Archive for June, 2009

30
Jun

Feds Bullard says must shield Fed independence

PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) – St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President James Bullard said on Tuesday that public anger over the U.S. financial crisis and subsequent bailouts could cause big problems if this escalated into a political challenge to the independence of the U.S. central bank.

"If that leads to some sort of erosion, or even the appearance of an erosion, of the independence of the Fed, I think that could be very counterproductive in this environment," he said after giving a talk about monetary policy to a Global Interdependence Center event.

The atmosphere between the Fed and the U.S. Congress has become very tense in the wake of last year's crisis. Lawmakers are angry over the taxpayer-backed rescues of investment bank Bear Stearns and insurer American International Group, which led to a public outcry that could hurt them in the polls.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke also endured a hostile congressional grilling last week over the Fed's role in Bank of America's purchase of Merrill Lynch, and lawmakers have demanded Fed emails and questioned its accountability.

All of this is taking place against the background of a record U.S. budget deficit, and an unprecedentedly aggressive Fed purchase program of U.S. government debt.

"We've got very large fiscal deficits. We've got the appearance…that the Fed is monetizing the deficit, pushing up yields. Anything that is going to erode the independence of the Fed is going to feed that expectation and drive yields higher.

"So I think we are really in a delicate situation here as regards the independence of the Fed, and that is an important consideration going forward," he said in response to a question from the audience.

Bullard said that he did not believe the Congress really wanted to clip the Fed's wings, but warned it would be easy for foreign investors to get the wrong message, and conclude that the Fed was going to finance the deficit by printing money.

"The Congress has thought over the last 100 years about how much independence to give the central bank. And when they really think about it, at the end of the day, they want the level of independence that we have. And so I think that will be the end outcome of this," he told reporters.

"I don't think anyone involved intends to monetize the debt, but that is what it looks like to outsiders," he said.

EXIT STRATEGY

In earlier remarks, Bullard said that the Fed's very accommodative monetary policy will remain in place for an extended period and a premature exit from this strategy could thwart U.S. economic recovery.

But Bullard said having a plan to shrink the monetary base after the Fed massively expanded it was important to control inflation expectations. And he said selling Fed-held assets was probably the most likely way it would choose to go.

"Without an exit strategy, expectations of high inflation may develop," Bullard said at the event, which was held at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.

"If expectations of inflation feed into today's long-term yields, those yields will rise today and hamper recovery prospects," he said in prepared remarks.

He later told reporters that mapping out an exit strategy did not mean an imminent threat of rate hikes.

"It is not that we are trying to back off accommodative monetary policy. Policy is very accommodative and it will remain accommodative. But you still have to map out what is going to happen in the future," he said.

Bullard will be a voting member of the Fed's policy-setting committee next year.

The Fed has cut interest rates to almost zero and pledged to buy up to $1.75 trillion worth of U.S. government and mortgage debt to combat a severe recession and prevent the economy from slipping into a Japan-style deflation, which inflicted a decade of stagnation on that country in the 1990s.

It left this purchase program in place and unchanged at its meeting last week, and Bullard said this reflected some recent improvements in the U.S. economic outlook.

"I think the idea is to see how the data comes in over the summer here and then evaluate at that point," he said.

Bullard, in remarks used in a PowerPoint presentation to illustrate his argument, said there were various ways the Fed could reduce its balance sheet to tighten policy.

But he said two options — the issuance of Treasury supplementary financing programs or the issuance of Fed debt — were unlikely because of the size of the U.S. budget deficit.

Other options involving repurchase programs and the payment by the Fed of interest on reserves were untested in the context of the central banks's current operating environment, he said.

"Selling assets as appropriate is the most likely option," he said.

(Reporting by Alister Bull; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

Fed’s Bullard says must shield Fed independence

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30
Jun

Private Banker Moved Funds Undetected

He grew up in elite circles in Buenos Aires, acquiring the polish and privileged connections that paved the way for him to become a star private banker in New York to wealthy clients at UBS and JPMorgan Chase.

