Avid Trader Official Blog: Evening Market Update

Posted by on July 30th, 2010

The US equity markets dipped out of the gates on Friday, but managed to recover and hover near the flatline for most of the day. The early weakness was due to the release of US 2Q GDP, which showed a slower-than-anticipated rate of economic growth and a smaller-than-forecasted increase in personal consumption. However, positive reports on consumer sentiment and Midwest manufacturing activity helped to improve sentiment and move the Dow into positive territory for the week. Earnings reports headlined the equity front, as Dow members Merck & Co and Chevron both beat the Street’s bottom-line projections, but failed to meet revenue expectations. Elsewhere, MetLife, Amgen and McAfee all reported earnings that topped analysts’ expectations, while Genworth Financial fell short of operating earnings forecasts. Treasuries moved higher on the GDP announcement and managed to hold onto gains throughout the day.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 Index were both flat, closing at 10,466 and 1,102, respectively, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 3 points (0.1%) to 2,255. in moderate volume, 1.2 billion shares were traded on the NYSE and 2.1 billion shares were traded on the Nasdaq. Crude oil rose $0.50 to $78.86 per barrel, wholesale gasoline gained $0.01 to $2.10 per gallon, while the Bloomberg gold spot price advanced $12.93 to $1,181.18 per ounce. Elsewhere, the Dollar Index-a comparison of the US dollar to six major world currencies-was flat at 81.62. for the week, including dividends, the DJIA gained 0.4%, the S&P 500 Index lost 0.1%, and the Nasdaq Composite declined 0.7%.

Dow member Merck & Co. inc. (MRK $34) reported 2Q EPS ex-items of $0.86, three cents above the Reuters estimate, with revenues dipping 1.6% year-over-year (y/y) to $11.3 billion, short of the $11.5 billion that analysts were expecting. The drugmaker said it had strong performances in consumer care and animal health products. MRK lowered its full-year EPS outlook. MRK traded lower.

Fellow Dow component Chevron Corp. (CVX $76) posted 2Q earnings of $2.70 per share, compared to the $2.44 that the Street had forecasted, with revenues jumping 27.5% y/y to $51 billion, compared to the $52.2 billion that was anticipated. CVX said revenues grew mainly due to higher prices for crude oil, natural gas and refined products, which also help grow its upstream earnings-exploration and production-while its downstream profits-refining-rose on improved margins. CVX finished higher.

MetLife inc. (MET $42) was nicely higher after the health insurer posted 2Q EPS ex-items of $1.23, above the $1.00 that analysts were expecting, while revenues, which increased 5% y/y to $12.8 billion, came in below the $13.1 billion that the Street was looking for. MET said it benefitted from strong underwriting results, higher net investment income, and its disciplined approach to expense management.

Genworth Financial inc. (GNW $14) reported Q2 EPS of $0.08, although operating earnings, which exclude investment gains and losses, came in at $0.24, which was four cents below analysts’ estimates. The company’s life insurance business posted a 45% decrease y/y in earnings, although revenues in that business line increased 30%. Shares of GNW fell over 14%.

Amgen inc. (AMGN $55) announced adjusted 2Q earnings of $1.38 per share, above the $1.30 that was expected, with revenues increasing 2% y/y to $3.8 billion, topping the $3.7 billion that analysts expected. AMGN lowered its full-year revenue forecast but maintained its EPS outlook. Shares were higher.

Shares of McAfee inc. (MFE $33) climbed over 9% after the software maker posted 2Q earnings ex-items of $0.63, three cents higher than the Street’s forecast, while revenue grew 4.4% y/y to $489.2 million. The company noted particularly strong revenue growth in North America and has made two recent acquisitions of mobile security firms, making the number of internet-connected devices on which McAfee can put its technology “nearly endless”, according the company’s CEO.

2Q output slows, but consumer sentiment and Midwest activity reports soften the blow

The first look at 2Q Gross Domestic Product, the broadest measure of economic output, was released this morning and showed a 2.4% annualized rate of growth, compared to the steep upwardly revised 3.7% gain in 1Q, and the 2.6% expansion that economists surveyed by Bloomberg had forecasted. Personal consumption rose 1.6%, short of the 2.4% that was forecasted and the large downwardly revised 1.9% growth seen in 1Q.

