McDuck's Account Talk

Status
Not open for further replies.
News article links from Peter Schiff's website:

5/19/2009
Brazil and China Eye Plan to Axe Dollar
- Financial Times

5/19/2009
Wary of U.S. Debt, China Shifts Gears on Investment
- Reuters

5/19/2009
Housing Cons. Plunges to Record Low in April
- Los Angeles Times

5/19/2009
Buyers, Sellers Differ on Right Price Level
- Baltimore Sun

5/19/2009
Fannie and Freddie in 'Critical' Condition
- CNN Money

5/19/2009
Memorial Day Weekend Travel Forecast to Fall
- Los Angeles Times

5/19/2009
As Car Brands Vanish, Shoppers Face Choices
- Hartford Courant

5/19/2009
Recession Forces Co's. to Consider Alternatives
- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

5/19/2009
Saks Swings to a Loss as Luxury Demand Falters
- MarketWatch

5/19/2009
American Express Will Slash 4,000 Jobs
- Bloomberg

5/19/2009
Donation of Organs Declines in U.S.
- Raleigh News & Observer
 
http://www.federalnewsradio.com/index.php?nid=35&sid=1679778
logo.gif


OPM issues RFI for Retirement System Modernization project

May 20, 2009

By Jason Miller
Executive Editor
FederalNewsRadio

The Office of Personnel Management wants to try again to upgrade its retirement system.

OPM May 14 issued a request for information for the Retirement Systems Modernization project asking industry for input in three general areas: data access and integration, business process and workforce support and legacy system modernization services.

The RFI comes seven months after OPM ended its $290 million contract with Hewitt Associates to upgrade the system. Hewitt failed to meet OPM's requirements with the benefits calculator.


OPM says it wants to upgrade its market research to see what new technologies and new approaches exist.

OPM director John Berry tells Federal News Radio's Mike Causey in a recent interview that he did a review of the last two failed attempts to upgrade the system.

"The most recent failure we were trying to do too much-our eyes were bigger than our stomachs," Berry says. "We are trying to dream big but focus on the things we have to fix and fix now. We have an old system that is gasping for air. It is working, but it could fail at any moment."

Berry says OPM wants a system that can accurately process retirees' information, and pay them on time. He says it would be nice to have it as a strategic planning tool as well, but his focus is on the system's core job.

The Government Accountability Office recently issued a recent report that says OPM has come up with neither an overall plan nor even a schedule for implementing the retirement systems modernization.

GAO found that OPM needs to set up specific benchmarks for progress.

"It's really (about) establishing in a quantifiable and measurable way what it is you want to achieve by a certain time frame, whether it's a specific capability by a certain date, whether it's to be able to process a certain number of the retirement applications in terms of percentages that you receive," says Valerie Melvin, GAO's director of Information Management and Human Capital Issues, recently on FederalNewsRadio's Daily Debrief.

In the RFI, OPM wants to be sure industry wants their requirements.

"The OPM Retirement Program interfaces with approximately five primary payroll offices and several hundred personnel offices, some of which do not currently support electronic data submissions," the document states. "Respondents to this RFI should note that there are many special provisions and/or special computations processed under the CSRS and FERS retirement programs."

Vendor responses are due by June 15. -----

(Copyright 2009 by FederalNewsRadio.com. All Rights Reserved.)
 
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-retirement24-2009may24,0,885521.story

lat_logo_inner.gif


Early retirement claims increase dramatically


By Mike Dorning

May 24, 2009

Reporting from Washington — Instead of seeing older workers staying on the job longer as the economy has worsened, the Social Security system is reporting a major surge in early retirement claims that could have implications for the financial security of millions of baby boomers.

Since the current federal fiscal year began Oct. 1, claims have been running 25% ahead of last year, compared with the 15% increase that had been projected as the post-World War II generation reaches eligibility for early retirement, according to Stephen C. Goss, chief actuary for the Social Security Administration.

Many of the additional retirements are probably laid-off workers who are claiming Social Security early, despite reduced benefits, because they are under immediate financial pressure, Goss and other analysts believe.

The numbers upend expectations that older Americans who sustained financial losses in the recession would work longer to rebuild their nest eggs. In a December poll sponsored by CareerBuilder, 60% of workers older than 60 said they planned to postpone retirement.

Goss said it remained unclear whether the uptick in retirements would accelerate or abate in the months ahead. But another wave of older workers may opt for early retirement when they exhaust unemployment benefits late this year or early in 2010, he noted.

The ramifications of the trend are profound for the new retirees, their families, the government and other social institutions that may be called upon to help support them.

On top of savings ravaged by the stock market decline and the loss of home equity, many retirees now must make do with Social Security benefits reduced by as much as 25% if they retire at age 62 instead of 66.

"When the recession ends and the economy bounces back, there may be a band of people for whom things will never be the same again. They'll still be paying the price for 10, 20, 30 years down the road," said Cristina Martin Firvida, director of economic security for AARP, the nation's largest membership organization for people 50 and older.

For Herman Hilton, 66, of Jacksonville, Fla., a lean 6-foot-2 electrician with a bushy gray beard, the decision to lay down his pliers and screwdriver was born of frustration.