But as Hernán E. Arbizu tended the fortunes of his gilded South American clients, he says he also illegally took millions of dollars from them for years while at both banks, without being detected.

What is more, Mr. Arbizu said he regularly dipped into UBS client accounts — and even visited the Swiss giant’s offices in Manhattan to ensure that the illicit transactions went through — for at least a year after he left UBS for a new job at Chase in the fall of 2006.

The fast-lane world of private banking has hit some serious speed bumps in recent months, its affluent clientele hit by Ponzi schemers, failed hedge funds and tax evasion investigations from Washington to Europe.

Several big European banks stumbled into the Madoff swindle, for example. More recently, UBS agreed to a $780 million settlement with the Justice Department to address accusations that it had helped wealthy Americans hide billions of dollars in taxes in secret offshore bank accounts.

The curious case of Mr. Arbizu, whose career exploded when a Chase customer discovered and reported his crime in May 2007, offers a rare window into this well-shielded world, and raises questions about how carefully some of its largest institutions monitor their bankers.

In telephone and e-mail interviews held in the last eight months, Mr. Arbizu put himself in what he said was the “3 percent of bankers who at some point get confused because of the pressure. We feel like we can take risks that other people don’t even dream to do, and that we can manage that risk — I don’t know why.”

But he also said that UBS “didn’t have proper control over its bankers” and he accused the bank of creating an atmosphere of pressure to keep clients and reel in new ones. A spokesman for UBS declined repeated requests for comment on the case.

Mr. Arbizu, an Argentine native, fled the United States for Argentina in May 2008, just before he was to be indicted by federal authorities in New York on federal bank fraud charges. He insisted that he had not personally profited from his actions, but rather had shifted money between accounts to make good on unrealistic investment promises he made to keep important clients. “Of course I made a huge mistake — I feel really bad,” he said.

Yet while his actions pale in comparison with Bernard L. Madoff’s $65 billion Ponzi scheme, Mr. Arbizu’s tale contains the same “rob Peter to pay Paul” logic that apparently guided Mr. Madoff.

Mr. Arbizu, 40, said that in order to maintain an aura of success with major UBS clients, he pretended to remain their personal banker even after he left for Chase. His handpicked successor at UBS, Jose Cecilio Decastro, helped maintain the ruse until he resigned last July and moved to Venezuela.

UBS conducted an internal investigation of Mr. Decastro last year and determined that while he had “done foolish things” by helping Mr. Arbizu, according to a person briefed on the investigation, he did not warrant referral for prosecution.

In June 2008, weeks after Mr. Arbizu was indicted in New York, the Argentine authorities raided JPMorgan Chase’s offices in Buenos Aires and confiscated records of 200 wealthy Argentine clients, many of them Mr. Arbizu’s, whose names and assets were then published in a local newspaper.

But Mr. Arbizu, who says he is assisting an Argentine investigation of potential tax evasion and money laundering by Chase customers, was not caught by either bank’s tripwires and controls.

In fact, for more than five years, he was not caught at all.

In early 2003, he moved to Fairfield, Conn., to take a job at UBS as a private banker for wealthy clients in Argentina and Chile. He then worked out of the bank’s Park Avenue offices in Manhattan, where he earned $300,000 and bonuses for overseeing 13 accounts worth $200 million.

Mr. Arbizu maintained that he had felt overwhelmed by pressure from UBS early on to keep existing clients and bring in new ones. Just months after he joined the bank, he promised an important client, Alberto Lopez, a wealthy farmer in Argentina, that he would generate a 21 percent return on one of his accounts. “Of course, this was impossible,” Mr. Arbizu said.

Months later, Mr. Lopez wanted his investment return. Scrambling, Mr. Arbizu secretly dipped into Mr. Lopez’s principal, which he replenished by secretly tapping $2.8 million from another star UBS client, the Acevedo Quevedos family, wealthy and politically prominent in Paraguay.

