Finance topics

September 30, 2010

Obama tax plan: Who gets hit - and why

Filed under: economics — Tags: , , — Gogo @ 5:57 am

Roberton Williams is a senior fellow at the Urban Institute and contributor to TaxVox, the blog of the nonpartisan research organization Tax Policy Center. He was at the Congressional Budget Office from 1984 through 2006. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the writer.

President Obama’s plan to raise taxes on the nation’s highest income households may not quite mean what you think.

A closer look suggests that fewer people may get whacked than either Obama or his Republican critics suggest.

And for many of the victims, the club won’t be the president’s plan to raise rates to 36% and 39.6%. Those rate hikes are getting most of the attention, but the real cudgel would be higher taxes on capital gains and dividends going to high-earners.

First, let’s look at whom Obama’s plan would hit.

As most everyone knows by now, ever since his presidential campaign, Obama has promised to retain the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts for households with income below $250,000 and individuals making less than $200,000.

That seems clear enough, but candidate Obama never said what he meant by "income," although his budget helps to clarify the issue by defining income very generously.

Defining "income": First, let’s define our terms.

The broadest way to measure income — total income — counts everything you get in cash, regardless of source, including taxes your employer pays and you never see. By that measure, just over 3% of households have income above the president’s thresholds.

Or the president could have decided to use a narrower measure, "adjusted gross income," which excludes income not subject to federal tax such as tax-exempt bond interest and much of Social Security benefits. Just over 2% of tax units have AGI that tops the $200,000 and $250,000 thresholds.

Finally, the president could have gone one more step and dropped exemptions and deductions from his definition of income. That’s the familiar description of taxable income — and pretty much the bottom line on your 1040 — and it would protect another 0 no fax payday loans.2% of households from a tax hike.

How Obama does it: Instead, Obama — in his budget — uses a definition that is even a bit more generous than any of those.

To make sure that no one making less than $200,000 really does get hit with a tax increase, the president had to extend the 28% bracket to cover more income. That would cut taxes for even the richest taxpayers by a few hundred dollars and provide a small cushion against higher levies for people just over the thresholds.

Who would pay and why: When all the dust settles, the Tax Policy Center figures that just 1.7% of households would pay higher taxes under the president’s proposal than if Congress extended all the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts.

Just as interesting is why those 2.7 million high-income taxpayers would get hit. For most of them, the answer is not the high-profile increase in the top rates. Rather, it is Obama’s proposal to hike rates on capital gains and dividends.

A close look at his plan shows that fewer than three in ten affected taxpayers would be hit by the 36% and 39.6% rates on ordinary income that have drawn the loudest complaints.

Another change, the limitation on itemized deductions and the phaseout of personal exemptions would affect less than half.

But nearly 95% of people facing higher tax bills would pay more tax on gains and dividends. Keep in mind, by the way, that while Obama would raise the top rate on capital gains from 15% to 20%, he would also tax qualified dividends at 20%. If the Bush-era tax cuts are allowed to expire, the top dividend rate would hit 39.6%.

Knowing that less than 2% of households would face higher taxes, mostly because of their investment income, won’t calm the debate — and by itself certainly provides no justification for backing the president’s plan — but it’s always helpful to know the facts. 

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September 27, 2010

First Southern snags failed Haven Trust

Filed under: legal — Tags: , , — Gogo @ 9:45 pm

Boca Raton-based First Southern Bank made its first move since it got bolstered with private equity money by acquiring the failed Haven Trust Bank of Florida on Friday.

The Florida Office of Financial Regulation shut down Haven Trust, which is based in Ponte Vedra Beach in the Jacksonville area.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. awarded Haven Trust's $148.6 million in assets to First Southern Bank. It also got $133.6 million in deposits in its home office and its Saint Augustine branch.

Of the purchased assets, $127.3 million are under a loss-sharing agreement where the FDIC that would cover 80 percent of the losses.

The FDIC said the failure of Haven Trust Bank would cost its deposit insurance fund $31.9 million. The state’s 24th bank failure of the year extended Florida’s lead as the nation’s worst state for bank failures in 2010.

