Trying to Sell a Shi**y Deal

Today’s hearings are finally over – all 11 hours worth. It’s not clear who did themselves more harm – Lloyd Blankfein for explaining what Goldman Sachs did back in 2007 or Carl Levin (D-MI) for making the same points over and over and over again (none of which any of the Goldman crowd seemed to understand no matter how many times it was repeated).

A good portion of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations seemed to quite enjoy using the word “shi**y” today as Levin does in the clip above. I heard at least three committee members utter it including Claire McCaskill (D-MO).

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The Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations has been at it for almost five hours now, not yet done with just the first of three panels on today’s Goldman Sachs hearings. Lloyd Blankfein is on the third panel, so, hopefully he brought an overnight bag. As for the other big news of the day, this item in Der Spiegel is quite critical of the fatherland for their role in the ongoing meltdown otherwise known as the country of Greece.

The Greeks are mainly responsible for their current predicament. But the German government has made the country’s situation worse with its lectures and reluctance to provide assistance. Chancellor Angela Merkel is mainly to blame for the fact that German taxpayers now have to suffer.

On the one side there are the Greeks, who clearly still do not have their financial statistics under control and who produce one false report after another about the country’s budget deficit. On the other side are the Germans, who delight in hindering a rapid and unambiguous European response to the Greek crisis — in the process driving the cost of a solution through the roof.

At the same time, it is striking just how many representatives of the parties in Germany’s coalition government are giving advice to the Greeks, ranging from drastic pay cuts to an immediate declaration of insolvency right up to a swift withdrawal from the euro zone. These observers base their verbal radicalism on the noble economic argument that Greece needs to be made “fit for the financial markets” once again. Another, less sophisticated, argument goes that the vast majority of Germans are unwilling, after years of limiting their own consumption, to make financial sacrifices to help out Greece.

Both Greece’s calculation errors and the diva-like reluctance of the German government to help Athens are nothing more than an invitation to speculators to bet on the demise of the southern European country.

Can you imagine what things would be like in Europe right now if the British had decided to join the currency union back in the 1990s when they had the opportunity?

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It’s another one of those weird, late-2008 type of days for financial markets as the dollar, treasuries, and gold bullion are about the only things going up. Adding to the intrigue is the fact that, yesterday, the inventory at the popular SPDR Gold Shares ETF (NYSE:GLD) reached a new all-time high as indicated below.

After leveling off in recent weeks at about five or six tonnes above the old highs from last June, a mark that was approached in late-December before falling back again early in the new year, the new total of 1146.5 is now well clear of the old highs with more additions likely to come, given what’s happening in markets today.

Full Disclosure: Long gold coins and GLD at time of writing

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Barter Makes a Comeback

As elected officials in Washington query what, so far, appear to be both uncooperative and unrepentant officials from Goldman Sachs, more and more Americans turn to barter as detailed in this story from South Carolina’s The State.

Over the past 30 years, Columbia artist Jeff Donovan has bartered for artwork, tuition for his daughter’s private school, a custom-made suit and, most recently, a couple of visits to the dentist.

Bartering gives Donovan a way to use his talent – instead of having to pay cash – to get things he might never buy for himself.

Bartering, trading goods or services rather than charging cash, is an ancient practice. But it has gained popularity during the economic meltdown that left many short on cash but rich in talent or treasures.

The number of online barter ads has increased 100 percent since 2008, according to published reports.

“I couldn’t tell you the last time I had been to a dentist, and I felt like it was time,” said Donovan, who is self-employed and has a part-time job but no health insurance.

The dentist paid $325 to the gallery for the painting and gave Donovan a $325 credit at her office. He got his first cleaning last week and will go back in six months for a follow-up.

“It worked out very well,” he said. “Both parties were satisfied, which is I guess the ideal.”

It’s news to me that the IRS has been taxing bartered goods and services for almost 30 years. Apparently, as long as there’s an even swap between parties, no taxes are due, which would kind of suck for the government if barter were ever to expand to a much bigger scale.

 

While the world waits to hear what Goldman Sachs has to say before the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, word comes from Standard and Poor’s that home prices are again falling, any ambiguity about the current trend now removed after the firm said last week to ignore the seasonally adjusted data that, in February, also showed a decline.

The unadjusted Case-Shiller 20-City Home Price Index fell 0.9 percent in February, the sharpest decline since March of last year during the depths of  the recession when the homeowner tax credit was just a glean in the eye of elected officials in Washington.

 
 
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