Mr. Arbizu left UBS for JPMorgan Chase in November 2006 without informing the Quevedo family. The following April, the Quevedo family contacted Mr. Arbizu, saying that its members needed money from their UBS accounts to buy land.

Panicked about covering the shortfall, Mr. Arbizu said he “pretended” he was still the family’s banker at UBS, and secretly raided a JPMorgan Chase account held by Natalio Garber, a prominent media executive in Buenos Aires, for the funds.

He did so, he said, by faxing transfer requests with forged client signatures to UBS’s New York offices, and then visiting the offices to ensure with Mr. Decastro that the transaction had gone through. “Everybody there liked me and trusted me — ‘Oh great, you’re visiting us,’ ” Mr. Arbizu recalled. “I think that my presence there saying that it was O.K. made people not follow the controls.”

Weeks later, Mr. Garber learned of the ruse and called Mr. Arbizu’s boss to complain. JPMorgan Chase fired him and alerted federal prosecutors in Manhattan, paving the way to an indictment that accused Mr. Arbizu of 12 illegal transfers while at UBS and JPMorgan Chase, totaling more than $5.3 million.

Darin Oduyoye, a spokesman for JP Morgan Chase, said that the bank was “waiting for the U.S. government to pursue extradition” of Mr. Arbizu, but declined to comment further.

In the interview, Mr. Arbizu said the 12 transfers, some to client accounts in tax havens like Andorra and the Netherlands Antilles, totaled only $2.8 million.Mr. Arbizu secretly made eight of the transactions from accounts held by his former UBS clients from March 2007 through March 2008, up to 16 months after he had left for JPMorgan Chase.

JPMorgan has not dropped its lawsuit, but it has not made filings that would push its case forward. Last February it quietly closed a case that it had filed against Mr. Arbizu with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, the agency that monitors brokers, although a spokesman declined to say whether it had dropped or settled the case.

By contrast, UBS has not sued Mr. Arbizu. But in May 2008, it filed a report with Finra to declare the bank had initiated an internal investigation of Mr. Arbizu a month earlier. The next month, UBS amended the Finra report to include details of $2.8 million in illegal transfers from an unnamed Paraguayan client. But UBS said in the amended report that it had received complaints about those transfers only in May 2008 — one month after it began investigating Mr. Arbizu for illegal money transfers.

UBS quietly settled the Finra action for $1.44 million last December. In mid-June, UBS filed a broker report for Mr. Arbizu’s successor, Mr. Decastro, saying that he had left the firm amid an internal investigation of “violations of firm compliance and client confidentiality rules.”

“I know I am stupid,” Mr. Arbizu said. “I feel that in all these years I had my head divided into two sections, in one small section all this problem and in the rest my ‘normal’ life.”

Private Banker Moved Funds Undetected

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29
Jun

Porsche Rejects Volkswagen Offer

Filed at 9:47 a.m. ET

STUTTGART, Germany (AP) — Porsche has rejected Volkswagen AG’s bid to take a 49 percent stake in the sports carmaker, a company spokesman said Monday.

Porsche Automobil Holding SE spokesman Albrecht Bamler said the offer by VW ”is not a viable option.”

According to Bamler, Porsche board chairman Wolfgang Porsche received the offer in a letter by courier last week. But the company’s CEO Wendelin Wiedeking and management board were not informed.

”Without the management board, nothing goes here,” Bamler said.

Porsche holds a roughly 51 percent stake in Volkswagen, but ran up hefty debts in accumulating that holding and is now seeking a merger with the larger company. Exactly how that is to happen remains unclear.

German weekly Der Spiegel reported the VW offer was worth euro3-4 billion ($4.2-$5.6 billion), which would have helped Porsche pay off it debts, racked up in its attempt to take over VW.

Bamler said, however, that for VW to take a stake in Porsche, the Wolfsburg-based automaker would have to take out credit worth euro10.75 billion ($15.15 billion).

