Month: April 2008

More Taser Abuse

Some guy falls down the stairs, gets a head injury, tries to drive home, zones out in the parking lot in his car, and when a disoriented man does not respond to police orders, he is tased repeatedly, then wrestled to the ground, handcuffed, and dies (see here and here).

It’s clear that Tasers should be legally as a lethal weapon, because the police use them irresponsibly and with impunity because, unlike other potentially lethal force, there is no review board following the use, unless there is a death.

Randi Rhodes Suspended For Calling Hillary Clinton a “Whore”

More specifically, she called Clinton a, “Big F*cking Whore, and applied similar language to Ferraro.

Air America’s official statement is here.

She was doing a stand up gig at the SF Air America affiliate at the club, and yes, this is over the top, and not the F-bomb.

Also, I don’t get Air America, no station that I know of carries it in the Ballmur area, so I haven’t heard her before….Does she always sound this….drunk?

Economics Update

First, we have a new peak in Jobless claims, 407,000, the highest level since Katrina hit New Orleans (here and here). Note, as always, that weekly jobless numbers are just a snap shot of a single week, and as such, there is a lot of noise, but this did not stop the dollar from retreating in response.

That being said, the fact that the IMF is predicting a global slowdown ain’t a good sign either.

Given that we have a consumer driven economy, the fact that people are falling behind on their debts at the highest rate in 15 years is a good indicator that we are already in a recession.

In energy, was down a buck, and gasoline hit a new record. Assuming that we are not at peak oil, there might be some moderation as the economy cools.

The markets are seeing a cooling economy too, driving Treasuries higher, because investors are looking for safe havens.

In real estate house prices fell in 21 metro areas, and foreclosures rose to record levels. Same old same old.

Finally, I’m beginning to feel like Keith Olbermann and Bill O’Reilly. I can’t make through a week without some insurer disaster intruding. In this case, it’s Triad Guaranty Inc., which is considering, “a plan to stop writing new business”, called a “run-off” in the insurance. Note that it’s business is mortgage insurance, as opposed to monoliner bond insurance.

Too many people defaulting on mortgages.

Bush Gets Missiles at NATO Conference

Well, it appears that Bush has managed to browbeat the Europeans into accepting an ABM installation spread across Poland and the Czech Republic, despite the fact that he pissed them off of by publicly lobbying for the admission of Georgia and the Ukraine to NATO, despite the fact that there had been a previous agreement not to do so.

The marvelously named Duck of Minerva makes the point that Bush was talking out of both sides of his mouth, on the one hand claiming that the missile shield is not intended to be used against Russia, and on the other claiming that the membership of Georgia and the Ukraine, “would send a signal throughout the region that these two nations are, and will remain, sovereign and independent states.”

If they need membership to be protected against Russia, then who do they need protection against?

The answer is that this is a deliberate attempt to antagonize Russia, because it is believed to play well for Republicans. Lynne Cheney has been lobbying for recreating what was the Soviet threat for political advantage since the early 1990s.

It’s all the fault of those damn Eskimos!!!

   



Of course, once again, the Greeks appear to be compensating for what must be the smallest penises in Europe, vetoing Macedonia’s entry into NATO.

Let’s get this clear:

  • Macedonia was never a part of Greece.
  • Alexander the Great was not a Greek.
  • The people of what was then Macedonia did not speak Greek, except for the aristocracy, who were educated in Greek, and might have spoken Greek with more facility than Macedonian.
  • Greece was conquered by Macedonia, by Phillip of Macedon, and then Alexander took over the known world.

Any questions?

Did Greenspan Get a Fake PhD?

I came across a review of Robert Auerbach’s book, Deception and Abuse at the Fed: Henry B. Gonzalez Battles Alan Greenspan’s Bank.

It goes into my must read pile.

Auerbach is an outspoken critic of both the Fed and of Greenspan, and was an aide to one of Greenspan’s fiercest critics, Henry Gonzalez, former head of the House Banking Committee.

Basically, it appears that Greenspan got his PhD after stepping down from the Council of Economic Advisers. It happened in a very few months, and it was never published:

Exactly how Greenspan wrapped up his NYU studies in such a short period is unclear, but it appears that his thesis wasn’t especially time-consuming. Auerbach cites an earlier biography that says that Greenspan submitted — instead of a normal Ph.D. dissertation — some papers totaling 176 pages that he entitled Papers on Economic Theory and Policy. Among them was at least one he’d written earlier.

