Posts Tagged Economy news
When Life Insurance Becomes a Liability
Posted by David in Business news, Economy news on May 22nd, 2009
OWNING life insurance is supposed to make you feel more secure. These days, it’s often a source of anxiety instead.
People who are less wealthy suddenly need a bigger policy to protect their families. People whose policy investments have been battered face unexpected premium increases. And even those who feel adequately insured at affordable prices are worried about their insurers’ ability to meet financial commitments.
In addition to investment losses, premium increases have shocked many people. “This is a real issue for clients who own variable policies,” said Loretta Nolan, president of Loretta Nolan Associates, a certified financial planner in Old Greenwich, Conn.
These policies combine insurance protection with a tax-deferred investment account that helps to pay the premiums. During the bull market, they promised investment returns high enough to limit the size and duration of premium payments. But the marketers didn’t stress the downside: if investment performance falls short, policyholders must spend more on premiums.
And that’s what has happened. Now, policyholders must pay higher premiums, for more years, to maintain their current level of insurance. The alternative is to reduce the coverage, which sometimes leads to a surrender charge.
If you’re in this situation, do a policy stress test, advised Ms. Nolan: ask the insurer to project your future premiums, assuming the policy investments earn a modest 4 percent return. If that shows you can’t afford the premiums, you need to consider alternatives.
If your priority is keeping your insurance, Ms. Nolan suggested replacing some of your variable coverage with a less-expensive term policy. For example, if you have a $500,000 variable policy, you might buy $300,000 of term insurance and trim your variable policy to $200,000, keeping your total premiums affordable. But if you see the variable policy chiefly as an investment loss — and don’t need the insurance — you might want to exchange it for an annuity, said Glenn Daily, a fee-only insurance consultant in Manhattan. The exchange is a tax-free transaction (called a 1035 exchange) that lets you use your loss to offset taxes on future gains. If you lost $30,000 in the variable policy, for example, your first $30,000 of gain in the annuity would be tax-free.
If your net worth has taken a 30 percent hit, advisers say you probably need more insurance to protect your family, at least until your stock portfolio and your home regain value.
Determining how much you need is more an art than a science, said Richard B. Freeman of Round Table Services, a Westport, Conn., wealth management firm. Instead of relying on a software program that would probably recommend more than you would ever buy, he suggested that you think in terms of two lump sums — one to pay off your mortgage and cover your children’s college education and the other to create income for your survivors.
A nonworking spouse needs insurance, too, added Mr. Freeman: “If Mom’s home with the kids, her policy has to do more than hire a nanny and a housekeeper. It should be big enough to let Dad take a job with shorter hours closer to home, so he can have more time with the kids if he’s the surviving parent.”
The cheapest way to increase your coverage is with term insurance, often available in a group plan through your employer. But that is not necessarily the cheapest way to buy it. If you’re healthy, you might get a better deal by shopping for an individual term policy, said Mark Cortazzo, senior partner at Macro Consulting Group, a Parsippany, N.J., financial adviser, especially if you’re a woman in a state with unisex rating for group insurance.
If you’re in poor health, you might want to buy as much group insurance as possible at work. You can usually convert it to an individual policy without evidence of insurability, albeit at a price, when you leave the job, Mr. Cortazzo said.
If you have serious health problems, you should avoid the standard application process for individual coverage because your application will probably be rejected after the medical exam. With each rejection it is harder to find coverage.
Instead, you should enlist a broker who specializes in the high-risk market to present your case informally to insurers. He can make sure you formally apply only to those companies that will accept you. You may soon have more options if insurers with highly publicized financial difficulties relax their underwriting standards to maintain their sales volume, said Wil Heupel, managing principal of Accredited Investors, a Minneapolis financial planning firm.
So how do you avoid buying insurance from a company whose health is worse than your own? Advisers say that if you’re buying more than $3 million in coverage it’s prudent to diversify among several highly rated companies.
“Work with a broker who sells the policies of many carriers,” Mr. Freeman said. An agent represents only one, whose problems he may minimize.
