senate posts
FeedPosted Jun 25th 2010 5:30PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Politics, Recession, Financial Crisis

In the process that saw the Senate Republicans block, via filibuster, an extension of unemployment benefits this week, the Senate also rejected an effort to extend the Build America Bond program. Without an extension, the program will expire on December 31.
Talk about irrationality in spades.
President Obama introduced the Build America Bond program as a way to make more capital sources available to state/local governments, after capital became constrained as a result of the financial crisis. The program provides a 35% subsidy from the U.S. Treasury to state/local governments for interest costs, Bloomberg News
reported Friday, effectively increasing the pool of private capital that would consider such investments.
Continue reading Unemployment Benefits, Build America Bonds Programs Stall in Senate
Posted Feb 11th 2010 3:10PM by Kevin Kersten (RSS feed)
Filed under: Exxon Mobil (XOM), Chevron Corp (CVX), BP p.l.c. ADS (BP), Green Stocks

With the failed global warming submit; leaked emails, faked numbers, suppressed data and major snow storms hitting both Europe and America global warning aka "climategate" seems to have taken a major hit recently.
Some are even going as far as predicting the
demise of global warming.
This could be a big turning point for global warming. Having been caught in a lie; they have lost massive amount of creditability and now face an uphill battle to convince a skeptical public. Certainly, global warming may regain public credibility, but it will face a lot of scrutiny as it tries.
Continue reading Is Global Warming Dead? Stocks to Dump ...
Posted Jan 21st 2010 2:30PM by Kevin Kersten (RSS feed)
Filed under: Politics

Last month Congress increased the debt limit to $12.4 million and with the
U.S. debt clock showing the debt at 12.3 million Congress is going to need to act soon and now the Senate
wants to raise the limit $14.3 trillion.
Lets break down the numbers:
14.3 trillion proposed debt limit ($14,300,000,000,000)
308.5 million
estimated U.S. population (308,500,000)
$46,353 proposed limit per person
$185,413 per family of four
Continue reading Are You Ready for More U.S. Debt?
Posted Nov 29th 2009 3:10PM by Tom Johansmeyer (RSS feed)
Filed under: JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Economic Data, Politics, Housing, Recession, Financial Crisis
If mortgage companies start to feel like they're losing elbow room, it's probably because they're starting to get nudged by the Obama administration. The folks in the White House are planning to kick off a campaign to squeeze mortgage companies to lower payments for even more borrowers who are in trouble. The $75 billion program, financed by taxpayers, to keep homeowners from falling into default appears to be in trouble.
Mortgage lenders have increased their efforts to modify borrowers' mortgages, but most of them are still in a trial stage, which will last up to five months. Only a handful have been made permanent, which isn't good enough for Washington. The Treasury Department's assistant secretary for financial institutions, Michael S. Barr, told the New York Times, "The banks are not doing a good enough job," continuing, "Some of the firms ought to be embarrassed, and they will be."
Continue reading White House, lenders, lawyers and borrowers: Nobody can agree on mortgage relief
Posted Apr 3rd 2009 2:00PM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: Federal Reserve, Financial Crisis

The American people are mad as hell at all the money that has been given to who knows who. So Senators Bernie Sanders, Russ Feingold, Jim Webb and Jim Bunning
sponsored an amendment to a budget blueprint to get at more transparency as to where all this money is going. Bernie Sanders is quoted as saying: " The American people have the right to know who the Fed is lending taxpayer dollars to, how much they are getting and what the Fed is asking in return for the money."
The amendment calls on the Fed to identify each firm it has given assistance to, how much the assistance was worth and what the firm is doing with the money. It is important to note that the amendment passed by a vote of 59 to 39. In other words over half the Senate is leaning on the Fed for more information about what they are doing.
Continue reading Senate amendment wants the Fed to name names
Posted Jan 29th 2009 10:30AM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Politics, Recession