For at least the last 10 years, as he wired new buildings, he was looking toward retiring as soon as he hit 66 and qualified for full benefits. And last fall, like millions of other older workers, Hilton put his "golden years" plan on hold when his 401(k) lost more than a third of its value.

Then last month, his life took another unwelcome turn: Hilton's foreman pulled him aside to tell him that he was being laid off. For several weeks, Hilton collected unemployment insurance. But he soon decided to call it quits and file for Social Security.

"I can live on what I have," Hilton said. "But it's not what I planned on. I won't have the comfort factor of as much of a safety cushion."

That cushion is important. As Americans live longer, the elderly are increasingly at risk of outlasting their financial assets. That's a serious problem for them and their families, who are often called upon to provide assistance.

Because benefits are reduced for people who retire early, the surge in retirements should not have any long-term effect on the solvency of the Social Security system, although it will probably add to the near-term budget deficits confronting the Obama administration, Social Security's Goss said.

The full consequences of retirement decisions made in hard times will become apparent when people who retired early begin to exhaust their savings.

"As they get into their 70s and 80s, it will be increasingly inadequate,"
said Alicia H. Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

The most severe effect will probably fall on the unemployed widows of workers who retire early, Munnell said. Survivors' benefits also take a deeper cut when people retire early -- reduced as much as 30% for retirement at 62. Because women tend to live longer than men, that leaves them more vulnerable to running out of money as expenses for assisted living and other costs rise in advanced old age.

Significant numbers of workers have long chosen to retire early. In 2007, the most recent year for which statistics are available, 42% of men and 48% of women began collecting Social Security retirement benefits at age 62, the first year of eligibility.

The current recession, the worst since the Depression, is striking when older workers are by historical standards unusually vulnerable. Though older workers in previous recessions were less likely than their younger counterparts to be laid off, that advantage has eroded in recent years, said Munnell, who analyzed more than two decades of Labor Department data on layoffs.

Fewer workers are now protected by union contracts that require newer employees to be laid off first. And older workers now typically have less of a seniority advantage in a workforce that more frequently switches jobs.

Once they lose their jobs, older workers have a harder time finding new ones. On average, it takes laid-off workers 55 and older nearly a month longer than their younger counterparts to find new employment, and the gulf has been growing recently, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Goss said it was theoretically possible that people who claimed retirement benefits during the recession would resume working once the economy improves.

Yet experience suggests that retired workers are unlikely to return to work in large numbers, particularly not to full-time jobs that would allow them to make up their earnings losses while they were out of the workforce, said Paul N. Van de Water, a former senior policy official at the Social Security Administration and now a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington think tank.

"It's partly a question of intent," Van de Water said. "It's partly a question of your skills not being kept up to date."

Copyright 2009 Los Angeles Times
 
All these people have to do is hold their 401Ks for the bull market rebound and they will all be fine. After all it's long term money and no one is going to spend it all at once. This is a great time to put excess money to work and I plan to do more of that in June. I think BAC will advance me $1.4M on margin and the best time to buy is during the early stages of a new bull market leg. This is also dangerous but propitious while interest rates are low and will most likely remain low for several years.
 
Market underperforming SPI Futures index
The West Australian - ‎12 minutes ago‎

The S&P 500 got pushed back into negative territory year-to-date. Treasury yields jump catalysing a broad sell-off in the equities markets. Concerns that higher interest rates will undercut a recovery in the economy. April’s existing home sales better-than-expected. US Financials down. Retailers down 2.2 per cent. BHP and RIO both down in ADR form overnight – 3.38 per cent and 3.61 per cent respectively. Metals down. Oil up. Gold unchanged.
 
Rising Profit Forecasts

Wall Street Journal - ‎1 hour ago‎

The Great Corporate Profit Rebound of 2009 is looking, well, not so great.

In November, analysts expected profits underlying the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index to finish the year 17% lower but jump 30% this year. In fact, 2008 profits fell 40%. That should have made a big percentage increase this year all the more attainable.

But calls for that 30% profit jump this year were soon tempered to 24%, then 20%. Now, after a mostly disappointing first quarter, the forecast stands at 9%.

Blame Wall Street's flubbed estimates on a pair of mental stumbling blocks that behavioral finance researchers call "recency bias" and "anchoring bias." People tend to view events that are recent as normal, even when historical data say otherwise. Thus, they often anchor their beliefs in arbitrary benchmarks, not realizing those benchmarks are skewed.

Late last year, analysts might have expected earnings to quickly bounce back to "normal." Their beliefs were still anchored in the "golden age of profitability," as one investment firm called 2006. That year, profits reached their highest share of the economy since the 1960s, as consumers shopped on borrowed funds made plentiful by bloated house prices. All the factors involved -- house prices, consumer spending, corporate profits as a percentage of gross domestic product -- have since reverted to, or at least moved toward, their long-term averages. Slowly, Wall Street seems to be getting used to the idea that today's lower level of profits represents a reset, not a temporary lull.