The GDP Price Index rose 1.8%, above the consensus of economists, which called for a 1.1% increase. The core PCE Index, which excludes food and energy, increased 1.1%, just above expectations which called for a 1.0% increase. The methodology used to calculate GDP was updated and revisions were made to the prior three years of data.

Breaking down the report, consumer spending added 1.15% and inventory building added 1.05%, both of which were smaller contributions than in 1Q, while business spending on equipment and software contributed 1.36%, up from 1.24% in 1Q. Meanwhile, residential construction added 0.6%, seen as somewhat unsustainable, but commercial real estate investment added 0.1%, the first positive figure since 2Q 2008. a large portion of the slower rate in 2Q versus 1Q was due to the 2.8% negative impact of net exports, as imports outpaced exports, which may have been due to auto-related manufacturing. Lastly, federal government spending contributed 0.7%, and state and local government added 0.2%.

Meanwhile, the Employment Cost Index for 2Q gained 0.5%, matching the consensus.

Elsewhere, the final University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index increased by a larger amount than initially reported in the preliminary release, rising from the preliminary reading of 66.5 to 67.8 in July, compared to the expectation of economists, who forecasted an increase to 67.0. However, the index sits below the 76.0 reading it hit in June, which was the highest level since January 2008. The upward revision came as the current economic conditions component of the report increased from 75.5 in the preliminary report to 76.5, and the economic outlook component rose from 60.6 to 62.3.

Finally, the Chicago PMI unexpectedly improved, rising from 59.1 in June to 62.3 in July, compared to the decline to 56.0 that was forecasted by economists. The index of business activity in the Midwest continued to expand as a reading of 50 is the demarcation point between expansion and contraction, and the employment component of the report continued to expand, along with increases in production, new orders, order backlogs, and inventories.

Treasuries finished higher after gaining ground on the release of the GDP report. The yield on the two-year note lost 2 bps to 0.55%, the yield on the 10-year note declined 7 bps to 2.91% and the yield on the 30-year bond fell 9 bps to 3.99%.

Disappointing economic news out of Japan highlights international front

European economic data was marked by reports showing UK consumer confidence fell by more than expected in July, reaching the lowest level since August 2009, and retail sales in Germany-Europe’s largest economy-declined much more than anticipated in June. However, Sweden’s 2Q GDP expanded by a larger amount than forecasted, Italy’s unemployment rate unexpectedly declined to 8.5% in June, and the euro-zone unemployment rate remained unchanged at 10% as expected. in other economic reports across the pond, euro-zone consumer prices increased 1.7% y/y to match expectations, Italy’s consumer prices rose more than forecasted, while its producer prices increased at a rate that was below expectations, and Spain’s unemployment rate surprisingly inched higher to 20.09% in 2Q.

in Asia/Pacific news, Japan reported that its jobless rate unexpectedly rose from 5.2% in May to 5.3% in June, above the expectation of economists that anticipated the rate to remain unchanged. other reports that were to the downside in Japan included a surprising drop in industrial production, which fell 1.5% month-over-month (m/m) in June, compared to the forecast of a 0.2% gain, construction orders fell over 10% y/y, vehicle production slowed, but came in at a 25.9% y/y rate, and the nation’s housing starts rose by an amount that was less than half of what was expected. Meanwhile, Japan’s Consumer Price Index fell on a core level-excluding fresh food and energy-by 1.5% y/y in June, a slightly smaller amount than the 1.6% drop that was anticipated. Elsewhere in the region, South Korea’s industrial production rose more than forecasted in June, while the country’s Leading Index deteriorated in June, China released a survey showing business conditions improved in July from June and Thailand’s manufacturing production, business sentiment, and trade surplus all improved.

back in the Americas, Canada joined the US in announcing a smaller increase in economic growth than economists were forecasting. GDP increased 0.1% in May, compared to the 0.2% increase expected, and following a stagnant reading in April.