Porsche, based in Stuttgart, confirmed earlier this month it has been holding talks with a Qatar state investment fund, the Qatar Investment Authority, on a possible investment.

Volkswagen shares dropped 10.58 percent on the news to euro237.91 in afternoon trading in Frankfurt.

Porsche shares nudged up nearly half a percent to euro45.92 in Frankfurt.

Porsche Rejects Volkswagen Offer

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28
Jun

FTSE 100 shares fall

LONDON (AFP) – Stocks in London ended the session weaker Friday on mixed US and corporate data.

The FTSE 100 index shares was 0.27 percent lower at 4,241.01 points.

The Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) was the most widely traded stock, seeing 175 million units change hands, followed by Vodafone, which saw 121 million switch owners.

Petrofac led the blue chip risers, climbing 29 pence — or 4.63 percent — to finish at 655, followed by RBS, which gained 1.38 pence — or 3.74 percent — to stand at 38.12.

Invensys led the day's fallers, shedding 5.50 pence — or 2.44 percent — to finish at 220, followed by the Sage Group which lost 3.60 pence — or 2 percent — to end at 176.5.

Elsewhere, the pound was up against the dollar and the euro.

Sterling was worth 1.6481 dollars at 15:58 BST, up from 1.6371 at Thursday's close, while it inched up to 1.1718 euros from 1.1702 over the same period.

FTSE 100 shares fall

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27
Jun

Hummer buyer to open talks with China regulators: report

CHICAGO (Reuters) – The potential buyer of General Motors Corp's (GMGMQ.PK) Hummer division will begin formal talks with Chinese regulators on Monday in an effort to win approval for its acquisition, The Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday.

China's Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery has agreed to buy the Hummer brand from the bankrupt U.S. automaker but state radio in China reported on Thursday that the country's top economic planning agency was likely to reject the bid.

A GM spokesman was not immediately available to comment on the Journal report.

Tengzhong's lack of experience and the gas-guzzling nature of Hummer's sport utility vehicles were cited as reasons for the expected opposition by the National Development and Reform Commission, the report said.

However, GM and Tengzhong have yet to formally present the deal to the Chinese regulators and the parties negotiating the deal have not been told it is in trouble, the Journal said, citing unidentified sources.

The Journal quoted one unidentified GM executive as saying talk that the deal would be blocked was not true and should be considered "pure speculation."

Executives from GM and Tengzhong met this week to firm up their plans and are operating under the assumption that the deal has a reasonable chance of getting approved, according to people familiar with the meeting, the Journal said.

GM said on June 2, the day after filing for bankruptcy, that it had tentatively agreed to sell the Hummer brand to Tengzhong, saying it expected the deal to close in the third quarter. GM officials said at the time that they saw no snag in closing the deal.

Based in the Chinese province of Sichuan, Tengzhong makes special-use vehicles, highway and bridge structural components, construction machinery and energy equipment.

(Reporting by Ben Klayman; Editing by Bill Trott)

Hummer buyer to open talks with China regulators: report

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27
Jun

U.S. commercial banks see record Q1 trading revenue

NEW YORK (Reuters) – U.S. commercial banks reported record trading revenue in the first quarter of 2009, benefiting from wide trading margins and gains from interest rate products, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said on Friday.

Banks generated a record $9.8 billion in revenue from trading derivatives and cash instruments, compared with a loss of $9.2 billion in the fourth quarter of 2008, the OCC said.

Interest rate products, including derivatives, generated the strongest revenue, rising to a record $9.1 billion, compared with a $3.4 billion loss in the previous quarter, the OCC said. Credit trading was the only asset class to generate a loss, of $3.2 billion, trimmed from a fourth-quarter loss of $8.9 billion.

Foreign exchange revenue fell to $2.4 billion from $4.1 billion in the fourth quarter, while equity trading generated $1 billion in trading revenue compared to a fourth quarter loss of $1.2 billion, the OCC said.

Trading revenue were boosted as banks wrote down fewer losses from bad loans and recorded the declining value of their debt as a liability. Banks can book the deteriorating value of their own debt as trading revenue.