This was a long-awaited move for First Southern Bank, which in February announced it raised $400 million in capital from 25 institutional investors. The bank installed Herbert Boydstun, the former head of Louisiana banking powerhouse Hibernia National Bank, as chairman and CEO.

In a press release, Boydstun said, “As a result of our solid capital position, we have money to lend and can satisfy the credit needs of our customers, helping them build their businesses, meet the demands of growing families and save for a secure financial future."

He welcomed the Haven Trust employees to the bank and said he looks "forward to working with them to provide the kind of service that customers expect and deserve.”

First Southern has five branches in Palm Beach and Broward counties. As of June 30, it had $448 million in assets, but it had enough capital at the bank and holding company level to surpass $3.5 billion in assets.

Haven Trust Bank was founded in 2006. It fell into “undercapitalized” status as of June 30, when 16.1 percent of its loans were noncurrent. Most of its loan portfolio was in commercial real estate. The bank had been under a regulatory order to raise capital since March.

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September 23, 2010

New housing starts jump 10.5%

Filed under: economics — Tags: , , — Gogo @ 3:00 am

New housing starts rose an estimated 10.5 percent in the United States in August compared to July, the Commerce Department reported.

Construction on privately-owned homes were at a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 598,000. The rate is 2.2 percent higher than in August 2009.

Of the 598,000 units, the Commerce Department said 438,000 were single-family homes. Single-family home starts increased 4.3 percent compared to July.

A housing “start” is when footings have been poured or a hole dug for construction.

The Commerce Department also tracks building permits issued by government officials. The issuance of a permit doesn’t guarantee a home is built; about 60 percent of the time, the home is constructed, according to the Commerce Department.

The number of building permits for homes in August increased 1.8 percent compared to July, but was 6.7 percent below the level of August 2009.

Single-family home permits in August were 1.2 percent below July.

To read the full report, go here.

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September 18, 2010

Traffic will reopen around sinkhole

Filed under: economics — Tags: , , — Gogo @ 10:30 am

Construction crews are completing the repair of a sinkhole at North and Oakland avenues ahead of schedule, so traffic will reopen at the intersection at 4 p.m. today.

The Milwaukee Department of Public works on Monday announced that the intersection would remain closed through Sept. 20. But, as of today, traffic will be open in one lane in each direction.

The street in the middle of the intersection collapsed after the July 22 floods, forcing the city to completely block traffic payday loan lenders. The city hired Rawson Contractors Inc., of Sussex, and Edward E. Gillen Co., of Milwaukee, to repair the sinkhole.

Construction work at the intersection is not complete, so some traffic restrictions, such as a prohibition on left turns, will remain in effect.

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September 14, 2010

Cincinnati Public Schools board votes to halt work on King Day

Filed under: term — Tags: , , — Gogo @ 7:21 pm

The Cincinnati Public Schools board voted Monday night to halt work on construction projects on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

The move is in response from criticism from the Cincinnati chapter of the NAACP, which last January staged a protest with the Baptist Ministers Conference at a school construction site in Evanston. The Cincinnati school system observes Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a holiday, but contractors working on its school construction project sites were not required to observe it, as well. The new CPS board resolution requires construction contracts to have language requiring companies to do just that online cash advance.

"This is a significant win for the African American Community in 2010. The Baptist Ministers Conference and the Cincinnati NAACP hope that all construction sites across Cincinnati will follow CPS's lead on closing for the Dr. Martin Luther King Holiday," Christopher Smitherman, president of the Cincinnati NAACP said in an e-mailed statement.

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September 12, 2010

ServiceMaster CEO Spainhour set to retire

Filed under: economics — Tags: , , — Gogo @ 2:18 pm

The ServiceMaster Co.’s CEO Patrick Spainhour is retiring.

His date of departure is set for Dec. 31, but could come sooner or later depending on when a “qualified successor” is appointed, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission this week.

Edward Liddy, chairman of ServiceMaster parent ServiceMaster Global Holdings Inc., said a search will begin immediately.