( Source NYT)
More Investors, Chastened by Stock Losses, Settle for Municipal Bonds
Posted by David in Banking news, Finance news on May 22nd, 2009
THE historic lure of most municipal bonds has been their tax-free returns. But the recession and the rash of corporate troubles have widened their appeal to investors wary of the stock market who want to settle for a steady if unspectacular return.
Municipal bonds are still the terrain of high earners, who like their safety and higher tax-adjusted return than Treasury bonds. But increasingly average retail investors have been buying them to fill out their bond allocations. “Our average account has increased their asset allocation in fixed income to 52 percent and most of that is in munis,” said Robert Everett, director of fixed income at the Boston Private Bank and Trust Company. He said that was an increase of 15 percentage points from last year.
Even though the major stock markets have risen in the last month, uncertainty about the rally abounds. Suddenly, the return on a municipal bond of 6 to 7 percent, including the tax exemption, seems great.
The other draw has been safety. Historically, the default rate on investment-grade munis is less than a quarter of a percent, compared with almost 2 percent for corporate bonds. And the difference in yield between United States Treasuries and munis has recently been as much as 2.5 percent.
Given the pressure on city and state coffers, the default rate is likely to rise closer to 1 percent. But that is far lower than the yields on munis suggests, said George Strickland, a managing director at Thornburg Investment Management of Santa Fe, N.M. “The market thinks 20 percent of investment grade issuers will default in the next 10 years,” he said. “The major muni issuers are doing well.”
Being selective with munis is key. The first risk investors need to understand is the difference between general obligation and revenue bonds. General obligation bonds are sold to finance the daily operations of a municipality. Legally, that entity is obligated to do whatever it needs — from cutting services to raising taxes — to make its bond payments.
A revenue bond is sold to finance particular projects like hospitals, utilities and stadiums. The receipts from such projects are used to make the bond payments, and many investors have started to wonder how these will hold up.
“Stay away from revenue bonds, backed by projects like a parking lot at a university,” warned Gregg S. Fisher, chief investment officer of Gerstein Fisher, an investment advisory firm in New York. “If cars stop showing up, then you could have trouble getting your money.”
Hospital bonds also need to be evaluated carefully. “Community hospitals with A and BBB ratings are feeling the pinch because people without insurance go to them and can’t pay,” said Ronald J. Sanchez, director of fixed income strategies at Fiduciary Trust, a unit of Franklin Templeton Investments. “You need to avoid certain segments with greater risk.”
This points to another issue: liquidity. Roughly $360 billion of new bonds are sold annually. New York and California are the benchmark issuers and their bonds are traded often. But there are scores of municipalities that sell bonds that buyers may have to hold for their duration because of illiquid markets.
Munis are traded in an over-the-counter fashion, which means finding a price quote, let alone a buyer, can be difficult at times.
For those aware of the risk, there are investing opportunities. During the first quarter, few municipalities sold bonds because they were waiting to see what the stimulus plan would bring them. Now, cities and states are making up for lost time.
Several portfolio managers advise that shorter-dated munis are safer. “The longer the duration the more volatility,” said Mr. Strickland, who likes the two- to three-year range.
Diversification is also being pushed for munis. Historically investors have concentrated on bonds from their state to get the full tax deduction. But owning bonds from other states could give them a greater return, as in the case of California, where a fiscal crisis has pushed up yields.
The recession has brought about new securities, known as Build America Bonds, to help ailing municipalities raise money. They allow municipalities to sell taxable bonds for capital projects while receiving a rebate from the federal government for a portion of their borrowing costs. The program is meant to attract institutional investors who typically do not buy munis. But they could also suit a retail investor who wants to put them in a taxable retirement account.
Source NYT
Mexico: The damage of H1N1 flu is about 2.2 billions USD
Posted by David in Finance news on May 15th, 2009
To cope with the pandemic, the Government will implement Mexico stimulation package worth 1.3 billion USD, mainly to support small business and tourism. This is the object most damage from the spread the H1N1 flu to top this month. According to Finance Minister Agustin Carstens, pandemic has cost targets of Mexico at least 2.2 billion USD.