If profits are now normal, stock prices seem a touch high. S&P 500 shares are averaging 17 or 18 times earnings, depending on whether earnings grow 9% or not at all this year. Something closer to 15 or 16 times forward earnings would be more in keeping with history.

Just as analysts are slow to fully acknowledge bad news, they're slow to adjust for good news. At the moment, there's a shortage of upward earnings revisions, but there are some. Within the S&P 500, I recently counted 67 companies whose current year estimates were raised the week before, versus 95 whose estimates were lowered. I scanned the first lot for valuations that still look modest. The results were few, but worth a look. Below are five names.

PJ-AP924_STOCKS_NS_20090527213006.gif
 
Wall Street sinks on GM, debt jitters
The Standard - ‎1 hour ago‎

Wall Street sinks on GM, debt jitters

(2 hrs 1 min ago)


Wall Street shares tumbled overnight with investors turning cautious as auto giant General Motors moved towards bankruptcy and the market was gripped by fears about rising US debt.

The Dow fell 173.47 points, or 2.05 percent, to end at 8,300.02, giving back nearly all of Tuesday's gains.

The Nasdaq shed 19.35 points, or 1.11 percent, to 1,731.08 and the S&P 500 fell 17.27 points, or 1.9 percent, to 893.06.

Traders said investors entered the market cautious after GM reported it had failed to win sufficient support from bondholders for a deal to swap debt for equity, making a bankruptcy filing more likely.

GM was widely expected to file for bankruptcy protection ahead of a Monday deadline imposed by the administration of President Barack Obama.

The failure to strike a deal with bondholders suggests a likely bankruptcy filing that some analysts say could be messier and longer than that of Chrysler.

While most observers expect the US government to lift up GM from its quagmire, ''what's more likely is that GM will drag the US government down – into deeper deficits, and a far steeper decline in Treasury bond prices,'' said Martin Weiss, president of Weiss Research.

Fears also remerged about ballooning US government debt and its impact on borrowing costs amid a prolonged recession
, pushing yields for US Treasury bonds higher.

''Concerns that higher Treasury yields could complicate an economic recovery effort drove a flurry of selling pressure,'' analysts at Briefing.com wrote.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
 
Who made money during the 1929 stock market crash?
http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2873/who-made-money-during-the-1929-stock-market-crash

dope_090612_crash.gif


Some people made money the old-fashioned way during the crash — i.e., by stealing it. After the initial crisis on Black Thursday, a group of high-powered bankers tried to stabilize the market by using a $130 million pool of funds to buy stocks, sometimes at prices above market value. A member of the group, Albert H. Wiggin, head of Chase National Bank, began short selling his own portfolio at the same time he was committing his bank's money to buying. He shorted more than 42,000 shares, making more than $4 million. Because he used a Canadian shell company to buy the stocks, he didn't even pay taxes on his gains. Though forced to resign in disgrace, Wiggin otherwise went unpunished and got to keep the money, the jerk.
 
Last edited:
18 JUN 09

  • US market has retraced ground so far this week.
  • S&P500 closed at 918, down 27.8 so far this week
  • Oil at $71
  • Treasury has announced the sale of $104bn worth of bonds at auction next week.
 
News articles highlighted on Peter Schiff's website:

6/23/2009
U.S. Wealth May Take 15 Years to Rebound
- Bloomberg

6/23/2009
What Exit Strategy? The Drama Isn't Over
- MarketWatch

6/23/2009
Mortgage Bankers Cut U.S. Loan Org. forecast
- Los Angeles Times

6/23/2009
Tightening Credit Puts a Squeeze on Businesses
- Los Angeles Times

6/23/2009
Million-Dollar Homes Hard to Move in Down Economy
- St. Petersburg Times

6/23/2009
Lost Jobs Forcing More Out of Homes
- USA Today

6/23/2009
Unlikely Roommates Come Together in Tough Economy
- Miami Herald

6/23/2009
As Theft Rises, Stores Step Up Anti-Crime Efforts
- Chicago Tribune

6/23/2009
Trucking Firms Edgy Over Rising Diesel Prices
- San Francisco Chronicle

6/23/2009
Farmer's Markets Are Sprouting Up All Over
- Denver Post

6/23/2009
Trash: It's What's for Dinner
- Orange County Register

6/23/2009
Survivalism Grows Popular in Valley
- Arizona Republic
 
http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/artic.../SPORTS04?Title=Is-Social-Security-in-Danger-

Is Social Security in Danger?
June 23, 2009

David Bronner of the Retirement System of Alabama brought out quite a crowd to Indian Hills Country Club Tuesday afternoon.

....

he still concerned that international problems could negatively influence that progress. For that reason, he says there is no real way to predict the future, nor are there any safe bets. Bronner says he imagines that things will become more clear in the next two years.

In the mean time, he advises staying as liquid as possible and paying all of your bills.
 
DB is a financial genius! Has kept the Retirement System of Alabama in strong financial health is spite of current economic times. Has been creative with RSA investments including airlines, golf courses, etc. not just stocks, bonds, etc. Interesting comments but no one really knows for sure where things are going. We just study all we can, learn all we can, and make our best guesses! And hope we are in the ballpark. :D
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top