Showing posts with label hedge funds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hedge funds. Show all posts

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Preying on Puerto Rico: how hedge funds & bad trade deals led to bankruptcy

Puerto Rican anti-austerity protesters rally in Manhattan, July 13 
This week America experienced the biggest municipal default in its history. This is no Detroit. The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, with a population of almost 4 million, ran out of money and missed a payment on its $72 billion debt.

The crisis has been likened to that of Greece as creditors call for — you guessed it — austerity, austerity and more austerity to settle the debt. For an island already suffering more than 12 percent unemployment (higher than any state), budget cuts would promise more pain.

With three thousand of our brothers and sisters belonging to Teamsters Local 901 in San Juan, Puerto Rico's debt crisis hits close to home. And the sources of the problem are all too familiar.

An exodus of workers caused by corporate-backed trade deals are among the culprits, as Think Progress explains:
Depending who you ask in Puerto Rico, the debt crisis was caused by neo-colonial and imperialist policies from the U.S., the Puerto Rican government’s wasteful overspending and corruption, or the cadre of hedge funds that are currently profiting from the island’s woes. Add to that toxic mix a series of free-trade agreements that triggered mass outsourcing, and a population in rapid decline due to out-migration, and you arrive where we are today, with the government on the hook for tens of billions of dollars.
Beyond anti-worker trade policies, the corporate greed behind Puerto Rico's problems has another ugly face: hedge funds. Circling the island like vultures over the carcass they helped kill, hedge funds with fingerprints all over the debt disaster want extreme austerity imposed on the U.S. territory.

According to the organization Hedge Clippers, it's companies with names like BlueMountain Capital Management and Stone Lion Capital Partners that are at the heart of the crisis:
Several groups of hedge funds have bought up large chunks of Puerto Rican debt at discounts and have also pushed the island to borrow at extremely favorable terms for creditors. At the same time, they are also using the island as a tax haven. Known as “vulture funds,” these investors have followed a similar game plan in other debt crises, in countries such as Greece and Argentina. The spoils they ultimately seek are not just bond payments, but structural reforms and privatization schemes that give them extraordinary wealth and power.
A report commissioned by these funds recommends cutting the minimum wage, laying off teachers, selling off public assets and slashing workers' retirement benefits.

What makes Puerto Rico more vulnerable is that, unlike Detroit, it's not protected by Chapter 9 bankruptcy laws. Bills recently introduced in Congress — where Puerto Rico has no voting representation — would give the island Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection and disarm creditors. That legislation doesn't appear likely to pass and the White House has already said no to a bailout like the one so quickly given to the Wall Street vultures in 2008.

But Puerto Rico is not Greece. Yes, the austerity being pushed by creditors would almost certainly mean a vicious cycle of economic despair in Greek fashion, and Puerto Rico cannot turn to the IMF for help. But as economist Paul Krugman points out, the human impact of the crisis has been far less severe because Puerto Rico has so far been shielded from austerity. Even as its economy sank, the U.S. government continued to uphold the commonwealth's safety net in the form of Social Security, Medicare and other programs. Cutting welfare won't solve the crisis, however. Because, as Krugman explains, out-migration brought on by outsourced jobs (caused by bad trade deals) is central to the economic problems on the island.

Many activists in Puerto Rico are calling for debt forgiveness. Others are more visceral, saying the hedge fund millionaires who caused so much of the mess can shove it.

Martha QuiƱones Dominguez, an economics professor at the University of Puerto Rico, says what's needed is an independent audit to see which creditors' claims are valid and which aren't. The island needs to raise taxes on corporations and the rich, she said, as well as invest in sustainable development to cut down on dependency and imports.

While corporate powers are pursuing another mammoth trade deal in the Pacific, similar trade regimes have bankrupted another economy in the Caribbean.

As for the hedge funds plotting against Puerto Rican workers and families, these are the same forces pushing austerity and privatization on the U.S. mainland. If they succeed in Puerto Rico, they will be more powerful than they already are — and more dangerous.  