Following's Wednesday's
244-188 House vote -- one in which, despite President Obama's efforts to cultivate Republican ideas, every House Republican voted against it -- the focus on the stimulus package shifts to the Senate, where plan revisions are likely.
Assuming Senate passage, any differences between the two versions would have to be resolved in a conference committee.
Republicans are complaining that the bill has too many traditional Democratic-constituency-based programs and 'pork,' while some Democrats are concerned the bill does not contain enough spending - - in particular infrastructure spending, to create jobs the U.S. economy needs. The U.S. economy lost more than 2.6 million jobs in 2008 -- including 1 million in the past two months -- and the nation's unemployment rate has soared to 7.2%.
Continue reading Senate likely to revise stimulus package after House approval
Posted Jan 15th 2009 9:51AM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Politics, Recession, Financial Crisis
The Senate is expected today to vote on the revised, second $350 billion TARP allotment, while the House Speaker also indicated she expects the U.S. Congress to approve the measure.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-California,
indicated to ABCNews that Congress would approve President-elect Barack Obama's request for another $350 billion in bailout / rescue funds because this time it will be spent by "a president who will enforce the law." The House vote is expected to be close, however.
To block Obama's request, both the House and Senate must vote to withhold the money, assuming each chamber has the two-thirds vote to override a potential Obama veto.
On Wednesday, Senate Republicans won assurances from Obama administration officials that the administration would use the money for financial institutions, not for aid to auto manufacturers and other industries,
Bloomberg News reported. Republicans have criticized the Bush administration's decision to lend $13.4 billion to assist the recovery of
General Motors (NYSE:
GM) and Chrysler.
Is tracking TARP money feasible?Both Senate and House lawmakers have called on greater accountability and transparency to 'verify and track' where the money is going, but economist David H. Wang said that isn't feasible.
Continue reading Senate, House seen passing second-half of revised TARP
Posted Dec 14th 2008 4:40PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Management, Rants and Raves, Ford Motor (F), General Motors (GM), Politics, Sunday Funnies, Recession
In a high stakes game of chicken this past week, the Senate GOP and UAW leadership could not agree on setting a date certain for cutting members wages and the hard-line senators would not accept anything less. (See Auto 'support fund': Senate & UAW clash.)
One of the ironies of the proposed, and not passed, Federal bailout, or support fund, as I have begun to call it, depending on your point of view, is that the proposed $14 billion is more than the value Wall Street currently places on the two companies.
General Motors (NYSE: GM) closed Friday at $3.94, down $0.18 or 4.37%, with a capitalization of $2.4 billion. Ford (NYSE: F) closed at $3.04, up $0.14 or4.83%, with a capitalization of $7.04 billion. The combined value therefore is $9.44 billion; yes folks, another Washington bargain!
While world markets sank on the news of the failed talks, U.S. investors yawned and were unimpressed with activity in foreign markets -- all three of the major indices ended up for the day. Perhaps that's because temporarily propping up the two companies by spending more than they're worth made no sense to anyone outside Washington D.C. or Detroit.
Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture and planning firm. He writes the columns Chasing Value and Serious Money. Disclosure: I do not own shares of GM or Ford.
Posted Dec 12th 2008 10:15AM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Bad News, Rants and Raves, Competitive Strategy, Ford Motor (F), General Motors (GM), Politics, Recession, Financial Crisis
Well yesterday's operative word was "might" as in the congress might pass a bill to support the auto industry and prevent the potential bankruptcy of General Motors (NYSE: GM), Ford (NYSE: F) and privately held Chrysler. Things have changed and for now might has become won't -- as in nothing doing!
Republicans in the Senate clashed with the UAW, Democrats and the White House over a thinly viable plan to provide a $14 billion aid package to forestall industry collapse and give all sides the opportunity to improve a bad situation in the first quarter of 2009 under certain conditions.
The breaking point was the UAW's refusal to agree to immediate wage cuts. While headlines pronounce the deal dead, I say let's wait and see. After all this is Washington, DC, where any reasonable facsimile of the truth has a high probability of being posturing and pretending.
I have been following this saga all week and three days ago I posted Auto industry bailout: A bloated government to lead a bloated industry, when I did not see an easy solution for such institutionalized problems - on all sides. This was followed by Auto industry bailout: Oil companies should take over!, a very provocative suggestion that brought a multitude of comments from our readers, taking the bait. In a more congenial mood I continued with Auto industry bailout: Can't we all just get along? yesterday hopeful some good might come out of intense negotiations in the Capital. Intense yes, successful no, or at least not yet.
Continue reading Auto 'support fund': Senate & UAW clash
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