

Share

Eurozone inflation spikes to 1.5 percent in March

Euro_banknotes7879861.jpg

Inflation in the 16 countries that use the euro spiked to its highest level in 15 months during March, official figures showed Wednesday.

In its preliminary estimate for the year to March, Eurostat, the EU‘s statistics office, said consumer prices in the eurozone rose by 1.5 percent, way above February’s equivalent rate of 0.9 percent and market expectations for a more modest increase to 1.2 percent.

Eurostat did not provide any more details but a fuller analysis of why inflation jumped to its highest level since December will emerge on April 16, when a broader analysis is published.

Separately, Eurostat said unemployment across the eurozone rose by 61,000 in February, taking the jobless rate up to 10 percent in February from 9.9 percent a month earlier — February’s rate was the highest since August 1998 but in line with market expectations.

Read More: – By Pan Pylas, AP Business Writer, the Associated Press

Share

Professor: Huge Deficit Will Cause Dollar to ‘Collapse’

usdollar1.jpg

usdollar[1]

The federal deficit may soon cause a “collapse” of the dollar, Stanford University economics professor Scott S. Powell writes.

In an opinion piece in The New York Post, Powell notes that the ratings agency Fitch just cut Portugal‘s bond rating to AA negative — a clear sign that the insolvency crisis that began in Greece is far from over.

“And don’t think it’s merely a problem for the European Union. In fact, a debt-driven collapse of the dollar may be closer than most Americans realize,” he writes.

Before the government bank bailouts, gross federal debt was 70 percent of gross domestic product (GDP).

Read More: – By Gene Koprowski, Moneynews

Share

AT&T to Book $1 Billion Cost on Health-Care Reform

SF_att1.gif

SF_att[1]

AT&T Inc. will book $1 billion in first-quarter costs related to the health-care law signed this week by President Barack Obama, the most of any U.S. company so far.

A change in the tax treatment of Medicare subsidies triggered the non-cash expense, and the company will consider changes to the benefits it offers current and retired workers, Dallas-based AT&T said today in a regulatory filing.

AT&T, the biggest U.S. phone company, joins Caterpillar Inc., AK Steel Holding Corp. and 3M Co. in recording non-cash expenses against earnings as a result of the law. Health-care costs may shave as much as $14 billion from U.S. corporate profits, according to an estimate by benefits consulting firm Towers Watson. AT&T employed about 281,000 people as of the end of January.

“Companies like AT&T, that have large employee bases, are going to have higher health-care costs and, therefore, lower earnings unless they can negotiate something or offer less to their employees,” said Chris Larsen, an analyst at Piper Jaffray & Co. in New York, who rates AT&T shares “overweight” and doesn’t own any himself.

Read More: – By Amy Thomson and Ian King, Bloomberg

Share

Ireland’s ‘Worst Fears Surpassed’ as Banks Need $42.7 Billion

ireland1.jpg

ireland[1]

Ireland’s banks may need at least 31.8 billion euros ($42.7 billion) in new capital after a real- estate slump left them crippled by mounting bad loans.

The fundraising requirement was announced after the National Asset Management Agency, the country’s so-called bad bank, said it will apply an average discount of 47 percent on the first block of loans it is taking over from lenders and the country’s financial regulator set new capital targets. The discount compares with the government’s initial 30 percent estimate.

“Our worst fears have been surpassed,” Finance Minister Brian Lenihan said in the parliament in Dublin today. “The detailed information that has emerged from the banks in the course of the process is truly shocking.”

Read More: – By Dara Doyle and Colm Heatley, Bloomberg

Share

State Debt Woes Grow Too Big to Camouflage

unitedstatesmap1.gif

united-states-map[1]

California, New York and other states are showing many of the same signs of debt overload that recently took Greece to the brink — budgets that will not balance, accounting that masks debt, the use of derivatives to plug holes, and armies of retired public workers who are counting on benefits that are proving harder and harder to pay.