Bulls pause as data is the cause

The equity markets appeared to be poised to continue their recent upward momentum, gaining ground on Monday, aided by continued positive reports from the corporate sector, with FedEx Corp. (FDX $83) raising its 1Q and full-year outlooks. Also, an unexpected surge in new home sales-albeit off of a record low-contributed to the upbeat start to the week, as the report added to a recent string of relatively favorable data on the housing market-along with a separate report that showed an increase in the S&P/CaseShiller Home Price Index for May. However, as the week wore on, sentiment seemed to shift courtesy of some disappointing data that gave traders a reason to contemplate the recent momentum in the equity markets and the health of the recovery, prompting some profit taking, and stocks gave up gains and finished mixed for the week.

although 2Q earnings season continued to show mostly better-than-expected results, this week some disappointing reports out of the tech sector, headlined by Symantec Corp’s (SYMC $13) soft sales and guidance that missed expectations, along with lackluster results from consumer products firms Kellogg Co. (K $50) and Colgate-Palmolive Co. (CL $79), commanded attention and helped motivate some profit taking. Moreover, some reports from the US economic calendar fostered some economic uneasiness to stymie sentiment and stall the rally, such as an unexpected drop in durable goods orders and consumer confidence falling more than forecasted. However, a large piece of the week’s dampened sentiment came from the Federal Reserve, as voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) offered a warning about deflation, while the Fed released its Beige Book-summarizing anecdotal data of business activity across all Fed Districts in the US-which showed slowing economic activity. The disappointing economic docket culminated with Friday’s release of the slower-than-forecasted rate of 2Q GDP growth.

Economic calendar will continue to ring labor and ISM reports wait in the wings

next week there will be a heavy slate of potential market moving reports that will make up the economic calendar and will waste no time as the ISM Manufacturing Index will be released on Monday, forecasted to decline from 56.2 in June to 54.0 in July, posting the twelfth-consecutive month of expansion, as depicted by a reading above 50. Meanwhile, the compliment to Monday’s manufacturing report will come on Wednesday in the form of the ISM Non-Manufacturing Index, and the gauge of service sector activity is forecasted to dip from 53.8 in June to 53.0 in July-the seventh-consecutive month of expansion. The ISM reports, especially manufacturing data, have maintained that although growth has slowed, it is not contracting.

The health of the consumer will also be in focus following Tuesday’s release of personal income and spending for June, forecasted to show modest growth of 0.2% and 0.1%, respectively, and any better-than-forecasted strength in the release will likely stimulate sentiment and support recovery sentiment as the consumer accounts for the lion’s share of the economy.

However, the headlining event will come on the final day of the week with the release of the labor report, which is expected to show nonfarm payrolls were 60,000 jobs lighter in July, and the unemployment rate increased from 9.5% in June to 9.6% in July. But, given the noise from the government’s temporary hiring for the 2010 Census, the change in private sector payrolls-forecasted to increase by 100,000 jobs-may be the report that garners the most attention. The employment situation, along with housing, are pistons of the economic engine that have yet to fire, and any hint of stronger-than-forecasted job growth could help solidify arguments that the economy continues down the recovery path offering further support to the equity markets.

other US reports due out next week include: construction spending, factory orders, pending home sales, MBA mortgage applications, ADP employment change, weekly initial jobless claims, and consumer credit.

on the international calendar for next week, euro-area PMI manufacturing and service sector reports will be released, along with similar manufacturing data from China, and euro-zone PPI retail sales, while the European Central Bank’s and Bank of England’s monetary policy meetings will dominate headlines in Europe. other international reports include: Japan’s Leading Index, UK PPI and manufacturing, Italian GDP, German industrial production, Canada’s unemployment rate, and the Reserve Bank of Australia’s interest rate decision.

Avid Trader Official Blog: Evening Market Update

Low Mortgage Rates Met With Blank Stares

Posted by on June 19th, 2010

by Nick Timiraos

More evidence is out on Wednesday that the pool of homeowners who can refinance under todays more stringent lending standards has been exhausted: Mortgage rates have hovered close to their lowest levels in decades, and yet refinance demand fell last week from the previous week.