Tourism is the third largest source of income from abroad in Mexico. But this sector is the loss of the capacity of hotel rooms at a reduced half compared with normal. Many airlines also canceled flights because of disease Bùng.
Temporarily, the government will free account health insurance that small businesses must be closed to workers, reduce taxes for airline and train travel.
Wal-Mart spends 2 milion USD to overcome scandal
Posted by David in Economy news, News on May 15th, 2009
Retailers leading the world for 2 million USD to the factories to remove a person died due to reduction in the gym on Friday evening last black last year. However, victim family hue and cry. Holidays in the U.S. is usually the opportunity to hand a strong retail promotion to stimulate shopping. Friday after Thanksgiving in the U.S. is called Black Friday - Black Friday evening and is having a sale the largest in years. Most items are discounted all sizes, has also suspended the sale sea off up to 90% during this period.
In black on Friday at the end of the year 2008, thousands of people know about the retailer’s Wal-Mart supermarket chain when applying this policy more attractive price. Jdimytai Damour, workers position just for a job, being stuck in crowds 2000 and last deaths breathing break. Besides Damour underprivileged have 11 other people injured, including a pregnant woman.
After several months of investigation, both the Wednesday and then, the retail world’s largest Wal-Mart entente by agreeing to spend 2 million USD to overcome consequences. The only U.S. $ 400,000 be used to indemnify the victims and 1.5 million for the advanced security in 92 retail stores of Wal-Mart in New York. Agreements not mentioned errors by Wal-Mart in death on pitiful.
Person responsible for the service, Ms. Kathleen Rice, a lawyer Nassau county (New York) that if taken to the Wal-Mart’s court, the fine for retailers more than $ 10,000 also. Instead, she choose another way is to force Wal-Mart to ensure safety for customers. “Our goal is to create a gold standard for industry and retail in the management of crowds,” she said.
Agreement, Wal-Mart and two top industry experts will discuss the management of crowds for employers in New York. Then, two experts will monitor the compliance of safety regulations in the system retailer.
Two Wal-Mart and lawyers for the acceptance are satisfied with the results achieved. However, families of the victims against the intent and agreements that have been offensive to people who lost. Edward H. Gersowitz, lawyers Jdimytai by Damour also call this action and unprincipled attitudes often considered victims. He declared: “The Wal-Mart used money to” buy break “the investigation as proof for long pompous thói’s retailers this. Family Jdimytai Damour The case for the court.
In the agreement, a term specify that if the victims received any compensation money from Wal-Mart means to them to waive the right of the American retail sector this court.
(Resource AP)
Toyota announced business reports with figures on the loss to 7.74 billion USD
Posted by David in Economy news, News on May 15th, 2009
Toyota has marked five loss record within 59 years, due to degradation policy and business failure. Manufacturers predict this situation will not better this year due to global economic recovery can not som.
On Friday, Toyota announced business reports with figures on the loss to 7.74 billion USD in three months first year. This loss is under the biggest employers since its establishment and also the largest of Manufacturers Japan. Business results financial year ends on 31 / 3 mark five business first failed by Toyota after 59 years of operation.
Only a year ago, Toyota Motor usurpation General to become the production car the world’s largest. But this year, employers face black dark period from the birth. Results Toyota’s business not only to illustrate the picture of global degradation, but also the evidence for failure in business strategies.
Before degradation boomed, Toyota has expanded production in the U.S. because of that demand will continue to rise. However, economic crisis occurs, the purchasing power suddenly decreased. Recently, to a Toyota factory in Mississippi and down to suspend production line in Texas. Well apply multiple changes in leadership of Tokyo and the U.S.. The analysis is concerned groups will be difficult to continue the policy work life for workers.