"While trading performance was strong even without the liability value changes, this source did add materially to first quarter trading performance," the OCC said.

Notional volumes in all derivatives markets increased by $1.6 trillion in the quarter to $202 trillion, as more derivative contracts were recorded by commercial banks that had formerly been investment banks.

The notional volume does not represent the actual amount of risk as it includes a number of trades that offset each other. Eighty-nine percent of derivatives exposures at commercial banks were eradicated from netting positions in the first quarter, the OCC said.

LARGEST BANKS

JPMorgan Chase & Co(JPM.N), Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N), Bank of America Corp (BAC.N), Citigroup (C.N) and HSBC Bank USA, part of HSBC Holdings (HSBA.L), have the largest derivatives exposures of U.S. commercial banks and account for 96 percent of total exposures, the OCC said.

As of March 31, their notional derivative exposures stood at $81.2 trillion, $39.9 trillion, $38.9 trillion, $29.6 trillion and $3.5 trillion, respectively.

Of these banks, Goldman had by far the largest credit exposure relative to its risk-based capital, at 1,048 percent, the OCC said. HSBC, JPMorgan, Citibank and Bank of America's ratios stood at 475 percent, 323 percent, 216 percent and 169 percent, respectively.

Goldman also got the largest overall boost from derivatives and cash trading revenue, which represented 69 percent of the bank's gross revenue in the quarter, the OCC said.

Trading revenue for JPMorgan represented 13 percent of its gross revenue and contributed 8 percent of both Citigroup and Bank of America's gross revenues. HSBC Bank USA's gross revenue lost 4 percent from trading revenue.

JPMorgan, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley (MS.N) and Citigroup had the largest derivative exposures of all holding companies, at $81.1 trillion, $77.9 trillion, $47.7 trillion, $39.1 trillion and $31.7 trillion, respectively.

(Reporting by Karen Brettell; Editing by Padraic Cassidy)

U.S. commercial banks see record Q1 trading revenue

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26
Jun

Indications: U.S. stocks futures lower ahead of income data

LONDON (MarketWatch) — U.S. stock futures leaned lower Friday as traders held off extending the prior session’s rally before the release of data on personal income and inflation.

S&P 500 futures slipped 2.1 points to 914.80 and Nasdaq 100 futures fell 2.75 points to 1,470.20. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 18 points.

U.S. stocks climbed on Thursday in a broad market rally which saw consumer and industrial stocks advance. Lennar rallied as the loss-making builder reported a 63% improvement in orders, while the Federal Reserve trimmed the size and changed the terms of some of its liquidity programs, citing improving financial conditions.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 172 points, the S&P 500 rose 19 points and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 37 points.

Friday’s session features income, spending and inflation data for May, as well as a second reading of the University of Michigan’s consumer confidence gauge for June.

Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher will be speaking on the U.S. economic outlook in the afternoon.

Government bonds and the dollar were weaker on Friday, with the euro up 0.6% to $1.4082, while yields on 10-year Treasury notes rose 4 basis points to 3.58%.

Yields move in the opposite direction to prices.

Crude oil futures rose 91 cents to $71.14 a barrel, and gold futures rose over $6 an ounce.

“Although we think that the latest oil price increase to over $70 a barrel is not justified by current fundamentals, it cannot be ignored that the oil market has improved,” said analysts at Commerzbank.

Of companies in the spotlight, Palm may rise after the company said it would be cash-flow positive by the end of the calendar year. Its loss in the quarter ending May 29, a period which didn’t include sales of the popular Pre phone, wasn’t as steep as analysts had forecast.

“Palm put up a better quarter than expected as it tightened its belt ahead of the launch of the Pre and saw solid shipments of legacy products,” said Matthew Sheerin, an analyst at Thomas Weisel Partners with a market weight rating. “From our initial checks as well as proprietary use/purchase of the Pre, we believe the launch has gone relatively well to date.”