Demand for home-purchase mortgages also continued to fall last week, according to the weekly application survey from the Mortgage Bankers Association. that means there have now been five straight weeks of declining demand for purchase mortgages, which have fallen to their lowest level since February 1997.

Home buyers have not yet returned to the market following the expiration of the home-buyer tax credit at the end of April,” said Michael Fratantoni, the MBA’s vice president of research and economics.

Early indications show that home sales activity plunged in May, the first month after the tax credits expiration. Sales in markets including Minneapolis, Denver, Seattle, Phoenix and new Jersey were down by around 25% in May from one year earlier.

Most analysts expected housing demand to fall after the tax credit expired, but few had predicted that mortgage rates would tumble to such low levels after the Federal Reserve ended its purchases of mortgage-backed securities in March. Average rates on 30-year fixed-rate loans fell to 4.81% last week from 4.83% at the end of May.

Mortgage rates tracked by Zillows Mortgage Marketplace index reached their lowest level of the current cycle on Tuesday, with participating brokers quoting an average 4.58% rate for 30-year fixed-rate loans.

Nearly half of all borrowers with 30-year conforming fixed-rate mortgages have mortgage rates of 5.75% or higher and could reduce their rates by a full percentage point if they refinanced at current rates, according to investment bank Credit Suisse. And a one-percentage-point decline in mortgage rates can cut $1,500 off the annual payment on a $200,000 30-year fixed-rate mortgage.

But many borrowers cant refinance because they dont have enough equity, their credit isnt strong enough, or theyre income has fallen in recent years. Others may qualify but face extra fees that make refinancing too expensive to justify. also, many of those who could refinance likely did so when rates fell to comparable levels last year in March, August and December.

Follow Nick on Twitter for more on housing and mortgages: @NickTimiraos

Low Mortgage Rates Met With Blank Stares

Lori Van Dusen Ranked in Barron's Top 100 Women Financial Advisors

Posted by on June 12th, 2010

WASHINGTON, Jun 9, 2010 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX) –Barron’s has named Lori Van Dusen, executive director at Convergent Wealth Advisors, to its annual list of America’s top 100 Women Financial Advisors. Van Dusen was ranked 12th on the list. in addition to this recognition, Van Dusen has received many honors throughout her career, including most recently being ranked in the top 50 Advisors in the state of New York by Barron’s (2010). Van Dusen was also ranked in 2009 by Barron’s as one of the top 100 Independent Financial Advisors.

“It is an honor to be recognized as one of America’s top 100 Women Financial Advisors,” said Van Dusen. “Our team works hard to consistently provide our clients with the best possible service and investment solutions. this recognition from Barron’s is a direct result of this hard work and commitment to our clients.”

The Barron’s rankings reflect the volume of assets overseen by the advisors and their teams, revenues generated for the firms, and the quality of the advisors’ practices.

About Convergent Wealth Advisors

Convergent Wealth Advisors is a recognized industry leader in wealth management, advising on over $13 billion in assets (as of March 31, 2010). Convergent provides investment consulting services and customized wealth management solutions, including advice on concentrated stock strategies, alternative investments, collateralized lending, specialty financings, and insurance and estate planning, to over 350 ultra-high net worth individuals, institutions and family offices. Convergent is headquartered outside of Washington, D.C., with offices in Los Angeles, New York, Portland (OR), Rochester (NY), and Seattle. Convergent is a majority owned subsidiary of Convergent Capital Management, which is a subsidiary of City National Corporation /quotes/comstock/13*!cyn/quotes/nls/cyn (CYN 56.45, +0.10, +0.18%) , the parent company of City National Bank.

This news release was distributed by GlobeNewswire, www.globenewswire.com

SOURCE: Convergent Wealth Advisors; City National Corporation

CONTACT: Convergent Wealth AdvisorsMedia Contact:Laura Smith301.998.0304Laura.Smith@ConvergentWealth.com

(C) Copyright 2010 GlobeNewswire, Inc. all rights reserved.

