Posts Tagged ‘debt’

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Debt Settlement And Debt Negotiation in usa

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Savings
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Hedge Fund Directory
Hedge Fund Directory

Hedge Fund Directory and online research database containing List of Asian including Japan and India, European, Canadian and US Offshore hedge funds. Seed capital for startups …

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Individual Voluntary Arangements
Individual Voluntary Arangements

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Debt Consolodation Loan
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Source: http://www.submit-link.eu/link/9297/Commercial-Real-Estate-Mortgages-Apartment-Multi-Family-Loans

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China’s Wen: government debt risk “controllable” (Reuters)

BEIJING (Reuters) ? China’s Premier Wen Jiabao said the nation’s government debt is at an “overall safe and controllable” level, that funding for key projects would be ensured and that applying the brakes to the problem would be done in a way to avoid systemic risks.

Investors have been worried by the scale of the debts built up by China’s local governments, which some fear could threaten the stability of the banking system.

Wen’s comments, reported in the official People’s Daily on Monday, were made in a speech dating back to early January at the government’s flagship financial work conference.

Wen pledged to contain and defuse local government debt risks and avoid the spread of financial risks.

“Currently, our government debt is overall safe and controllable,” he said.

“We are taking the issue of managing local government debt very seriously. Through clean-ups and regulation, the trend of expanding investment vehicles has been effectively contained.”

China’s state audit office said earlier this month it had uncovered 530 billion yuan ($84 billion) worth of irregularities involving local government debt.

But the figure is a fraction of the 2 trillion-3 trillion yuan of sour loans economists believe are buried in the 10.7 trillion yuan of debt local governments had at the end of 2010.

ACTIVELY, APPROPRIATELY EASE RISKS

Wen said China “must both actively and appropriately ease financial and fiscal risks, and also ensure the funding needs of key construction projects approved by the government.”

But he warned against a simplistic approach to local government investment.

“We cannot simplistically hit the brakes and use a one-size-fits-all approach, and must avoid turning localized risks into comprehensive, systemic risks,” he said.

Wen also urged greater attention and controls on systemically important financial institutions.

“We must study standards for determination and a framework for assessing our country’s systemically important financial institutions, and we must adopt more stringent oversight standards towards these institutions, enhancing external constraints on them,” he said.

Wen also vowed to “break monopolies” against private capital participation in the financial sector, promising broad reforms to ownership and capital structures in banking, equities, insurance and other financial institutions that would encourage more private capital to flow into the financial services sector.

“Improving financial services for small businesses requires the reform, innovation and regulated development of financial institutions that come in different types and different sizes,” he said, making clear there was a role for private credit in the economy, providing it was properly regulated.

In addition, Wen made the case for more market-based reforms to interest rates and credit pricing to enhance their roles, along with exchange rates, as price levers.

Wen said China should “accelerate nurturing of a market system for benchmark interest rates, guide financial institutions towards enhancing their risk price-setting capacities, and steadily advance marketizing reform of interest rates.”

And he repeated the long-standing commitment to “further improve the renminbi exchange rate formation mechanism, strengthen the flexibility of the renminbi exchange rate in both directions, maintaining a basically stable renminbi exchange rate at a reasonable and balanced level.”

China would push forward with yuan convertibility in an orderly manner and broaden the use of the currency in cross-boarder trade settlement, he added.

And Wen reiterated that the government would further diversify its huge $3.18 trillion foreign exchange reserves.

“We should explore a multi-layer investment channel for our foreign exchange reserves and further improve the skill of managing the reserve assets by steadily diversifying the investment to maintain safety, liquidity and preserve and increase its value,” he said.

SUPPORT FOR ECONOMIC INNOVATION

The Premier said China’s financial institutions must step up support for key areas of economic structural adjustment, for projects aimed at saving energy and reducing pollution, and for indigenous innovation.

Beijing has unveiled a slew of tax breaks to help cash-strapped small firms cope with rising costs and has also allowed them to issue more bonds and tap other sources of financing to ease the funding squeeze.

China’s big four state-backed lenders are criticized by small and medium-sized business owners for directing the bulk of their lending capacity to major state-owned enterprises.