Boeing lost an order from Australia’s Qantas for 15 Dreamliner planes, with the airline deferring orders for another 15 of the planes that have yet to fly.

On the financial front, UBS sold $3.5 billion worth of shares and warned of a second-quarter loss.

Citigroup was ordered to halt some operations in Japan.

Oil and commodity plays helped lift Asia stocks, with the Nikkei 225 up 0.8% in Tokyo and the S&P/ASX 200 up 1.2% in Australia.

Banks helped Europe stocks rise, with the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 up 0.5%.

Indications: U.S. stocks futures lower ahead of income data

Hot News: Currencies: Dollar slips against euro, pound; steady vs. yen

25
Jun

US Central Bank Chief Defends Bank Bailout

Ben Bernanke testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, 25 Jun 2009, before House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing The chief of the U.S. central bank is defending his actions in the multi-billion dollar bailout of one of the nation’s largest banks. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told a government oversight committee, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Wednesday the Fed acted “with the highest integrity” during a merger between the private Bank of America and failing investment bank Merrill Lynch.Critics say Bernanke and former U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson told Bank of America its top officials would be fired if they failed to go ahead with the deal. Others, including the oversight committee’s ranking opposition member, Republican Representative Darrell Issa, accuse them of taking part in a government “cover-up.” Bernanke repeatedly denied both allegations, saying the Fed only acted to prevent the financial crisis from spreading.The deal, late last year, was part of Washington’s effort to rescue the troubled financial system.  The political controversy comes as President Barack Obama is proposing to give the Federal Reserve more power as part of a plan to reform the country’s financial system.Some lawmakers say the U.S. central bank already has too much power.Bank of America Chief Executive Kenneth Lewis testified earlier this month he was told he and other top executives would lose their jobs if they tried to back out of the deal.Oversight committee chairman, Representative Edolphus Towns, a Democrat from New York, said much of what happened during the financial crisis “remains shrouded in secrecy.”Bank of America received $45 billion in emergency loans from the U.S. government. Almost half of the emergency aid was tied to the takeover of Merrill Lynch.Lawmakers have also accused federal regulators, including the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department, and Bank of America executives of withholding information about the merger from investors.Some information for this report was provided by AP. 

US Central Bank Chief Defends Bank Bailout

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25
Jun

Kohlberg Hopes to Be Listed on Exchange in Amsterdam

Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, the private equity firm, said Wednesday that it was officially postponing a listing on the New York Stock Exchange, instead seeking to revise a merger with a publicly traded European affiliate that would give it an Amsterdam listing.

It is the latest twist for Kohlberg Kravis, which first sought an initial public offering nearly two years ago after similar moves by rivals. But the credit markets froze soon afterward, dimming considerably the attractions of being publicly traded.

Last summer, Kohlberg Kravis proposed buying out KKR Private Equity Investors, which trades in Amsterdam and invests in or alongside the private equity firm’s funds. Acquiring KKR Private Equity Investors, in which the buyout firm already held a 12 percent stake, was seen as a way to gain a public listing more quickly than through an initial offering. But the shockwaves of the financial crisis made it difficult for Kohlberg Kravis to go public.

Now, Kohlberg Kravis is seeking to revise the deal once more. Under the terms of the new proposal, the two firms would combine their entities, with Kohlberg Kravis holding 70 percent of the combined business and the private equity investors holding 30 percent. (The original plan would have given investors 21 percent at the outset and securities known as contingent value interests that could give them up to 27 percent.)

Kohlberg executives would reap about 40 percent of the combined business’ carried interest, which has long been the bulk of profits of private equity firms.

The combined business would remain listed on the Euronext Amsterdam exchange, but could transfer its listing to the N.Y.S.E., also owned by NYSE Euronext.

On Wednesday, K.K.R. said that it has already secured the consent of investors holding about 44 percent of KKR Private Equity Investors. The firm cautioned, however, that it had not yet secured the consent of its independent directors.