Lori Van Dusen Ranked in Barron's top 100 Women Financial Advisors

7 Ways to Make Money Online With the Swedish Smorgasbord …

Posted by on May 25th, 2010

>>

Have you tried making money online, but failed miserably using the guru’s tactics? You are not alone. there is somebody starting a new online business every 11 seconds and MORE than 99% fail. The reason they fail is simple… there is a lot of faulty information out there about the “make money online topic”.

In this article I’ll give you 7 ways to make money online, and there really is no smorgasbord… It’s just a way to make you read this article, because you need it AND I’m Swedish, so I thought it fit in.

Anyway, you really need to listen to what I’m telling you cause it might help you make your first dollar.

Here are my 7 ways to make money:

#1: Get a website and sell something on it that you create. (This is the hardest one). this requires some work and effort in the first few days, or weeks, but once it’s up and running there is no end to how much you can earn.

#2: Create a blog and promote it using social bookmarking. this is something I do in a lot of niche markets and know a lot of people who are successful with this type of income.

#3: Sell your information products or ebooks, CDs, DVDs and more on eBay.

#4: Get resale right and start selling the product as your own (very profitable).

#5: Work as a freelancer, writing blogs, copywriting, articles, videos or whatever you are good at.

#6: Start working as an affiliate for ClickBank and start generating sales for other people (by far the easiest).

#7: do bummarketing and start making money for free. this is really powerful and works for anybody who puts their mind to it.

Those are just some of the many hundreds of ways to make money online. Another one is AdSense and placing ads on a blog, selling adspace and even selling links for authority sites.

All of this can be done relatively easily. It’s like they say, “If you can read and open an email account, you can make money online” and it’s true.

I’ve sat across many students experiencing trouble, and having shaky hands, but they still put in the effort and made a lot of money online from learning the secrets of affiliate marketing or selling their own ebooks online.

If this is something you want to do, go lookup experts who know how to make it happen for you. They are everywhere, you just need to know where to look.

7 Ways to make Money Online With the Swedish Smorgasbord …

Research Says…Americans Are Ready to Rebuild Their Financial Security

Posted by on March 17th, 2010

DES MOINES, Iowa–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Calling all Americans: get an advisor. get a plan. get rebuilding. That’s the message from the Principal Financial Group® in its launch today of the new multi-faceted America Rebuilds campaign including an online planning center at www.AmericaRebuilds.com.

“The country has been through tough economic times, but the resilient spirit of Americans is evident everywhere, including in their desire to rebuild their financial futures,” said Mary O’Keefe, senior vice president and chief marketing officer, The Principal®. “There has never been a better time for people to rebuild. We can help by connecting those who need assistance with those who can provide it.”

The numbers tell the story

While people are ready to rebuild, they are at different phases in the reconstruction process – some are emerging from the rubble, and some are farther along. according to the latest Principal Financial Well-Being IndexSM (1st Quarter 2010) – a survey of working and retired Americans conducted for The Principal by Harris Interactive – the vast majority of American workers (84 percent) and retirees (71 percent) are beginning to take some action to rebuild their financial well-being. Since the recession began in 2008, Americans said they have started to rebuild by spending less money (62 percent of workers; 54 percent of retirees); paying down debt (45 percent of workers, 29 percent of retirees); and increasing savings in an emergency fund (22 percent of workers; 14 percent of retirees). they also sought online tools or help from a financial advisor to better manage their finances.

But the shift toward taking more personal financial responsibility did not start with the recession, it just accelerated it, O’Keefe said. Even before the crisis, people were behind in their retirement planning1, they were spending too much, and they were in debt. Americans learned painful financial lessons as a result of the downturn, including the need to have an emergency fund2, save more, pay off debt and protect their assets. As a result, financial behavior is beginning to shift, spurring Americans to rethink their spending and savings habits. Today more Americans say they’re ready to get back on track with their savings and start the new decade on the right financial footing3.

