Deborah notes

Oct 17 '11

US postal union hires former White House official


* USPS wants to end Saturday mail, close post officesWASHINGTON, Oct 17 (Reuters) - The largest U.S. postal union has hired a former Obama administration official who oversaw the 2009 auto manufacturers bailout as a financial advisor while the struggling U.S. Postal Service restructures.The National Association of Letter Carriers, which represents 280,000 postal workers and is one of four unions representing USPS employees, has retained former White House advisor Ron Bloom and investment bank Lazard Group, the union said in a statement.The Postal Service has seen mail volumes ebb as consumers send email and pay bills online. The agency is expected to announce next month a multi-billion-dollar loss for the last fiscal year.Postal officials say they need permission from Congress to end Saturday mail delivery and renegotiate labor contracts, potentially laying off thousands of workers, in order to return to profitability.The agency is studying more than 3,600 post offices and several hundred processing facilities for possible closure.Bloom oversaw the restructuring of Chrysler and General Motors after the 2009 taxpayer rescues and left the White House in August. The letter carriers’ decision to hire him indicates unions are stepping up the fight against restructuring moves they have argued rely too much on cutting employees.Union president Fredric Rolando said in a statement that Lazard Group and Bloom “can provide valuable assistance to all stakeholders who share our commitment to maintaining and growing this vital national resource.”The statement did not clarify what their roles would be. A spokesman for the union could not be reached for comment.Postal Service spokesman David Partenheimer said in an email that he could not comment on the hiring but that “we agree pursuing revenue-generating ideas is critical to return the Postal Service to profitability, just as cost cutting actions are also vital.”The Postal Service last month narrowly missed defaulting on a $5.5 billion payment to prefund retiree health benefits. Congress moved the payment’s due date until mid-November but so far has shown little agreement on a broad postal overhaul.A House of Representatives committee approved Representative Darrell Issa’s postal reform bill last week but his proposals likely will face opposition from rural lawmakers and Senate Democrats. [ID:nN1E79C1FJ]Lawmakers voted to allow the Postal Service to designate up to 12 mail delivery holidays each year. Six months after passage of the bill, the Postal Service would be able to ask its regulators for permission to stop Saturday delivery.

63 notes Tags: US postal union hires former White House official

Oct 14 '11

RPT-Could bank recapitalisation kill the patient?


LONDON, Oct 14 (IFR) - Can attempts to stop the euro zone debt crisis spiralling further out of control by boosting banks’ capital be achieved without killing either the economy or private investors’ appetite for financial institutions?Now the European Commission has thrown its weight behind the IMF’s push in September for a eurozone banking recapitalisation, forced recaps of European lenders appear inevitable. The question now becomes, how should they be done?Even before EC president Jose Manuel Barroso’s statement to the EU parliament on Thursday proposing a recapitalization, senior FIG bankers were arguing against pure equity injections that dilute existing shareholders.”Banks will do everything to avoid taking government money: sell assets, reduce RWA, stop lending. Plus any bank would loath to raise equity at the current levels,” said one banker.It might not be that simple. Quite simply the world believes a Greek default is coming and it might be followed by others.According to Goldman Sachs research, 50 of 91 European banks could fail a revised regulatory stress test with a combined short-fall of EUR139bn, and if the core Tier 1 capital ratio is set at 9% instead of 7% the gap could be EUR300bn.When the US authorities stemmed American banks’ downward spiral in 2008, the recapitalization was complemented by various liquidity provisions and asset price stabilization measures but ultimately by a regulatory threat that the state would inject capital if the private sector would not.The majority of bankers who spoke to IFR believe some sort of repeat of the US experience is possible. A European version of TARP would entail banks being provided with capital via preferred shares and warrants.Prefs would not be Basel 3 compliant but that need not be a bad thing as they would then clearly be seen as only temporary.Later on, the injection could be followed by conversion into common stock or private equity raises.This type of operation is clearly going to be an expensive exercise. Barroso said banks should first use private sources of capital, and threw a wild card into the mix by saying this should potentially include restructuring and conversion of debt to equity instruments.Bondholders have warned that coercive liability management similar to what happened in Ireland, where Tier 1 investors suffered losses of up to 90% on their bonds, would be dangerous.Barroso has said that, if necessary, national governments should provide support, and should this not be available, then recapitalisation should be funded via a loan from the EFSF.Paul Achleitner, Allianz board member, is pushing for a transformation of the European Financial Stability Facility into a sovereign debt insurer.This would dramatically increase the fire power of the Triple A EUR440bn fund without requiring another painful round of EU government approvals.One banker likened this to an asset protection scheme (APS) of the type used to protect Royal Bank of Scotland after an initial state injection of capital had proved insufficient.”The capital benefit from the APS because of the reduction of risk weighting is immense,” he said.Furthermore, structured carefully, under Eurostat rules the APS would appear on states’ balance sheets only when actual losses occur.The APS concept is also behind various bad-bank plans used for ABN, LBBW, BayernLB, KBC and UBS, although Eurostat’s accounting treatment is different in that circumstance because assets are transferred in a bad bank.The Allianz idea would only guarantee new issuance. Whether existing sovereign debt would benefit or be shunned because investors consider it subordinated is an open question but hitherto APS schemes have only supported existing portfolios.There are big questions whether it’s possible to recapitalize banks via traditional mechanisms without destabilizing markets further as this would imply that sovereign debt does not possess the risk-free status it had previously been assumed to hold.And there is no certainty on timing, size or the source of losses due to sovereign exposure. Ideally this uncertainty needs to be eliminated and attempting to calculate the quantum risks sending the wrong signals about the size of the problem and the ways to reduce it.Most importantly, there is little political appetite for further injections of capital that cost the taxpayer money, but this needs to be weighed against the requirement for demand from equity and fixed income investors.”There needs to be a limit to excessive dilution, and second, bondholders cannot feel they are being overly hit,” said one banker.Given this, another option that some have considered is the issuance of a form of contingent capital which might convert into capital at times of stress, although pre-emption rights might make it difficult to execute.

31 notes Tags: RPTCould bank recapitalisation kill the patient

Oct 14 '11

Indian shares fall early; financials down


The 50-share NSE index was trading down 0.24 percent at 5,065.90 points.

32 notes Tags: Indian shares fall early financials down