To say that this is irregular is an understatement. Dissertations are supposed to be public and available to people in the field, on the theory that it advances the area of study, even if that study is the “dismal science”.

The implication is not that he has lied on his resume, but rather that because of his connections, he was able to repackage a bunch of slop, and get his PhD anyway.

Sounds like Greenspan’s whole career.

Zimbabwe, Updates and a Correction

First, the opposition won an absolute majority, as I said yesterday. It appears that the MDC Tsvangirai has 99 seats, MDC Mutambara (a sort of a splinter faction, but not fully a separate party) has 10, and Zanu-PF has 97, with one independent, out of 210 seats (3 seats had the winners die before the election and are empty).

The entire MDC Tsvangirai/MDC Mutambara has me confuse, but it appears that they are the same party, they just don’t get along, so they have an outright majority.

There is also an upper house, and results have been delayed, but this is rather a more complex system than the Parliament.

Still no results in the presidential election, a runnoff is expected, along with a lot of unrest.

The original calculation of 50.3% for Tsvangirai appears to have been a miscalculation.

Judge Restricts RIAA’s Right to Sue

But only a little bit.

Basically, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Karas said that placing copyrighted material in a shared drive does not constitute publication. They would have to show that illegal copying took place.

This is a good thing, as Declan McCulagh demonstates:

As I wrote last fall, there are some dangers if the RIAA’s “making available” theory is widely adopted by courts. If my mother accidentally shares her computer’s entire hard drive with the world by clicking the wrong button in an OS X setup menu, is that “making available?” Should she be held liable for $222,000 in damages, and lose her house, for accidentally making two CDs of music available to the world?

If I don’t upgrade to a newer version of my operating system even though I know there’s a security glitch that opens my hard drive to the Internet, does that mean I’m “making available” my music collection? Do Internet service providers “make available” access to Kazaa? Do search engines “make available” links to infringing files?

That being said, the Judge gave an alternate route to the RIAA, specifically that they could refile charging an “offer to distribute”.

This means that people with files being shared on Bit Torrent could be liable under this, but search engines, and the examples above would not be.

Breaking: Abstinence Only Education Makes You Really Stupid

Another bit of news from the department of the blatantly obvious.

It appears that in their zeal to keep teens from having sex, abstinence education may be contributing to STD and pregnancies.

In the hit parade of abstinence only stupidity reinforced myths believed by teens:

  • Fla. Teens Believe Drinking Bleach Will Prevent HIV
  • Drinking Mountain Dew Will Stop Pregnancy
  • smoking marijuana will prevent a person from getting pregnant.

Is it any wonder that Florida has the sixth-highest teen pregnancy rate nationally?

The War on Privacy

The folks at TPM have found another Yoo memo, this one only 37 pages long, and discovered that one of the conclusions there was that the 4th amendment, which protects against “unreasonable search and seizure” did not apply in anti-terror investigations.

Seriously, these guys had no concept as to the rule of law. They really hate everything that out founding fathers worked for.

The memo is no longer in effect, but little known state agencies known as “fusion centers” have been sucking up every bit of personal data they can find:

  • New York and other states also tap into a Federal Trade Commission database with information about hundreds of thousands of identity-theft reports.
  • Pennsylvania buys credit reports and uses face-recognition software to examine driver’s license photos.
  • Rhode Island has access to car-rental databases
  • Maryland, authorities rely on a little-known data broker called Entersect, which claims it maintains 12 billion records about 98 percent of Americans, including cell phone records.

See the ACLU report here.

Debbie Stabenow’s Husband in Prostitution Sting

She’s the Governor of Michigan, and the details are here.

Obviously there are political ramifications, but I want to talk about what I see as the real issue:

Troy police Lt. Gerard Scherlinck said Troy’s undercover officers focus their efforts on breaking up prostitution rings about four times a year, depending upon manpower. During the stings they arrest only the prostitutes.

“(Detectives) stop people coming and going and interview them. If they have a cooperative witness, they will use that person to testify against the ring rather than arrest them. That’s what happened in this case,” Scherlinck said.

If the case goes to trial, Athans would be called as a witness to testify and positively identify the woman, he said.

Let me get this, the rich pig who who makes the illegal buy gets off scott free, but the woman, generally poor, possibly with a substance abuse problem, sometimes a single parent, gets prosecuted?

I believe that prostitution should be legal and tightly regulated. But, if it is illegal, going after the people at the bottom of the pyramid, frequently people who are doing this because they lack other alternatives, is evil.