Spainhour is leaving the company after leading it through a series of transitions over the last four years that included moving its corporate headquarters form Downers Grove, Ill., outside Chicago, to Memphis in 2007.

The move was announced in the fall of 2006, just weeks after Spainhour took over as chairman and CEO, and six months later it was announced the company was being acquired by the New York-based private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice Inc.

Prior to the acquisition, the company had at one time planned to build a multi-million campus to consolidate all of its operations and create as many as 500 new jobs.

The acquisition shelved those plans and instead led to hundreds of layoffs small personal loans.

“Pat has done an outstanding job stabilizing ServiceMaster’s performance and improving profitability during some of the toughest economic conditions we’ve seen,” said Liddy. “His leadership, integrity and commitment to building great relationships, both with customers and those who work with him, will be greatly missed.”

Prior to joining ServiceMaster’s board in 2005, Spainhour was chairman and CEO of Ann Taylor Stores Corp. He also had senior roles at Gap Inc., Stride Rite Corp. and Donna Karan Co.

The ServiceMaster Co. is Memphis’s largest private company with 2009 revenues of $3.24 billion and 2,143 employees, according to Memphis Business Journal research.

ServiceMaster is the parent company for the brands Terminix, TrueGreen, TrueGreen LandCare, American Home Shield, Merry Maids, Furniture Medic, AmeriSpec and ServiceMaster Clean.

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September 8, 2010

August jobs report: Signs of life for employment

Filed under: online — Tags: , , — Gogo @ 9:33 pm

Business hiring is picking up, but not enough to make up for the massive losses of temporary government jobs.

The economy lost a total of 54,000 jobs in August, the Labor Department reported Friday.

Businesses added 67,000 jobs to their payrolls in August. Economists had forecast a smaller gain of 44,000 jobs. It marked the eighth straight month that businesses added jobs, following nearly two straight years of job losses.

The bulk of the losses came from the public sector, as the government cut 114,000 temporary census workers. It was the third straight month that census worker layoffs caused an overall decline in jobs.

But the report showed some improvements in the jobs picture, a welcome piece of good news among a slew of disappointing economic readings in recent months.

"It is a sigh of relief," said Sung Won Sohn, economics professor at Cal State University Channel Islands. "The labor market in August was lethargic, but better than feared, reducing the fears of a double-dip recession."

The overall losses were less than expected. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com forecasted a loss of 120,000 jobs.

And upward revisions for June and July showed there were 123,000 additional job gains in those months than previously reported.

U.S. stocks posted strong gains following the pre-market report.

Government payrolls outside of the Census Bureau, however, trimmed another 7,000 jobs in the month, with cuts coming from cash-strapped state governments.

The unemployment rate rose to 9.6% in the month from 9.5% in July, matching economists’ expectations.

President Obama said Friday the business hiring in the report is good news but "not nearly good enough."

"The economy is moving in a positive direction. Jobs are being created," he said. "They’re just not being created as fast as they need to, given the big hole that we experienced."

He promised his administration would be unveiling additional legislation next week try to spur more hiring.

House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, responded that the Obama administration policies are responsible for the weak jobs growth.

"We will not solve our fiscal challenges until we cut spending and have real economic growth — and we won’t have real economic growth if we keep raising taxes on small businesses," he said.

Not out of the woods yet: Stubbornly high levels of unemployment and weak job creation have raised fears that the nation’s economic recovery is in danger of stalling out and falling into a double-dip recession.

Some economists cautioned that despite signs of life in the report, the labor market is still soft.

Scot Melland, CEO of Dice Holdings, a provider of specialized career web sites, said he thinks despite the improvement, the overall labor market deserves no better grade than a C+.

"It’s moving in the right direction, but it’s not the numbers we’d like to see," he said.

And few are forecasting any significant improvement through the rest of this year.

The pace of job growth among business is not enough to make a dent in the stubbornly high unemployment. About 150,000 jobs are needed every month just to keep up with the pace of population growth.

Even if job growth continues to improve, it will take years to recoup the net loss of 8.4 million jobs in 2008 and 2009. Even with more than 700,000 jobs added so far this year, total employment is 7.6 million jobs below where it stood at the start of the Great Recession.