Bank lending in China is essentially rationed by the government, which sets an annual lending target and decides how much credit can be created in the economy.

China has set a target of 8 trillion yuan ($1.27 trillion) in new local-currency bank loans and 14 percent growth in broad M2 money supply for 2012, three sources familiar with government plans told Reuters earlier this month.

That marks a rise from 7.47 trillion yuan in new bank loans and annual M2 growth of 13.6 percent achieved in 2011, implying a further loosening of policy by the People’s Bank of China to support the economy as growth loses steam and inflation cools.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Writing by Nick Edwards; Editing by Ed Davies, Ken Wills and Alex Richardson)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120130/bs_nm/us_china_finance

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Economics and Investing: – SurvivalBlog.com

Debra P. sent a link to a news clip where a CNN reporter catches on: Hedge fund manager hoards nickels. (Although she muddies the waters by talking about numismatic value and base metal value in the same breath.)

And speaking of nickel, this piece comes from Canada: Steel yourself for new non-nickel loonies, (Thanks to C.L. for the link.)

A Colorado television station interviewed a “one man think tank”: Melting Gold Coins To Reduce National Debt–Man Says America’s Debt Would Be Erased If Government Would Melt Gold Coins Into Bars, Sell Them To Other Countries. Not only is he severely out of touch with the spot price of gold, but he apparently thinks that the gold being minted into 1-ounce American Eagles is coming from long-established government stockpiles. It is actually bought on the open market. Both this man’s disconnect from reality and the television reporter’s choice of stock footage (showing $1 Sacagawea “gold” dollar coins) leave me speechless. Reporters need to learn : Don’t interview the Village Idiot as a subject matter expert.

Desperation measures: BofA told Fed it could sell branches in emergency. [JWR's Comment: Haven't Americans caught on to the fact that the nascent global credit collapse could trigger a cascade of margin calls and bank runs?]

Items from The Economatrix:

France Loses AAA- Rating In Blow To Eurozone

Hedge Funds Blamed As Greek Debt Deal Falters

EU Threatens Hungary Over Refusal To Implement Austerity Policies

Further Debt, Dimming Prospects

Source: http://www.survivalblog.com/2012/01/economics_and_investing_1054.html

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PM says Japan must tackle debt to avoid rate cut (AP)

TOKYO ? Japan’s prime minister, attempting to build support for painful fiscal reforms, said Saturday that the country should be alarmed by ratings cuts in Europe and must tackle its massive public debts to avoid becoming the next target.

Japan’s debt is more than twice its gross domestic product, higher than any of the struggling European economies whose fiscal problems have set off a eurozone crisis that has reverberated in markets around the world. Japan’s credit rating was downgraded last year, and Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said it could be further harmed if the country is seen as dragging its feet on reforms.

Noda commented during a live TV talk show following ratings agency Standard & Poor’s downgrade of nine European countries, including France, one of the strongest economies in the eurozone.

“Even France got its credit ratings changed,” Noda said. “We’ll be in a spotlight if Japan makes an impression that we are dwelling on the current fiscal policy and just let it slide. We must tackle the problems with considerable sense of crisis.”

The rating agency ended France and Austria’s triple-A status Friday. It lowered Italy’s and Spain’s by two notches and did the same for Portugal and Cyprus. S&P also cut ratings on Malta, Slovakia and Slovenia. France’s downgrade to AA+ lowers it to the level of U.S. long-term debt, which S&P downgraded last summer.

Noda, who took office in September, reshuffled his Cabinet on Friday in a bid to win cooperation from the opposition and voters to raise the sales tax and rein in the bulging fiscal deficit. He named Katsuya Okada, a former foreign minister, as deputy prime minister to spearhead the efforts.

Noda says Japan urgently needs to reduce its debt burden as the nation ages and its labor force shrinks, putting a greater burden on the social security and tax systems. He has promised to submit a bill by the end of March to raise the 5 percent sales tax in two stages, to 8 percent in 2014 and to 10 percent by 2015.

The plan is unpopular not only among the public and in the divided parliament, but within Noda’s own Democratic party. Powerbroker Ichiro Ozawa and his supporters arguing that raising taxes would hurt the already weak economy.

