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US urges food output boost to avert unrest By Javier Blas in Cison di Valmarino, Italy Published: FT April 20 2009
OECD warns on pensions crisis By Chris Giles, Economics Editor
Published: FT June 23 2009
Strains in pensions systems, in both private and public provision, threaten to turn the financial crisis over the past two years into a social crisis lasting decades, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development warned on Tuesday.
In its annual analysis of the health of the pensions systems around the world, the Paris-based international organisation, found that private pensions plans lost 23 per cent of their value last year while higher unemployment "leaves little room for more generous public pensions". http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/4301d326-5feb-11de-a09b-00144feabdc0.html
Global property lending landscape altered forever Reuters, Thu Jun 25, 2009
LONDON (Reuters) - The days of easy borrowing and cheap real estate debt are gone for good, some of the world's top commercial property executives conceded this week. Speakers at the Reuters Global Real Estate Summit in London said they had abandoned hopes of ever seeing a return to the halcyon days of credit that fueled an unprecedented bull run in property prices following the turn of the millennium. With the world's economy in shreds after the near collapse of the banking sector, the global property market is facing a watershed period with grim growth prospects.
Executives are now bracing for permanent changes in the way they fund deals and lukewarm future relations with nervous lenders and investors, who either want to minimize escalating property losses or protect huge fortunes reaped during the boom. "The lending market is basically dead," Ed LaPuma, president of U.S. real estate financing company W.P Carey said. "There needs to be a very compelling reason for a lender to lend or else they look at every loan they have made in the last four years, shake their head and they say they have lost too much to go in for more," LaPuma said.
Once the darling of investors from Joe Public to national wealth funds and governments, real estate has suffered a massive fall from grace since hitting its zenith in 2007. The asset class was pitched as a near-perfect hybrid between unexciting bonds and volatile equities, but is now broadly seen as the ultimate investment pariah -- trumping risky hedge funds, default-prone high-yield bonds and bombed-out stock markets. This new-found infamy could restrict the volume of so-called big-ticket property deals that rely on high leverage.
"There was probably 70-80 billion pounds of new debt arranged in the years 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007 but I can't see more than 25-20 billion pounds this year and next year," said Max Sinclair, head of UK lending at property lender Eurohypo. (...) "Underlying the whole problem is $2 trillion dollars of loss in the financial sector around the whole world," Roger Orf, president of Citigroup Property Investors said. "In terms of commercial mortgage losses, it's about $300 billion more, another incredible number. To cure this is a matter of years, not a matter of months," Orf said.
Some fear the slow rehabilitation of the credit market could curb growth of emerging property markets in Asia, Africa and Latin America, which rely on pioneering, debt-driven buyers. "If you look at the banking sector response to this crisis, it appears that the further east you go, the more demanding your typical lender becomes," said Mike Sales, the London-based head of property at Henderson Global Investors. (...) Many investors believe they will only be able to borrow up to 60 percent of a building purchase price at best, with triple-digit margins on loans, longer lease demands and higher income to interest cover ratios.
"Banks have realized this is too risky, and that part of the problem they are having right now is they have been too accepting of high loan to value ratios," said Reinhard Kutscher, who chairs the board at Germany's Union Investment Real Estate. (...) "I had a meeting with someone yesterday who said that if all banks marked their real estate loans to market, they would basically be insolvent," LaPuma said. "I don't know whether he's is right or wrong but I do know that real estate to most of them is a four-letter word."
(Additional reporting by Daryl Loo; Editing by Andy Macdonald) http://www.reuters.com/article/GlobalRealEstate09/idUSTRE55O3DI20090625?pageNumber=2
DETROIT (Reuters) - General Electric Co Chief Executive Jeff Immelt said on Friday the United States (...) should work to have manufacturing represent about 20 percent of employment, more than double its current level, he said. (...)
The United States need to reduce its reliance on financial services to drive economic growth, Immelt warned. "While some of America's competitors were throttling up on manufacturing and R&D, we de-emphasized technology," he said. "Our economy tilted instead toward the quicker profits of financial services." That is a lesson GE has learned -- its shares have lost some 58 percent of their value over the past year, largely the result of falling profit at its GE Capital finance unit. Immelt is restructuring GE so it will count on finance for just 30 percent of its profit, down from half before the downturn. "While our financial services business has performed well, I can't tell you that we were entirely free of these errors," Immelt said. "We weren't." http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSTRE55P4ZT20090626
The lengthy recession has proved discouraging for the swelling ranks of unemployed Americans, and forced U.S. states obligated to pay them jobless benefits to pile debt on their already strained budgets. Fifteen states have depleted their unemployment insurance funds so far, forcing them to borrow from the U.S. Treasury. A record 30 of the country's 50 states are expected to have to borrow up to $17 billion by next year, said Rick McHugh of the National Employment Law Project, a nonpartisan advocacy group http://www.nelp.org/. "We are setting the stage for big pressures for states to restrict eligibility and benefit levels," McHugh said. "Those type of restrictive actions undercut the (Depression-era program's) economic and social stability purposes." The state-run unemployment insurance programs are normally financed with payroll taxes paid by employers on each worker. But the funds' tax revenues are falling at the same time as benefit demands are rising. Nine million Americans are receiving jobless benefits, triple the number who got checks at the beginning of the year. Experts predict the number of recipients will peak sometime this summer as long-term unemployed run out of benefits, which were recently extended and last for 59 weeks in most cases. http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN2632992220090626
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- Re: [OPE] Who wrote the note 50 of chap.3 of Capital vol.1, Engels or Marx, (continued)
- Re: [OPE] Who wrote the note 50 of chap.3 of Capital vol.1, Engels or Marx, cmgermer Sun 28 Jun 2009, 15:30 GMT
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- Re: [OPE] Who wrote the note 50 of chap.3 of Capital vol.1, Engels or Marx, Michael Heinrich Mon 29 Jun 2009, 09:08 GMT
- Re: Re: [OPE] Who wrote the note 50 of chap.3 of Capital vol.1, Engels or Marx, mktitoh@xxxxxxxxx Mon 29 Jun 2009, 15:09 GMT
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