Decline in purchasing power is the main cause of loss caused by Toyota for 3 months in 2009. In addition, the yen remains strong price makes products manufacturers become expensive when exported to foreign countries. This quarter loss more than predicted by the analysis, and serious than the 6 billion of U.S. car manufacturer General Motors.
Significant area of concern is the Toyota North America, the largest with 7 of 36 Toyota factories around the world. Since last year, Toyota has cut production in order to overtake speed decreased purchasing power on the market. Price reduction on the gas market of North America led Models of energy saving by Toyota are no longer popular. In 3 months this year, Toyota sold only 24,277 of the hybrid Prius in the U.S., with sales in 5 / 2008.
Chairman of Toyota, Katsuaki Watanabe, he said: “We feel sorry that he is not sensitive enough to quickly resolve the problems now.” “Economic degradation occurred too fast and strong policies, regional diversity, which is the strength of Toyota, was to promote work. Sales of our decline in all markets,” he Katsuaki Watanabe said in the report of the meeting Friday.
However, while General Motor may soon got the Chrysler in the application for bankruptcy protection, the Toyota can still older than the period of this difficult, with potential major financial. Toyota factory in San Antonio, USA, are running only one production line, but still determined not to lay off any staff. Factory in Woodstock, both in Canada and only one batch of dismissal only. Last week, Toyota declared production will increase some form such as car and Camry Rav4.
To solve the problem in North America market, on 6 Toyota will appoint a new director for the area is Mr. Yoshi Inaba, leaving each position Toyota’s leadership in 2007.
This year, the situation will not seem better for Toyota to have vuốt lost opportunities in China, when the car needs a small form growing in this market. In addition, degradation financial Toyota will not make enough potential to invest in the new project, the first demand on the American market.
Toyota’s goal this year is only 6.5 million vehicles worldwide, compared with the number 7.57 million in the fiscal year just ended on 31 / 3 last. Also in the news conference Friday, President of Toyota received the global economy is difficult to be able to recover soon.
(Follow to WSJ)
France makes supreme defence effort
The French Government last night passed 36 decrees providing for heavy additional taxation and drastic economies to mobilise the nation resources for defence and to meet an extra expenditure of £85.000.000 on armaments
M Reynaud, Finance Minister, in a broadcast appeal to all classes to make fresh sacrifices for the country’s security, declared that a supreme effort was necessary if France and Britain were to succeed in the trial of strength between totalitarian Powers and their own regime of liberty.
Conversations will open in Venice today between Count Ciano and M Markovitch, the Italian Jugoslav Foreign Ministers. Next week M Markovitch will fly to Berlin with talks with Heir Hitler.
Germany and Italy are understood to be anxious to introduce Jugosavia to join the Rome-Berlin axis, as part of a large attempt to undermine Anglo-French influence in the Balkans.
In London, Paris and Moscow negotiations for a Three-Power pact are proceeding actively. Soviet proposals of a far-reaching character are being considered by the British and French government.
M REYNAUD’S warning to nation
M Reynaud, French Minister of Finance, broadcast to the nation tonight on the Daladier government’s drastic programme of taxation and economy to meet extra armaments expenditure of £85,000.000.
Added to the ordinary and extraordinary armed budget and the money spent on defence during the September crisis, this figure brings to total to £427,000.000 in the past eight months.
Today’s new measures are embodied in a series of 36 decree laws, approved by the Council of Ministers this evening and coming into force next week.
Their effect will be to place France virtually on a war-time basis so long as the present international tension lasts.
SPECIAL SALES TAX
Bread And Milk Excepted
The decree laws provide for a special sales tax of 1 per cent on all purchases except those already subjected to certain taxes on production. All retail sales will be affected by this new tax, but purchases of bread, milk and certain agricultural products derived from the farm are not affected.
Export sales will not be subject to the tax, which will be collected from the cellar and will be based on the turnover declared to the tax inspector.
Another decree deals with the control of profit on the production of armaments, which, in effect, will be limited to 10 per cent.