And states are responding in sometimes desperate ways, raising concerns that they, too, could face a debt crisis.

New Hampshire was recently ordered by its State Supreme Court to put back $110 million that it took from a medical malpractice insurance pool to balance its budget. Colorado tried, so far unsuccessfully, to grab a $500 million surplus from Pinnacol Assurance, a state workers’ compensation insurer that was privatized in 2002. It wanted the money for its university system and seems likely to get a lesser amount, perhaps $200 million.

Connecticut has tried to issue its own accounting rules. Hawaii has inaugurated a four-day school week. California accelerated its corporate income tax this year, making companies pay 70 percent of their 2010 taxes by June 15. And many states have balanced their budgets with federal health care dollars that Congress has not yet appropriated.

Read More: – By Mary Williams Walsh, the New York Times

Share

Despite Citi, Other Bailouts Yet to Pay Off for Taxpayers

1492usdollars1.jpg

1492-us-dollars[1]

Bank bailouts are turning out to be great business for the government.

Unfortunately for taxpayers, other federal rescues will almost certainly wind up in the red.

The Treasury Department said Monday it will begin selling its stake in Citigroup Inc. at a potential profit of about $7.5 billion — not a bad haul for an 18-month investment.

The move is a major step in the government’s effort to unravel investments it made in banks under the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program at the height of the financial crisis.

Yet a year and a half after Congress passed the big bailout, other parts of it — particularly troubled automakers General Motors and Chrysler and insurer American International Group — show no signs of being profitable.

Despite the returns from Citi and other banks, analysts and even the Treasury Department predict the bailout will wind up costing taxpayers at least $100 billion. The bailouts of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were not included in TARP, will add billions more.

Read More: – the Associated Press

Share

Are the Brits headed for the PIGS sty?

sty[1]

Is the United Kingdom in danger of being exiled to the island of misfit debtors?

For most of the past year, anxiety about overextended governments has focused on the southern European countries derisively known as the PIGS — for Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain. But the PIGS may soon have company.

U.K. officials this week released a budget that was short on cost-cutting details. Silence on that unpopular subject was hardly surprising, given the U.K. economy’s slow recovery and the political jockeying ahead of a national election that is expected to take place in early May. The move wasn’t the biggest stunner in a week that saw a downgrade in Portugal, squabbles over a Greek bailout and a selloff in long-dated U.S. government bonds.

Even so, observers warn of a squandered opportunity to quell fears over the cost of financing a recovery in the hard-hit U.K. economy. Government spending is on track to account for more than half of U.K. gross domestic product in 2010, while government debt is heading toward 64% of GDP next year, up from 44% in fiscal 2009.

Read More: – By Colin Barr, senior writer, Fortune

Share

UBS Economist: Greek Default Is Inevitable

ubs[1]

Greece may get a bailout, but its economic woes will eventually lead to default on its government debt, says Paul Donovan, deputy head of global economics for UBS.

For now, both the International Monetary Fund and euro zone nations will provide support for the beleaguered nation.

A bailout plan, hammered out late Thursday by euro zone nations, sets out a system to rescue Greece if it finds itself unable to borrow. It would provide individual loans from other euro zone countries and funding from the International Monetary Fund, the Associated Press reported. But it sets out strict conditions for activating the mechanism, saying it could only be used as a last resort, and requires unanimous agreement of all 16 countries that use the euro.

“The Germans are going to have stop whining and start signing checks sometime soon. The French will have to pay up as well,” Donovan told Bloomberg.

Read More: – By Dan Weil, Moneynews

Share

The Sound Money Institute is and educational organization dedicated to the stability and soundness of the United States Dollar. Faced with unprecedented pressure to spend beyond its means the United States Government has pressured the Federal Reserve Bank to monetize the debt or in other words they are printing currency to fund deficit spending by the US Treasury.

Subscribe here for daily updates on the most recent news from the financial sector.