Monday, January 5, 2015

Today's Teamster News 01.05.15

Teamsters
NYCLASS flyers aim to convince New Yorkers that horse-carriage ban supports Bill de Blasio’s ‘progressive agenda’  New York Daily News   ...“There’s nothing progressive about taking away jobs for 300 families,” said George Miranda, the head of Teamsters Joint Council 16...
Trade
A New Threat Looms on the Horizon: TISA  Economy in Crisis   ...The Trade in Services Agreement (TISA) covers 50 countries and 68.2 percent of world trade in services. The U.S. and the European Union (EU) are the main proponents of the agreement. If enacted, the agreement would severely limit the ability of the U.S. to regulate the financial sector...
War on Workers
Why New Credit Cards May Fall Short on Fraud Control  Wall Street Journal   ...Big U.S. banks are steering clear of an advanced security measure used in credit cards around the world, opting for a system that is more convenient for shoppers but may leave them vulnerable to fraud...
Tax Inversion Remains (Huge)  naked capitalism   ...The recent Treasury measures raised legal obstacles, but the heart of the problem remains unaddressed...
Coca-Cola’s anti-American outsourcing scheme: How Big Soda gets the public to shoulder its costs  Salon   ...“Citizen Coke: The Making of Coca-Cola capitalism,” traces the history of Coke’s empire through the company’s reliance on offloading its costs and risks in precisely this way, tapping into public goods like curbside recycling and municipal water systems while eschewing ownership of the resources and infrastructure needed to produce its iconic beverage...
Anti-terror plan to spy on toddlers 'is heavy-handed’  The Telegraph   ...Nursery school staff and registered childminders must report toddlers at risk of becoming terrorists, under counter-terrorism measures proposed by the [British] Government...
U.S. health worker arrives in Nebraska for Ebola evaluation  Reuters   ...An American health care worker possibly exposed to the Ebola virus in Sierra Leone arrived at a hospital in Omaha on Sunday for evaluation and any necessary treatment, an official said...
Miscellaneous
Jaguar Demos a Car That Keeps an Eye on Its Driver  Technology Review   ...An Australian company called Seeing Machines is turning sensing inward with technology that focuses on drivers themselves in hopes of reducing distracted and drowsy driving...
Auto Industry Galvanized After Record Recall Year  New York Times   ...More than 60 million vehicles have been recalled in the United States, double the previous annual record in 2004. In all, there have been about 700 recall announcements — an average of two a day — affecting the equivalent of one in five vehicles on the road...
The Future of Getting Arrested  The Atlantic   ...Several cities have recently put in place networks of microphone-based gunshot sensors, and others are likely to adopt similar systems. When a sensor picks up a suspicious noise, a computer program analyzes the sound and, if it resembles gunfire, determines its point of origin to within a few yards...
Princeton graduate, 30, 'who shot dead his $200m hedge fund founder father, 70, in NYC apartment' arrested after he 'went on the run and barricaded himself in his Manhattan home'  Daily Mail   ...A Princeton graduate has been arrested after he allegedly executed his multimillionaire hedge-funder father at the family's Manhattan apartment on Sunday...

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Meet Campbell Brown, union-busting shill for hedge funds that want to eradicate public education

Campbell Brown, once a CNN news reader, is now trying to bust teachers unions and turn public schools over to Wall Street.

Nice.

She recently appeared on The Colbert Report to talk about her new group, 'Partnership for Educational Justice. She pretended the group was just 'helping' New York parents eliminate tenure, something she knows very little about. Her New York legal challenge follows the Vergara decision in California. According to education historian Diane Ravitch,
The plaintiffs argued that poor and minority children suffered because they had ineffective teachers who could not be fired. Lawyers for the teachers unions maintained that the causes of low performance were poverty and inadequate school funding. The plaintiffs prevailed and promised to take their cause to other states with strong teacher job protections, like New Jersey and New York.
The NEA was not pleased:
The lawsuit was brought by deep-pocketed corporate special interests intent on driving a corporate agenda geared toward privatizing public education and attacking educators.
Anyhoo, Campbell Brown had a rough time of it on the Colbert show, refusing to answer Colbert's questions about who was funding her group. She said she couldn’t say because she had to protect them -- perhaps from the moms outside the studio holding handmade signs.

