Posts Tagged ‘President Obama’

Chicago 2016 Had its Rewards, But Also Risks

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

So Chicago was eliminated in the first round of International Olympic Committee voting as the host city for the 2016 Summer Olympics, a source of great surprise to many, particularly in light of Barack Obama making the final pitch personally.chicago202016

Still, one thing bears repeating:  no city hosting the games has ever made money from the Olympics. Los Angeles’ $233 million surplus only took direct expenses into account; it did not include indirect expenses such as security and infrastructure.  Montreal took 30 years to pay off their Olympic debt.  Nagano, Japan’s Olympics were so costly and controversial that the city’s Olympic organizers destroyed the games’ financial records.

“There has never been an Olympic Games that has made a profit,” notes Robert Barney, director of the International Centre for Olympic Studies at the University of Western Ontario and co-author of Selling the Five Rings:  The International Olympic Committee and the Rise of Olympic Commercialism.  Add in all costs and revenues “including federal allotments, state allotments, it’s always been that a debt has to be paid somewhere.”

On the plus side, Chicago 2016 would have been a tremendous boost to the city’s international trade, (though it would have impacted tourism only slightly).  Then there’s the unquantifiable brand enhancement.  Chicago 2016 might have been the catalyst to wipe away the moniker of the City of Al Capone forever.

In the spirit of good sportsmanship, we send our congratulations to the host city of the 2016 Summer Olympics – Rio de Janeiro.  The first South American city to host the games, few in Chicago can begrudge Rio its victory.

One Year After Financial Meltdown, Obama Counsels Caution

Monday, September 21st, 2009

On the first anniversary of the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the onset of the global financial crisis,  President Barack Obama used a Wall Street speech to call for stringent new regulation of United States markets.  After Lehman’s collapse, the American government infused billions of dollars into the financial system and took major stakes in Wall Street’s most famous names.  Although this action stabilized the system, it could not forestall a shrinking economy or the highest unemployment rate in 26 years.lehmanbros

“We can be confident that the storms of the past two years are beginning to break,” he said.  As the economy begins a “return to normalcy,” Obama said, “normalcy cannot lead to complacency.”

Lobbyists, lawmakers and even regulators so far have opposed proposals to more closely monitor the financial system. The five biggest banks – Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Bank of America – posted second-quarter 2009 profits totaling $13 billion.  That is more than twice their profits in the second quarter of 2008 and nearly two-thirds as much as the $20.7 billion they earned in the same timeframe two years ago – a time when the economy was considered strong.

Connecticut Senator Christopher Dodd, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, is the point man for formulating new rules.  President Obama wants stricter capital requirements for banks to prevent them from purchasing exotic financial products without keeping adequate cash on hand.  It was precisely this type of behavior that caused last year’s financial crisis.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke Likely to Keep His Job

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Federal Reserve chairman and Great Depression scholar Ben Bernanke will stay in his job for another four years if President Barack Obama gets his way.  There likely will be some contentious moments during the reconfirmation hearings as Senators grill him about bailing out Wall Street institutions deemed too big to fail.  He is expected to stay on.bernanke__150184gm-a

Former Fed governor Randall Kroszner, who resigned his post to return to the University of Chicago, believes that the president has made the right choice and that Bernanke’s “amazing and steady” leadership rescued the nation from a second Great Depression.  Mark Calabria, a policy scholar at the libertarian Cato Institute, disagrees and opines that Bernanke’s renomination “sends the worst possible message”.  Still, most experts think that retaining Bernanke is a smart move, especially now that the economy and financial markets are stabilizing.  “Love him or hate him, there’s strength in continuity,” says money manager Douglas Nardi of Legg Mason Investment Counsel.  “Things are going pretty well, and you don’t want to rock the boat.”

Bernanke faces some rough months ahead.  He will have to start pulling money out of the system that he flooded with cash last fall.  This is a judgment call full of political peril, because it could mean slowing economic growth to control inflation – even if unemployment is still hovering around the 10 percent mark.  In Kroszner’s opinion, Bernanke is significantly farther along in this process than the general public realizes.  The Fed provided approximately $1.5 trillion in short-term loans as of the end of last year, which helped keep swaps, commercial paper and other institutional markets from shutting down completely.

Obama’s Housing Plan Seeks to Help Homeowners in Trouble

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

Residential, Financing

Nine million homeowners can breathe a preliminary sigh of relief.  They may get to keep their homes now that President Obama has unveiled his ambitious – and larger than expected — $75 billion mortgage relief plan.  At the same time, the Treasury Department will double the size of its support of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  The government, which seized the mortgage finance companies last fall, will absorb up to $200 billion in losses at each company.

The massive Homeowner Stability Initiative is intended to help the five million borrowers who are said to be “under water” to refinance their home loans.  Additionally, it provides incentive payments to mortgage lenders to assist as many as four million families who are either already in or on the verge of foreclosure.

Obama chose the Phoenix area as the venue for his announcement because it has been hit hard by foreclosures.  He believes that putting a halt to foreclosures is key to turning around the economy.  The plan is sound and proof that Geithner can deliver specifics and bold initiatives when he needs to. bittinger_sinking_house1

It will be interesting to see if the President gets the bipartisan support that he wants from Congress to pass this vital legislation.  Obama, who likes to strike a fine balance between hope and skepticism, describes himself as an eternal optimist – though anything but a “sap”.  The Democratic majority in the House is comfortable enough that this legislation will ease through that chamber.  When the bill moves to the Senate, however, Obama may once again need to twist a few Republican arms to avoid a filibuster.