Fannie Mae Tightens Guidelines Again

Fannie Mae is tightening lending standards (here and here).

This follows regulators allowing the borrow and lend more extensively, in an attempt to bolster the housing market.

Upper management at FNM gets it. That the market is completely fscked, and if they don’t tighten up, they will get swamped.

Changes to their standards for buying loans:

  • Minimum credit score of 580.
  • It won’t buy, “Delinquent loans that have fallen 60 or more days past due in the last year”.
  • It won’t buy loans to borrowers who have been foreclosed on in the past 5 years (used to be 4 years).

Calculated risk has some more details, and there are some additional standards which appear directed towards dissuading people from walking away from properties where they are under water (aka jingle mail).

Telco Immunity Deal

It appears now that name calling, invocations of 911, and threats of dire political consequences to Democratic members of Congress, it appears that Bush and His Evil Minions are willing to negociate in food faith.

Honestly, I don’t trust them, but it’s clear that something has changed:

The White House’s more conciliatory posture reflects a recognition that the Bush administration’s leverage on national-security matters has slipped since this past summer, a top Republican congressional aide said. “There’s a recognition that if they’re actually going to get a product they can support, there’s going to have to be some new level of engagement,” the aide said.

Pa4rt of this, IMSNHO, was that Representatives got many enthusiastic high fives from constituents when they left for the recess, and part of it is because it is increasingly clear that DNI Mike McConnell is a lying sack of sh*% (like his lying about telcos refusing to wiretap) who does nothing but carry water for Bush.

There is talk of a compromise along the lines of something like limits on liability, or some sort of government indemnification (which was probably already part of the deal).

I don’t object to indemnification or damage limits, there are precedents for this, and it would not have the effect of covering up Bush’s law breaking.

What worries me is that Steny Hoyer is point man on this, and when the going gets tough, he folds like overcooked broccoli.

OK, You Are Not Getting Any Sleep Tonight….

Yesterday, Marketplace had a store about a complex financial instrument called a “default credit swap“.

They try to explain what it is, and the best they can do is say is that it is some sort of complex financial transaction that serves as a sort of insurance against companies defaulting on their loans.

But that’s not what they are, that is their intended purpose.

This excerpt of the exchange may clarify a bit:

MOON: Well, this is where it gets tough, Kai, because a lot of people on Wall Street, even some of the leading economists in the academic world, don’t really understand exactly how these things work. A lot of them are whipped up with some computer wizardry, some advanced math — think of those fancy Greek letters turned on their sides. And there’s a lot of guesswork to this, too, about how much they’re really worth.

Boy…That makes it a lot clearer, doesn’t it?

So we have another derivative like instrument where there is no value that can be understood. In fact, most of the people who trade this stuff not only don’t know the value, they don’t know what it is.

It could be bellybutton lint futures for all we know, and for all Wall Street knows.

RYSSDAL: All right, so what’s the problem, though, if everybody agrees that they don’t know what they’re worth?

MOON: Well, the critics I’ve spoken to complain that they’re really nothing more than gaming instruments — gambling. Turns out that the big hedge funds that attract so much money from rich investors and big institutions, well, they’re playing the market on their own, and they don’t even need to have a stake in a particular company to do that.

RYSSDAL: I’m going to make the analogy here to a March Madness office pool, right? I go in, I pick a basketball team, and if they do great, that’s great, but I’m not vested.

It is. Except instead of wagering on UCLA and Auburn, these big bankers and brokers and hedge fund managers pick up the phone and they negotiate these wagers privately. Nobody really regulates this. They’ve created this incredibly enormous shadow financial system, if you will, that’s virtually hidden from investors and analysts and regulators.

You know when those high energy physicists do that complex stuff that explains how to smash two pieces of metal together to wipe out Hiroshima, I feel a bit more secure about this.

RYSSDAL: How big would “incredibly enormous” be?

Good question. I’d like to know how many billions of dollars are nothing more than fairy dust.

MOON: OK, I’m about to unload some numbers on you here, so I’ll speak slowly so you can follow this.

The value of the entire U.S. Treasuries market: $4.5 trillion.

The value of the entire mortgage market: $7 trillion.

The size of the U.S. stock market: $22 trillion.

OK, you ready?

The size of the credit default swap market last year: $45 trillion.

RYSSDAL: That’s a lot of money, Bob.