Here's the reason she couldn't say whose backing her, compliments of Charles Pierce at Esquire:
Quite simply, Campbell Brown is not in this for the kids. She's running a con on behalf of some pretty shady people.
(One of those shady people is Paul Singer, a hedge fund manager who profits off poor indebted countries. For example, he bought $400 million in debt from the Congo for $11 million and was repaid $127 million. He did the same in Peru and Argentina. He is not interested in helping poor people.)

Continues Pierce on Campbell Brown's backers:
Here's the Board of Directors. I see a powerhouse lawyer, a private equity cowboy, and three people who are already experienced in the school "reform" movement, one of whom once worked the beat for all-around union-buster Chris Christie. (And Howard Fuller's institute at my alma mater is heavily financed by the Bradley and Walton Foundations, both huge reservoirs of wingnut welfare.) I do not see any actual teachers, unless you count Brown's year of teaching English to the Czechs. One can extrapolate from this that the corporate backers of this latest scheme are even less connected to actual education.
Pierce observes that Brown is stepping into the shoes of disgraced education 'reformer' Michelle Rhee:
She ... spent a year teaching English in Czechoslovakia, which I guess qualifies her for her current job, being a public spokesperson for the latest attempt to privatize American public education, Michelle (Big Grift) Rhee having apparently run her course as the rake in this long con, what with the cheating scandal and the big salary and all that sweet corporate sugar. The make-education-a-business scamsters needed a new face for the operation. Enter Campbell Brown, B.A. in political science, and professional communicator.


Monday, December 24, 2012

Today's Teamster News 12.24.12

Art Pope, Koch Brothers Ally, Picked To Run North Carolina Budget  Huffington Post   ...On Thursday, when the incoming North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory (R) announced that Art Pope, the state's single largest donor and a founding board member of the Koch brothers' Americans for Prosperity, would be in charge of his state's budget as deputy budget director...
The Crass Cynicism of Right-to-Work Laws  Counterpunch   ...in the neo-liberal order that arose in the aftermath of the PATCO strike and, later, the coal miners’ strike in Great Britain, capitalists found that they again have everything to gain by reverting back to their old ways: enriching themselves by impoverishing their workers. This is why the most nefarious among them are now pouring money into efforts to legislate the right to work...
Right-to-work states have lower unemployment but also lower wages  Charlotte Business Journal   ...In the Northeast, where no states have right-to-work laws in place, the employer cost per worker per hour, including benefits, is highest in the nation at $33.18, according to the report. The cheapest labor, $26.32 per worker per hour, is in the South, where all but a couple of states have right-to-work laws on the books...
Yvonne White: Repealing right-to-work is a matter of economic justice (opinion)  Detroit Free Press   ...Decades before passage of the Civil Rights Act, labor unions served as the ladder to the middle class for people of color. In Michigan this month, a coalition of anti-worker interests swept away years of progress by crippling unions in the state where organized labor was born...
When Hedge Funds Trump Governments  Economic Populist   ...While Greece suffers to the point of revolution and suicide, hedge funds made out like bandits on Greek sovereign debt...
Gasoline Prices near Low for Year, Expected to Increase  Calculated Risk   ...It looks like prices will finish the year near the low, but probably increase soon...
Why Do Americans Have Less Vacation Time than Anyone Else?  Big Think   ...yes, the United States is the only OECD country that does not require employers to provide even a day of paid leave to its employees...