"We see things going sideways to modestly up," said Tim Quinlan, economist with Wells Fargo Securities. "The layoffs are behind us but the hiring hasn’t picked up yet.

September will likely see another large drop in government jobs. But with only 82,000 census workers left, there should be limited impact on employment from the census jobs in the final three months of the year. 

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September 5, 2010

Biz groups to align in Wyoming Co.

Filed under: marketing — Tags: , , — Gogo @ 12:48 am

Two Wyoming County business groups are close to completing a merger.

The Wyoming County Chamber of Commerce and the Tourism Promotion Agency are joining forces to operate as one entity. The tourism agency moved at the beginning of the year from its offices in Castile into the chamber’s offices in Perry.

Rick Henry, board chairman at the chamber, said in a statement the two organizations have long been closely aligned in both mission and services. Joining forces will provide even better services for the local business and community.

“It’s an exciting time for both the Chamber and TPA,” he said.

The boards of directors of the two agencies signed a memorandum of understanding on Sept. 1 to shift tourism functions for the county under the umbrella of the chamber. Laura Lane remains president of the chamber, while all existing tourism staff have also remained on during the transition. Brian Fleischman, hired as director of tourism last summer, will continue on in similar capacity, but with an expanded role as director of communications and marketing.

The two groups can be found online at www.wycochamber.org and www.GoWyomingCountyNY.com.

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September 1, 2010

Sanofi-Aventis gets tough in Genzyme bid

Filed under: money — Tags: , — Gogo @ 10:42 am

Pharmaceutical giant Sanofi-Aventis on Sunday publicly confirmed for the first time its previously reported bid for Genzyme Corp. (Nasdaq: GENZ) and moved to prod Genzyme shareholders into embracing a deal that management of the Cambridge, Mass., company has so-far spurned.

The offer, outlined in a news release issued by Paris-based Sanofi-Aventis, is $18.5 billion in cash, or $69 a share. Genzyme shares were trading below $55 a share immediately before news of the July 29 offer leaked.

Sanofi-Aventis (NYSE: SNY) said the offer was reiterated in a letter sent Sunday to Genzyme Chief Executive Henri Termeer, a copy of which the suitor made public.

A Genzyme spokesman did not immediately return a telephone call early Monday morning.

Sanofi-Aventis said it sent the letter only "after several unsuccessful attempts to engage Genzyme's management in discussions."

The news release goes on to state: "Sanofi-aventis is disclosing the contents of its letter in order to inform Genzyme's shareholders of the significant shareholder value and compelling strategic fit inherent in a combination of the two companies."

"A combination with Genzyme represents a compelling opportunity for both companies and our respective shareholders and is consistent with our sustainable growth strategy," Sanofi-Aventis Chief Executive Christopher A. Viehbacher said in the public statement.

"Now is the right time for Genzyme to consider a transaction that maximizes value for its shareholders," he adds later. "Sanofi-aventis believes strongly in this acquisition and its strategic and financial benefits business card design. We remain focused on entering into constructive discussions with Genzyme in order to complete this transaction."

In contrast to the upbeat news release, the letter fromViehbacher is strongly worded and even critical.

"We are disappointed that you rejected our proposal on August 11 without discussing its substance with us," Viehbacher wrote. "After our repeated requests, you agreed only to let our respective financial advisors hold a meeting of limited scope. Our financial advisors finally met briefly on August 24, but the meeting simply served as further confirmation that as throughout you remain unwilling to have constructive discussions. As I have mentioned to you, we are committed to a transaction with Genzyme, and, therefore, we feel we are left with no choice but to take our compelling proposal directly to your shareholders by making its terms public."

He later adds: "It is our preference to work together with you and the Genzyme Board to reach a mutually agreeable transaction. As we have consistently stated, we place value on the ability to engage in a constructive dialogue and to conclude a successful outcome that would ensure a timely and smooth integration."

Large pharmaceutical companies increasingly have been courting biotechs to bolster the bigger companies' patent holdings and new-drug pipelines.

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