Ummm…why yes, it is. Doing math in my head 4.5×1013/3×108=1.5×105, or in normal notation, about $150,000.00 for every man, woman, and child in the United States of America.

MOON: It is, and the great unknown here is that these things get traded, or swapped, between the banks and hedge funds and other investors, and there’s really no one who oversees or regulates these trades to guarantee that the buyer actually is going to be able to make good on these if they have to. And these things end up being so interconnected that it’s not just like single line of dominoes falling, if one fails. Imagine one falling domino taking down two more, and those taking down four more, and eight, and so on.

I don’t know about you, but I’m spending this evening gibbering inconsolably.

Here is the full audio, including some comments from an expert on this that is even less reassuring, and the tid-bit that Alan “Bubbles” Greenspan loved these.

Full Metal Pander

Obama is now saying that he wants to put Al Gore in his cabinet.

Sorry, gotta call serious Chapstik® moment. I know that candidates have to kiss the electorate’s butt, that is, after all a core value of democracy, but this one is kind of blatant.

Not a good move, particularly when it’s clear for the people who really care about such things, Albert Gore will not take the job.

If you offered him the presidency though…………

Trajectory of the Credit Crunch

Care of Calculated Risk, I really can’t add much to this:

From Bloomberg: Subprime Losses Reach $232 Billion With UBS, Deutsche: Table (hat tip Brian)

The following table shows the $232 billion in asset writedowns and credit losses since the beginning of 2007, including reserves set aside for bad loans, at more than 45 of the world’s biggest banks and securities firms.

See article for table.

Since Chairman Bernanke is testifying before the Senate Banking Committee tomorrow, here is a quote from last year:

“Some estimates are in the order of between $50 billion and $100 billion of losses associated with subprime credit problems.”
Chairman Bernanke, July 19, 2007

OK, maybe I can add a bit.

In less than 9 months, a 3-5 fold increase.

When I have the chance, I’ll post a quote from the Marketplace radio show that will curl your hair.

Economics Update

Let’s see, we have Bernanke, testifying before the Congress’s Joint Economic Committee, saying that there is just the slightest possibility that the US Economy might possibly be slipping into a recession, which is Fed speak for, we are totally boned.

Not surprisingly, the US dollar tumbles, because recession=further rate cuts.

Truth be told, given the current nature of the credit markets, the Fed could lower interest rates to zero and it wouldn’t lower short term rates. They are pushing on a string, and people are unsure about the amount of risk, so rates won’t go down.

On quick numbers, we have new mortgage applications falling 29% (refi is way down too), oil prices rising, up to about $101.20/bbl, and gas prices at a record high, $3.287/gal.

On the good news side, ADP’s private report is showing an increase in private sector payrolls, though I would rever the reader to this article on underemployment, which points to growing numbers of people working part time jobs, a sign of employment weakness, for some context:

Keith Hall, the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which prepares the monthly jobs reports, said in Congressional testimony last month that this broader measure [underemployment report] stood at 8.9% in February, up from 8.1% a year ago.

“We’ve clearly had a broad weakening in the labor market,” Hall said.

My perspective, and I am an mechanical engineer, which means that I value tangible goods in my world view, is that the fact that factory orders are still declining, -2.5% in January, and -1.3% in February, is a better indicator, though I also consider the fact that car sales tanked last month, including Toyota, significant too.

Of course, economists, and other such folks, tend to look at consumer spending, so the fact that Discover Financial Services reported that its consumer spending confidence index is down might be a bigger deal for them.

In real estate, we have Manhattan condo and Co-op sales collapsing. It appears that the market is now crushing, “location, location, location”.

And on the more surreal side of real estate, we are finding an epidemic of copper pipe theft from abandoned homes. The hed is a real eye catcher, “ Some homes worth less than their copper pipes“.

This makes the USA sound like it’s suffering from Baghdad level looting.

Senate Dems Cave on Bankruptcy Reforms on Mortgages

It’s being sold as an agreement on a relief plan, but the Republicans killed bankruptcy changes. You know the ones that would allow a primary home to be treated the same way as commercial property or vacation homes.

This is the single best part of any potential reform, for the following reasons:

  • It makes the holder of the loan willing to negotiate in good faith about restructuring.
  • It penalizes the bad actors more than others.
  • It would help more people keep their homes than any other step.
  • It does not involve taxpayers bailing the mortgage companies out.

Of course, it means that the fat cats experience some of the pain that they created, so it’s not acceptable to the Republicans.