Noda’s public approval ratings have continuously slid since he took office. The latest figure now stands below 40 percent amid resistance to raising the sales tax and a general lack of confidence in political leadership in Japan, which has seen a new prime minister every year for the past six years.

Noda said Saturday the measures are needed to keep Japan alive, and that he must seek the public’s understanding to “share the pain.”

“I will stake my political life to save and protect this country for future generations,” he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120114/ap_on_bi_ge/as_japan_europe_financial_crisis

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Analysis: more commitment, cash needed to rescue (Reuters)

ROME (Reuters) ? It is likely to take the combined forces of the European Central Bank, the IMF and the euro zone bailout fund to break Italy’s financial fall, and it’s far from clear that Europe’s leaders are ready to take on that rescue mission.

The precondition for Rome would be to rapidly replace Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi with an internationally respected figure and adopt long-delayed structural reforms dictated by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

That might spur the currency bloc’s leaders, who euro zone officials say have no plans for Italy’s rescue even though its borrowing costs have risen sharply to levels that threaten its ability to raise funds on the market.

“Financial assistance is not in the cards,” one euro zone official said Wednesday, adding the euro zone was not even considering extending a precautionary credit line to Rome.

It may already be too late. Many analysts say the Italian bond sell-off has already gone past a point of no return which will lead to the break up of the currency bloc.

“If you allow Italy to fail you bring down the euro zone,” said Nicholas Spiro, head of debt consultancy Spiro Sovereign Strategy.

A euro zone without tiny countries like Greece or Portugal may be plausible, but for many it is inconceivable without the region’s third largest economy, a founding member of the group that evolved into the European Union.

Italy’s benchmark bond yields jumped above 7.5 percent on Wednesday and the gap above their German equivalent hit 5.7 percent, both passing levels which forced Ireland and Portugal to leave the markets and seek international bailouts.

Moreover, the yield on 2-year bonds rose above 10-year ones for the first time since the launch of the euro, a clear sign of investors’ concern that they will not get their money back.

Those yields would be much higher but for aggressive buying by the ECB, but if Italy is to be saved the bank must go much further and accept the role of lender of last resort to the euro zone, which it has so far resisted.

Italy’s public debt is 1.9 trillion euros ($2.6 trillion), the fourth largest in the world, and its funding needs are too great to be met by the euro zone’s bailout mechanism (EFSF) and the IMF.

But while the “too big to bail” view assumes that Italy would need to be kept out of the market for years, if Rome is to be saved it must happen in a far shorter time frame.

“There is plenty of money available from the IMF and EFSF for the next 3-4 months so, in a best case scenario Italy has about that long to sort itself out or it will have to leave the euro zone,” said Riccardo Barbieri of Mizuho International.

As Italy’s crisis prompted a sell-off in Wall Street, the U.S. Treasury’s top official for international affairs urged Rome to move forward on fiscal and structural reforms.

Lael Brainard also said the IMF had ample resources to help resolve the European crisis and could play an important role in verifying progress on Italy’s reforms.

BIG DEBT REDEMPTIONS

Italian funding needs are modest for the next two months but rise sharply going into the new year, with more that 150 billion euros of debt coming due between February and April.

Since Italian bond yields began rising in the summer the ECB and Italy’s partners have been frustrated by the government’s inability to adopt reforms to improve the growth potential of one of the world’s most chronically sluggish economies.

The credibility of scandal-ridden Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is so low that even his pledge Tuesday to stand down after approval of a budget bill this month came too late to give any relief to markets.

President Giorgio Napolitano issued a statement Wednesday guaranteeing that Berlusconi really would go soon and that the bill would be passed “within a few days.”

Berlusconi’s departure is necessary if Italy is to have any chance of survival, but the country’s complicated internal politics may now have become irrelevant to its fate. Napolitano’s words did nothing to bring down bond spreads.

“What matters most in the minds of investors is not who will replace Berlusconi and how committed the next government will be to structural reforms, but whether euro zone policymakers will finally put in place a credible and durable backstop for Italian debt,” said Spiro.

“In the short term, the only thing that can save Italy is a large scale commitment on the part of the ECB.”

(Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111110/wl_nm/us_italy_markets

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