FeedPosted Nov 6th 2009 5:00PM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: Management, Industry, Market matters, Money and Finance Today, Politics, Headline news, Federal Reserve, Financial Crisis
US Senator Bernie Sanders, independent from Vermont, is known for his straightforward and unbiased positions.
His new legislative proposal is to break up big banks that are deemed "too big to fail." To quote Mr. Sanders: "if an institution is too big to fail, it is too big to exist. We should break them up so they are no longer in a position to bring down our entire economy."
Continue reading Senator Sanders proposes legislation to break up large banks
Posted Nov 5th 2009 12:50PM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: International markets, Management, Industry, Competitive strategy, Economic data
American businesses are setting up shop in Mexico instead of China. China, which was the number one location for manufacture of goods bound for the U.S., has fallen into third place. Mexico is now number one, followed by India.
Several factors have converged to make Mexico an attractive place for manufacture. Daniel Silva of the Mission Economic Development Authority said: "Compared to China, Mexico offers better access to North American markets with a shorter, faster and cheaper transportation route to move products and supplies by truck, rather than over thousands of miles by ship, rail and truck combined."
Continue reading Mexico beats China in American assembly for export factories
Posted Nov 4th 2009 2:40PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Good news, Management, Rants and raves, Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A), Serious Money, Headline news, Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNI), Best Stocks for 2009

Yesterday it was announced very loudly that
"my pal Warren" was
going to acquire the 77.4% of the
Burlington Northern Santa Fe (NYSE:
BNI) railroad, that Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) does not already own, for $100 per share, offering about a $24 premium to Mondays closing price.
Talk about putting your money where your mouth is --
yikes! Buffett has gone all in, betting the economy is healing, and silencing anyone that questioned his integrity or motives for cautious optimism saying it was all talk!
Continue reading Serious Money: Questions as Buffett's money & mouth converge on BNI
Posted Nov 3rd 2009 1:00PM by Tom Taulli (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Management
While UBS (NYSE: UBS) remains the largest bank in Switzerland, this isn't helping much. In the company's latest quarterly results, there was a net loss of $552.9 million. Then again, UBS had to take some major charges, such as for the sale of its Brazilian investment bank and valuation changes on its large outstanding debts.
But there is more bad news: UBS continued to suffer from problems with its private banking division. Unfortunately, assets continue to flee (up to $25.8 billion in the prior quarter). The main reason is the U.S. crackdown on offshore tax havens, which has resulted in UBS handing over information on 4,450 accounts. Obviously, this is extremely chilling for client relationships.
Continue reading UBS posts Q3 loss as clients continue to flee
Posted Nov 2nd 2009 8:00AM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: Press releases, Management, Industry, Annual meetings, Live coverage, Market matters, Headline news, Recession, Financial Crisis
Century-old CIT Group Inc filed for bankruptcy in the Southern District Court of New York on Sunday.
According to the terms of the bankruptcy, bondholders will hold new CIT Group Inc. (NYSE: CIT) debt worth about 70% of the face value of the old debt. Preferred creditors, including the U.S. government, will get money only after other creditors are paid back. Common shareholders will receive nothing.
In December 2008, the U.S. government invested $2.33 billion dollars in CIT under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP).
Continue reading CIT files for prepackaged bankruptcy
Posted Nov 1st 2009 10:30AM by Ted Allrich (RSS feed)
Filed under: Management, Comfort Zone Investing, Financial Crisis
The federal pay czar is doing his job. He's cutting enormous paydays for executives of banks and other institutions that took TARP money. That's as it should be. Those banks performed terribly. Several would have simply vanished if the government hadn't bailed them out. Since capitalism is all about rewarding risk and merit, these executives don't deserve extraordinary payments.
But there is a concern that investors need to think about. It has to do with the human side of this equation. Consider this: if you're an executive who has a contract that states exactly how you get paid and you meet those standards, you would expect payment. That's why there are contracts. You and your department may have been one of the few groups that contributed to earnings, helping mitigate some of the losses other departments generated. While you may feel a twinge of "team" spirit and be glad that you've helped, you don't feel it deeply enough to believe your contract should be violated.
Continue reading Comfort Zone Investing: TARP banks' executive brain drain
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