Friday, September 23, 2011

Today's Teamster News 09.23.11

Private Prison Plan Headed to Court  Capitol News Service   ...A plan to let a private company operate a dozen state prisons in South west Florida will get a crucial hearing next week. the plan has been controversial because of the size of the privatization and because of the way it was done...
Largest state unions won't seek recertification by Thursday deadline  Milwaukee Journal Sentinel   ...The legislation also requires that unions go through yearly recertification votes to keep their official status...To win..., unions must get 51% of the vote of all the members of their bargaining unit...
SB 5 debate prompts both sides to talk of fairness  Columbus Dispatch   ... State Rep. Connie Pillich said there would be no real collective bargaining if Issue 2 is passed, creating a “patently unfair” system for workers...
Malloy targets hedge funds as key players in state's economy  newstimes.com   ...Malloy ... told more than 200 (hedge fund professionals) ... that he wants Connecticut to be seen as a state that welcomes hedge fund operators...
US Constitution Week is Vetoed by Republican-Appointed Benton Harbor, Michigan, Czar  Buzzflash   ...the state-appointed manager of Benton Harbor declared the city council resolution honoring the US Constitution as null and void...
Imported melons cause illness  Trade Reform   ...Central American produce can be grown, for example, using chemicals that are banned in the U.S. Del Monte now is upset that their racket can’t continue unabated...

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Bankster earns $5 bln, pays less taxes than you

ABC has the story:
A huge Wall Street payday is raising questions as to whether the nation's top earners should benefit from tax breaks while so many unemployed Americans continue to struggle. Hedge fund manager John Paulson made more than $5 billion in personal profits last year, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday. The jaw-dropping figure works out to roughly $159 rolling in every single second.
Most of his profit is considered long-term capital gains, so he'll pay 15 percent in taxes. That's because of a tax loophole that billionaires have fought tooth and nail to keep (and Congress has let them). Most American workers pay income taxes at a rate of about 26 percent (not to mention a slew of state taxes).

What's disturbing is that Paulson apparently didn't make his money by investing in businesses that create jobs. Instead, he made bets on Wall Street, this year on gold.

TeamsterNation did a little google search and learned that $5 billion is about the gross domestic product of an entire nation -- Malawi. In fact it's MORE than the gross domestic product of Grenada, Gambia, Fiji, Barbados or Belize.

Gross.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Today's Teamster News 12.14.10

YRC's consolidation plans could bring jobs to KC  Kansas City Star
Holidays are feasts for package delivery companies  Raleigh News Observer   ...Industrywide, holiday shipments are expected to be up - a boon for businesses like FedEx and larger rival UPS...
GM Offers Buyouts to Skilled Workers  Wall Street Journal   ...offering buyouts and early-retirement incentives in hopes of persuading up to 3,000 skilled-trades workers to leave U.S. plants...
GOP Unmoved by Miners' Health Concerns While MSHA Cracks Down on Black Lung, Scofflaws  Huffington Post   ...Republicans blocked passage of a new bill Wednesday that would have enabled the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) to more effectively hold repeat offender mine owners accountable and to better protect miners' lives...
Obama meeting CEOs — now how about workers? (opinion)  Chicago Sun-Times  ...While Wall Street and corporate leaders have expressed displeasure with the president’s reform agenda — on health care and financial reform particularly — the reality is that corporations are making record profits
Senate votes for tax cut deal. What's route through House?  Washington Post   ...The deal is expected to clear the House with a combination of strong GOP support and some backing among moderate Dems...
More talk of severe budget cuts to follow tax cut deal  firedoglake   ...Anyone who thinks there won’t be spending cuts – in the first year – passed by the Congress (plenty of Democrats agree with this philosophy, especially in the Senate) that cancel out the stimulus from this deal, are living on another planet...
Incoming GOP Financial Services Chairman: Washington's Role Is "To Serve The Banks"  Alternet
How hedge funds create criminals  Harvard Business Review  ...Hedge funds are playing the role of Wall Street villain...

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Should the top 1% own most of the U.S.?


Oops, they already do.

That's according to "A Hedge Fund Republic," a great column today by Nicholas Kristof in the New York Times. It's about income inequality in this country. Kristof had to apologize to banana republics for comparing them with the United States. Apparently, banana republics like Nicaragua, Venezuela and Guyana are more equal than the United States. Kristof writes
...inequality in the United States has soared to levels comparable to those in Argentina six decades ago — with 1 percent controlling 24 percent of American income in 2007.

Here's another stunning statistic from our friends at the Economic Policy Institute: The top 1 percent of Americans owns 34 percent of America’s private net worth. 

Oh, and did we mention that 50 million Americans live in hunger?