Help…I need somebody

The role of the financial advisor is more critical today than ever, O’Keefe said. two major events have collided to create an enormous need for guidance: 78 million Baby Boomers are approaching and entering retirement4 just as the worst economic crisis since the great Depression wreaked havoc on financial security. Yet despite renewed interest in their financial well-being, most Americans still do not quite know how to get there. most do not have a plan5. And they don’t want to go it alone. More Americans want professional financial help through a financial advisor today than just a year ago6.

The ‘New Normal?’

It remains to be seen if the shift in consumers’ financial behavior will be permanent, but resources like America Rebuilds provide a place to start. “The battle cry of America Rebuilds is to build on the paradigm shift by giving Americans timely and effective information to help them make planning, saving and investing part of their DNA,” O’Keefe said.

Rebuild toolbox — Online planning center

At the heart of the America Rebuilds campaign is the online hub, www.AmericaRebuilds.com, designed to engage, educate, inspire and motivate Americans to take action. The site features:

  • Educational tools, videos and guidance from third-party financial experts and advisors
  • Financial calculators
  • assistance finding an advisor
  • Financial tips and information

Time Warner partnership

O’Keefe said The Principal will drive traffic to AmericaRebuilds.com through a visible promotional partnership with Time Warner divisions, Time Inc. and Turner broadcasting, including Web content featuring financial expert Jean Chatzky. The campaign includes a category exclusive sponsorship of CNN’s “Building Up America” series across CNN, HLN and Airport Networks. Chatzky conducted interviews with a number of consumers and business owners in various stages of rebuilding that will be featured as real life video stories on AmericaRebuilds.com. according to Chatzky, “It’s clear that Americans – by and large – are trying to make the right financial moves. They’re reprioritizing, saving more, and spending less. But it’s also clear that they could use some help.”

In addition to the Time Warner partnership, The Principal’s rebuild advertisements will run throughout national print, broadcast, cable, financial trade and local business journals, as well as NCAA basketball and football event sponsorships.

Got mobile?

If that’s not enough, The Principal has created a convenient mobile website for advisors and people on the go. The mobile site allows users to evaluate their retirement goals through a planning calculator; receive useful and entertaining information about budgeting, saving and other goals; access savings tips; find an advisor; and schedule calendar reminders to contact their advisor. for more information, visit: https://m.principal.com/plan.

About the Principal Financial Group

The Principal Financial Group® (The Principal®)7 is a leader in offering businesses, individuals and institutional clients a wide range of financial products and services, including retirement and investment services, life and health insurance, and banking through its diverse family of financial services companies. a member of the Fortune 500, the Principal Financial Group has $284.7 billion in assets under management8 and serves some 18.9 million customers worldwide from offices in Asia, Australia, Europe, Latin America and the United States. Principal Financial Group, Inc. is traded on the new York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol PFG. for more information, visit www.principal.com.

1 “Retirement Confidence Survey.” Employee Benefit Research Institute. (2010): 43% of workers said in 2009 they have less than $10,000 in savings and investments.

2 Principal Financial Well-Being Index (4th Quarter 2009): 28% of workers and 22% of retirees said the top lesson learned in the past decade was having an emergency fund in the event of illness, disaster or job loss.

3 Principal Financial Well-Being Index (4th Quarter 2009): 2/3 of workers and 58% of retirees said they have reduced their overall spending in the past two months as a result of the current economy. 59% of workers, 53% retirees are tracking their finances more closely as a result of the downturn. Workers (74%) and retirees (77%) said they will spend less after the downturn ends. Workers have increased the amount they are saving for retirement in the past six months (18% at year end 2009 vs. 11% at year end 2008).

4 U.S. Bureau of the Census

5Principal Financial Well-Being Index (3rd Quarter 2009): 83% of workers with retirement savings do not have a plan for how they’ll transition savings into retirement income

6 “What a Difference a Year makes: a Supplemental Report on the Impact of the 2008-2009 Financial Crisis.” LIMRA International. (2009): In 2009, 61% of retirees had personal financial advisors compared to 56% in 2008.

7 “The Principal Financial Group” and “The Principal” are registered service marks of Principal Financial Services, Inc., a member of the Principal Financial Group.

