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Posts Tagged ‘economic crisis’

Here is some excellent reading from John Maludin from Investor Insight. Please see below for more information in regards and links to further materials.

John Mauldin is a multiple NYT Best Selling author and recognized financial expert. He has been heard on CNBC, Bloomberg and many radio shows across the country. He is the editor of the highly acclaimed, free weekly economic and investment e-letter that goes to over 1 million subscribers each week.

“Last week I outlined three possible paths for the economy based upon the political
choices we make about the budget deficits.

First, there is the benign path, where we more or less roll back the Bush tax cuts,
and do not increase spending for new programs. The fiscal deficit falls into a manageable
range. We repeat the Clinton years where spending is help below increase in revenue so
that over time the budget gets balanced. While a large tax increase would have negative
consequences for the overall economy, it is far better than the other two paths strictly
from the perspective of growing the economy as much as possible. This path also has a
very small probability.

The second path is that the Obama budget is passed, the Bush tax cuts go away
and we have a decade of projected trillion dollar deficits. By the way, those deficits
assume 3% growth rates, low unemployment, low interest rates and very large health care
savings, and a withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan. The deficits are likely to be MUCH
larger then the CBO forecasts. This on top of exploding entitlement expenditures in the
middle of the next decade, which are underscored in the opinion of more conservative
analysts (including me).

The third path is the same as above expect that large new taxes are passed in order
to bring the deficit to a manageable size relative to the growth of GDP. This means that a
tax increase over and above those projected by the Obama administration of around $700
billion a year (about 5% of GDP!). Deficits would still be in the $3-400 billion range, but
from a funding perspective, it could be done.

The second path is one that will end in heart ache. I do not think that the world or
even US investors can buy multiple trillions of dollars of debt for more than a few years
without rates rising significantly. That, as Gross points out, will affect both businesses
and mortgage borrowers. It is a disastrous train wreck.

The third path is the more likely. I think (hope?) there are enough economically
conservative Democratic that will realize the problems of trillion dollar deficits. But they
do want a fully nationalized health care, and thus they will pass enough in taxes to pay
for it. If they are going to do it, this is their one chance, as Republicans are likely to do
better in the 2010 elections and get enough votes to push back any real tax increases other
than letting the Bush tax cuts expire.”

John Mauldin, Best-Selling author and recognized financial expert, is also editor of the free Thoughts From the Frontline that goes to over 1 million readers each week. For more information on John or his FREE weekly economic letter go to: http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/learnmore

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Here is some scary news reported by AP.

“The Treasury Department said Monday it will need to borrow $361 billion in the current April-June quarter, a record amount for that period. It’s the third straight quarter the government’s borrowing needs have set records for those periods.”

The bad news continues…

“Treasury also estimated it will need to borrow $515 billion in the July-September quarter, down slightly from the $530 billion borrowed during the year-ago period. The all-time high of $569 billion was set in the October-December period.”

“To cover the government’s heavy borrowing needs, Congress in February boosted the limit for the national debt to $12.1 trillion as part of the legislation that enacted President Barack Obama‘s $787 billion economic stimulus program. The national debt now stands at $11.1 trillion.”

One may only hope that the problems are to be solved…

Go to RealClearPolitics to read more on this story.

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Wall Street tried to resume it upward run on Tuesday, after taking in another round of “less bad” economic news — this time, from the slumping housing market.

Construction companies like KB Home, the Centex Corporation and Toll Brothers paced gains in the broader financial markets after the government reported that new-home construction in February rose 22 percent from January to a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 583,000. It was the biggest percentage gain since January 1990 and the first increase since April.

Economists had expected housing starts to decline slightly as home builders pulled back in the face of dwindling demand and competition from a flood of foreclosed properties.

In the last hour, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 131 points or 1.8 percent while the broader Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index was 2.4 percent higher. The technology-heavy Nasdaq gained 3.1 percent.

Crude oil settled at $48.89, up $1.54 a barrel in New York trading.

Stocks ended just below the break-even point on Monday after four days of gains that had lifted the markets some 10 percent last week.

The government also said that wholesale prices in the United States edged up slightly in February, but flatter energy prices and the continuing global economic downturn kept any price increases to a minimum.

The Labor Department reported that its producer-price index rose by a less-than-expected 0.1 percent last month from January. The so-called core index, which excludes volatile food and energy costs, rose by 0.2 percent, a shade more than economists had expected.

To read the full NY Times article, click here.

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WASHINGTON — In one of the bleakest assessments yet, economists at the World Bank predicted on Sunday that the global economy and the volume of global trade would both shrink this year for the first time since World War II.

The World Bank said in a new report that the crisis that began with junk mortgages in the United States was causing havoc for poorer countries that had nothing to do with the original problem.

As a result, it said, nations in Latin America, Africa and East Asia have had not only their growth stifled but their access to credit as well.

The bank’s assessment for 2009 was grimmer than those of most private forecasters. It did not provide a specific estimate, but bank officials said its economists would be publishing one in the next several weeks.

Even extremely pessimistic forecasters have predicted that the global economy would eke out a tiny expansion, on continuing if slowed growth outside the United States and Europe. In late January, the International Monetary Fund reduced its estimate for global growth this year to just 0.5 percent, the lowest level in more than 60 years.

Read the full articla by Edmund Andrews at NYTimes here.

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This current economic crisis has started to hit VC´s as well, Zero Stage Capital dissolves.

Zero Stage Capital, a life science and IT venture firm, dissolved last year after several poorly performing funds, according to limited partners. The firm’s few remaining portfolio companies have been transferred to a newly created firm, Vox Equity Partners, managed by the son of Zero Stage’s managing director.

Originally based in Cambridge, Mass., small business investment company Zero Stage raised a $150 million sixth fund in 1999 and a roughly $160 million seventh fund in 2001. In April 2005, the firm told VentureWire it had scrapped plans for a larger, $250 million eighth fund after several personnel changes, scaling back plans to raise a $150 million vehicle for buying struggling venture-backed businesses.

Yet by 2008, according to one limited partner who wished to remain anonymous for this story, the firm was run out of Managing Director Paul Kelley’s Sommerville, Mass., home as he worked to wind down its operations.”

Read the full VentureWire article by Jonathan Matsey here.

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