The new tax on these profits will increase progressively, starting at 50 per cent on the portion of profit between 6 and 10 per cent, and increasing to 80 per cent on the portion between 10 and 20 per cent. All profit of more than 20 per cent is taken wholly by the State.
3,000 Corus jobs under threat after consortium pulls out of contract
Posted by David in Finance news on May 9th, 2009
The Prime Minister led widespread condemnation of the firms which suddenly scrapped a 10-year deal to buy steel from Teesside Cast Products. Corus said it had no choice but to mothball the landmark plant which is responsible for nearly 25pc of Britain’s steel output.
Mr Brown said: “The workers have served the contract that they have been engaged on very well indeed. We are doing everything in our power to ensure that the contract is upheld.”
Kirby Adams, Corus’s new chief executive, said: “This is a nasty way of doing business. The villains are these four companies, the victims are our employees who have just been cast aside. We are outraged.”
Mr Adams had been in the job just two days when he received a letter from the four firms – Marcegaglia of Italy, Dongkuk Steel of South Korea, Duferco Participations of Switzerland, and Alvory of Argentina – informing him that they were terminating a 10-year contract to buy 78pc of Teesside’s production that they signed in 2004.
The consortium agreed to meet Corus this week to discuss the contract but still refused to honour it. Demand for steel has halved in Europe and North America in the past year. It is thought the firms plan to buy steel more cheaply elsewhere. Mr Adams said he was particularly outraged because the consortium had benefited from soaring steel prices in previous years. He said: “The contract allowed them to buy the steel at cost price so these companies have made hundreds of millions of pounds from Teesside during the good years. Now times are tough and they say they’re off. It’s unacceptable.”
Corus said it was using “all legal means” to ensure the terms of the 10-year agreement were fully enforced and that the four consortium members fulfilled their contractual obligations.
But, with just two weeks of orders in the pipeline, Corus said it has no choice but to start the process of winding down the plant. The company will start a 90-day consultation with Teesside’s workers and unions. It is a body-blow to Teesside, which has already suffered heavy job losses as a result of the crisis in the car industry. The plant employs 2,000 workers directly and another 1,000 jobs depend upon it.
Lord Mandelson, the business minister, said: “It is essential that Corus does everything it can legally, and with the Government’s assistance, to reinstate the off-take agreement. It is unacceptable that such a development should threaten jobs on such a scale, with such a potentially devastating impact on the area.
“The Government stands ready to do what it can to support the company. We are not prepared to reconcile ourselves to inevitable closure of this plant.”
Congress Delays Action on Auto Industry Loans
Posted by David in Economy news on May 3rd, 2009
Congress faced a big question this week, but the answer will have to wait. The heads of the Big Three American automakers came to Washington to ask for money — on their private jets, critics noted. The chiefs of General Motors, Ford and Chrysler asked for twenty-five billion dollars in new loans. Congress already approved twenty-five billion in September to help the industry develop fuel-efficient vehicles.
Democratic leaders in Congress proposed to offer the additional loans with money from the financial rescue program approved last month. But Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson objected. He says the seven hundred billion dollars is just for investing to strengthen the financial system.
On Thursday, a group of Senate Democrats and Republicans announced agreement on a compromise. It would let the companies temporarily use the fuel-efficiency loans to pay for daily operations. G.M. and Chrysler both say they could be out of money by early next year.
But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says there are currently not enough votes in Congress to pass any bailout plan for automakers. He says they failed to make their case that this appeal will be the last.
The companies now have until December second to explain how they would use the loans as part of long-term plans to save their businesses. Congress is prepared to consider the plans the week of December eighth.
Peter Morici, a professor of international business at the University of Maryland, is among economists who oppose a bailout. He appeared at this week’s hearings. He says the Big Three should be permitted to fail. If they seek bankruptcy protection, he says, they will be able to cut costs, reorganize and become competitive again.
But General Motors chief executive Rick Wagoner warned that the economy could lose three million jobs in the first year if the Big Three fail. They employ a total of about two hundred forty thousand people. But that does not include dealers or suppliers or the auto parts industry. Auto sales, though sharply reduced now, usually represent about four percent of the economy.