8 As of December 31, 2009

Research says…Americans are Ready to Rebuild their Financial Security

Pay czar limits exec pay at still-struggling GMAC

Posted by on March 15th, 2010

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration’s pay czar is limiting 2010 compensation for top executives at GMAC Inc. because the auto finance giant continues to lose money and can’t yet repay its $16.3 billion taxpayer bailout, according to people familiar with the negotiations.

Only one of the top 25 earners at GMAC will earn more than $500,000 in cash, and CEO Michael Carpenter will receive only stock compensation and no cash, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the talks.

The agreements follow months of wrangling with Kenneth Feinberg, the Treasury Department’s special master for executive compensation. They reflect his concern that GMAC has no plan to return to profitability or repay its bailout.

Feinberg is expected next week to announce 2010 pay packages for the top 25 earners at companies that continue to rely on “extraordinary assistance” from the government, including GMAC, American International Group Inc., General Motors and Chrysler.

Last year, Feinberg allowed two GMAC executives to exceed the $500,000 cash cap, and granted Carpenter an annual pay package worth $9.5 million. after becoming CEO in November, Carpenter earned about $1.2 million, including about $120,000 cash, for six weeks’ work.

Officials in the Bush and Obama administrations said GMAC had to be rescued along with automakers General Motors and Chrysler because GMAC provides crucial financing for auto dealers.

But the company’s biggest financial problems come from subprime mortgages and other risky loans it financed in the years leading up to the financial crisis.

A watchdog report last week blasted the bailouts, saying officials might have saved taxpayers billions by putting GMAC’s non-auto businesses into bankruptcy and saving only the crucial auto finance arm.

The report also questioned Feinberg’s approval of Carpenter’s generous 2009 pay package.

GMAC spokeswoman Gina Proia said the company has a plan to repay fully its taxpayer bailouts. she said Carpenter discussed the plan in testimony before an oversight panel last month.

Carpenter told the group that GMAC will focus on its core business, cut costs, improve its access to private capital and eventually become profitable enough to obtain the needed funds from private investors.

Proia said the company was more specific in a presentation to its owners, but would not disclose the details because GMAC is not a publicly traded company.

The U.S. Treasury owns 56.3 percent of GMAC.

Separately, AIG has decided to return a promised $45 million in retention payments in part by reducing payments to former employees, according to people familiar with the negotiations.

Feinberg had threatened broader pay cuts if AIG could not come up with the money, which employees promised they would return after the payments sparked a public outcry.

AIG employees agreed to forgo most of the money, but holdouts among former employees refused, insisting they were legally entitled to the full payments.

The company now believes it has the legal authority to withhold a portion of the payments, according to another person familiar with the matter. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the company’s thinking.

Feinberg and an AIG spokesman would not comment.

Pay czar limits exec pay at still-struggling GMAC

Help line: Java updates keep PCs current

Posted by on February 9th, 2010

Q: Why am I continually getting requests to update Java? I am concerned at the amount of times it has to be updated and concerned about an outside source trying to gain access to my PC.

A: Java is the programming language developed by Sun Microsystems that is used to create many of the interactive Web applications you see, especially games and interactive online forms and so forth.

To be able to use these, you have to have the Java “runtime environment” installed on your computer. those who don’t have this can install it easily by going to www.java.com.

When you install Java, it also installs the Java Updater, which checks for updates to the software and alerts you so you can then install them.

Since this software is updated constantly, the notifications can seem to come in quite often. this is nothing to be concerned about. you can install these updates as they come in without risking your computer or your privacy. I strongly recommend keeping this software up to date, because it is possible the update addresses some bug or flaw in the software that will be corrected when the patch is applied.

If you want to take some control over the Java Updater, you can configure it by double-clicking the Java icon in the Control Panel and then clicking on the Update tab in the window that appears.

Here you can turn off updates altogether (not recommended) or you can change when and how often Java Updater checks for updates, using the options you see when you click on Advanced.

Q: my computer was attacked over the weekend by a trojan. I guess I let my guard down. But after spending six hours and a lot of money getting rid of it, I want to report this. who takes such reports?