Kohlberg Hopes to Be Listed on Exchange in Amsterdam

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24
Jun

Central Bank Lends Record Amount in Europe

FRANKFURT (AP) — In a bid to further unclog credit markets in the euro zone, the European Central Bank said Wednesday that it would lend a record 442 billion euros or $617.8 billion to banks for 12 months.

The bank’s auction of 12-month loans, which will carry a flat rate of 1 percent, was started earlier in the day and was fully subscribed.

The central bank said that 1,121 institutions subscribed to the offering, its biggest since December 2007 when it offered 348.6 billion euros.

Central banks worldwide, including the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank, have pumped billions of dollars, euros, yen, pounds and Swiss francs into money markets since Lehman Brothers Holdings filed for bankruptcy in September 2008, which triggered the most acute phase of the financial crisis.

Since then, the Europe has fallen into its worst recession in six decades.

The bank first announced in May that it would offer up money for a year, part of its bid to keep cash moving in the markets and to stem further fallout from the financial crisis. The bank has also lowered its benchmark interest rate to an historic low of 1 percent and pledged to buy some 60 billion euros or $83.9 billion in covered bonds, a relatively safe type of asset-backed security, from banks.

Axel Weber, Germany’s central bank president noted at a Cabinet meeting Wednesday that “the E.C.B. is using a whole series of instruments at the moment — so that, at least in terms of providing liquidity on a one-year basis, there can barely be any reasoning on banks’ part why credit cannot be given,” a government spokesman Ulrich Wilhelm said.

On Monday, the central bank president Jean-Claude Trichet warned that the economy was in “uncharted waters” and said there still remained a risk of unexpected financial turbulence that could roil any nascent recovery.

Central Bank Lends Record Amount in Europe

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23
Jun

U.S. Home Sales Rose for a Third Month in May

WASHINGTON (AP) — A real estate group said Tuesday that sales of previously occupied homes rose modestly from April to May, the third monthly increase this year, but signs of any housing recovery are fragile at best.

The National Association of Realtors said Tuesday that home sales rose 2.4 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.77 million last month, from a downwardly revised pace of 4.66 million in April. Prices, meanwhile, dropped by 16.8 percent from a year ago.

About one out of every three homes sold was a foreclosure or distressed sale. That helped drag down the median price to $173,000 — 16.8 percent below a year ago. Falling prices coupled with new rules for property appraisers have caused many transactions to fall apart or be delayed.

“We have just been flooded with e-mails, telephone calls on the appraisal problems,” said Lawrence Yun, the Realtors’ chief economist.

The sales results missed economists’ expectations, and stock markets headed lower on the news. Home sales had been expected to rise to an annual pace of 4.81 million units, according to Thomson Reuters.

One bright spot, however, was that the number of unsold homes on the market at the end of May fell 3.5 percent to nearly 3.8 million. That’s a 9.6 month supply at the current sales pace.

That drop was “the best news in the report,” said Joseph LaVorgna, Deutsche Bank’s chief economist.

U.S. Home Sales Rose for a Third Month in May

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23
Jun

SEC says 4 partners ran $11 million Ponzi scheme

OMAHA, Neb. – The Securities and Exchange Commission says four business partners defrauded investors out of more than $11 million by promising significant returns on a fictitious no-risk investment.

The SEC filed a federal lawsuit and obtained an order freezing assets raised as part of the scheme. A hearing will be held Thursday to determine if the assets should remain frozen.

The four partners named in the lawsuit are Stephen Bowman, of Omaha, Neb., John and Marian Morgan, of Sarasota, Fla., Thomas Woodcock Jr., of Rockwell, Texas. They did not immediately respond to messages Monday.

The SEC says some investors received payments from newer investors’ money, as in a Ponzi scheme. But many investors were never paid anything while the partners made a series of excuses.

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On the Net:

Securities and Exchange Commission: http://www.sec.gov

SEC says 4 partners ran $11 million Ponzi scheme

Hot News: The Fed: What exit strategy? The drama isnt over