The industry chiefs blamed the credit crisis for keeping people from getting car loans. But lawmakers said poor business decisions have hurt the Big Three. Autodata Corporation says fifty-three percent of new cars and light trucks sold in the United States in the first ten months of this year were imported. (VOA News )
Teaching Young People About Personal Finance
Posted by David in Banking news, Economy news on May 3rd, 2009
April is National Financial Literacy Month in the United States. As the country faces a deep recession, Americans are paying closer attention to personal finance. Some critics partly blame the crisis on Americans’ low savings rate and high personal debt.
But efforts to increase financial knowledge have grown in the last ten years. Government, community and business leaders have pushed for teaching young people about the importance of saving, budgets and the true cost of credit.
The Jump$tart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy is based in Washington, D.C. It is an organization of about one hundred eighty groups, government agencies and businesses. Its goal is to provide financial knowledge to children and young adults before they get into debt.
Jump$tart’s Executive Director Laura Levine says many young people misuse credit cards without meaning to. She says they often start by making the lowest payment required. Over time, their credit limit is increased, but they do not pay off their debt. Laura Levine says young people can take on more debt than they can deal with.
The government says forty-five percent of college students have credit card debt. The average amount owed is more than three thousand dollars.
High credit limits are especially dangerous for college students. John Ninfo is a bankruptcy judge in Rochester, New York. He started the Credit Abuse Resistance Education Program.
It provides resources on its Web site for parents, teachers and students about financial issues. Judge Ninfo says he often sees people in their late twenties seeking bankruptcy protection in court. He says the combination of credit card debt and big student loans is burying young people in debt and driving many of them to bankruptcy.
The results of bad credit can be serious. Seventy percent of employers look at the credit histories of job candidates. In some fields, like law enforcement, bad credit means you cannot get a job.
Former President George Bush formed the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Literacy last year. That group has called for students at all grade levels to receive financial education. Currently, only seventeen states require personal finance to be taught at least as part of other courses.
And that’s the VOA Special English Economics Report, written by Mario Ritter. Transcripts and archives are at voaspecialenglish.com. I’m Steve Ember. (VOA News)
US Treasury Details Plan to Rescue Banks
Posted by David in Banking news on May 3rd, 2009
This week American Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner announced details of a plan aimed at removing billions of dollars in bad debts from American banks.
The government program has two parts. One involves buying groups of loans, like home mortgages. The second involves buying securities or financial investments tied to loans. Under the plan, the federal government will partner with private investors to buy bad loans made by banks.
These bad loans, also called toxic assets, have weakened American banks and interfered with normal lending. The Treasury Department says it will offer low interest loans to private investors so they will buy billions of dollars in toxic assets and get American banks lending again. The Obama administration says if the plan is a success, it could remove as much as one trillion dollars in bad loans.
No one knows how much government money might be needed. But during the past six months, more than seven hundred billion dollars has been committed to cleaning up the bad loans in the banking system.
The plan was first announced last month without many details. The stock market fell. However this week, news of the plan sent prices higher on the American and international stock markets. Following the announcement Monday, share prices of thirty major American industrial stocks increased almost seven percent. This was the biggest one-day gain since October. Mister Geithner said it will take several weeks for his plan to be properly judged by financial markets.
The deep international economic slowdown began in August, two thousand seven. That is when failures in the American home mortgage market caused financial markets to decrease lending.
First the American and then the world economy slipped into recession. Since then, several efforts to unlock credit have failed. Some experts say there will be no other choice but short-term nationalization of troubled banks if the Geithner plan fails to help the financial system.
This week Secretary Geithner also called for increased powers to control other financial businesses, like the insurance company American International Group. Mister Geithner said the Obama administration will continue working with Congress on details of the proposal.
And that’s the VOA Special English Economics Report, written by Brianna Blake. Transcripts, MP3s and podcasts of our programs are at voaspecialenglish.com. I’m Steve Ember. (VOA News )