A: unfortunately, viruses, spyware and trojans (collectively known as malware) are simply a fact of life when using your computer to access the Internet. To complicate matters, those responsible for orchestrating these attacks are adept at covering their tracks.

Any information you have about the origin of the attack probably will be useless in identifying the culprit, because it likely came from a computer that doesn’t even belong to the attacker.

Many antivirus and anti-spyware programs will report the details of any infection to the manufacturer automatically if you allowed for this during the setup. this information is used by these companies to help improve their detection and removal, but it is not reported to the authorities.

If you feel you have a valid complaint and enough information to identify the attacker, you can submit a complaint to the Federal Trade Commission at www.ftccomplaintassistant.gov. keep in mind that the FTC does not resolve individual consumer complaints. it collects information that allows the agency to detect patterns of wrongdoing, and may lead to investigations and prosecutions.

I don’t feel that tracking and reporting these Internet bad guys is a reasonable use of my time. I just keep my system protected as best I can and keep on moving.

The only exception I would make is if this happens to a computer you use on a corporate network. If you see suspicious behavior, you should report it to your IT department so IT can make sure that the company’s computers and network have not been compromised.

Write Jay Lee at helpline@chron.com. you can view more questions and answers at the help Line Blog at blogs.chron.com/helpline. Lee co-hosts the radio show Technology Bytes from 8-10 p.m. Wednesdays on KPFT 90.1 FM. the program is also available on the Internet at www.geekradio.com. Lee cannot personally answer all reader questions.

Help line: Java updates keep PCs current

Online Employer's ROI Calculator on Workplace Financial Program Is Free

Posted by on January 2nd, 2010

ORLANDO, Fla., Dec. 17 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — “In these difficult economic times more employers are investing in quality workplace financial programs because the return-on-investment (ROI) is often 3:1 or more,” says Dr. E. Thomas Garman, president, Personal Finance Employee Education Foundation (PFEEF).

A free online PFEEF ROI Calculator is available on the charitable foundation’s website (PersonalFinanceFoundation.org).

Employers can obtain their ROI estimate based on responses to six questions on the PFEEF website (PersonalFinanceFoundation.org), and they can immediately print out their projected ROI for providing employees with easy access to financial programs that genuinely improve personal financial behaviors.

Research shows when employees’ financial well-being increases through employer-provided financial education, work outcomes also improve.

PFEEF reports that for every dollar an employer invests in a quality workplace financial education program, they enjoy a $3 return on investment or more. the return is after accounting for the cost of the educational program. for example, the employer who invests $150 per employee for a workplace financial program PFEEF projects will earn a return of $450 within one year.

The return is based upon industry data and empirical research. Conservative calculations reveal improvements in ten employee work outcomes, such as job performance, turnover, absenteeism, health care costs, and less employee work time wasted dealing with personal financial concerns. PFEEF’s research goes back over 20 years and over 60 studies are on its website.

Upon request PFEEF also can prepare a very detailed employer-specific return-on-investment report that contains all of the assumptions and calculations to be shown to an employer’s management team. PFEEF can predict the employer’s return as well as prove it later following the delivery of financial education.

“Workers who learn to become better money managers and make better personal financial decisions are absent less, waste less time at work dealing with financial matters, perform their jobs better, reduce health care costs to the employer, and have fewer garnishments and Workers Compensation claims,” says PFEEF’s Director of Research, Dr. Aimee Prawitz.

“This translates into happier, healthier, more productive employees who go to work because they like working there. the positive outcomes for employers are real and tangible,” says Alan Gappinger, CEO of Heartland Institute, and a member of the PFEEF Board of Trustees.

“As stewards of employee well-being,” says Bill Pomeroy, President of the EDSA Group, and a member of the PFEEF Board of Trustees, “Employers should be willing to empower employees by providing them easy access to quality financial education, not simply to increase company profits, but because it is the right thing to do.”

SOURCE Personal Finance Employee Education Foundation

RELATED LINKS
personalfinancefoundations.org

Online Employer's ROI Calculator on Workplace Financial Program Is Free