Archive for October, 2011

Yen Intervention Weakens Markets

Monday, October 31st, 2011

World equities fell on Monday as commodity shares sank on a stronger dollar in the wake of Japanese intervention to weaken the yen, and doubts resurfaced over the European Union’s plan to stem its debt crisis. Japan sold the yen for the second time in less than three months, saying it intervened unilaterally to counter speculative moves that were hurting world’s third-biggest economy. Traders estimated the Bank of Japan could have purchased $65 billion to $75 billion against its currency. The DJIA fell 130 points, or 1 percent, at 12,100. The S&P lost 14 points, or 1.14 percent, at 1,270.

The dollar, which had fallen to a record low of 75.31 yen earlier in Asian trade, rose more than 4 percent against to as high as 79.55 yen. It was up 2.9 percent at 77.96 yen with traders saying more intervention would likely be needed for a more durable impact. The euro gave up most of last week’s gains on the dollar’s broad-based advance. It was last 1 percent down at $1.400 , retreating further from a seven-week high about $1.4247 last Thursday following news of the euro zone’s debt-rescue plan. The dollar could also come under pressure with Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke likely to repeat his disappointment at the pace of economic recovery when the Fed ends its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday.

Japan told the head of Europe’s bailout fund on Monday that it would continue to buy its bonds, but, like fellow potential investor China, did not commit to putting cash into a mooted special purpose vehicle to enhance the rescue fund’s firepower.

Is The Greek Haircut A Temporary Default

Friday, October 28th, 2011

Fitch ratings agency says Greece’s credit grade will remain low even after its debt load is cut as part of a European plan to fight the financial crisis. The plan asks Greece’s private creditors to take losses of 50 percent on the country’s bond they hold. Along with new loans and other measures, that is meant to bring Greece’s debt down to 120 percent of economic output by 2020.

Fitch said Friday that the deal would result in a temporary default, as widely expected. After the private creditors have swapped their Greek bonds for new ones with a lower value, the country’s rating is likely to remain in the ‘B’ category, only a few notches up from its current CCC grade. 

The stock market held around breakeven levels as banks struggled and warnings of an extremely overbought market tempered enthusiasm from a European debt bailout deal.

The major averages wafted between positive and negative numbers during a lackluster trading session,  a day after the massive 3 percent Thursday rally inspired by European Union leaders appearing to strike an agreement that would forestall an immediate debt crisis in Greece and elsewhere. The market “is currently at overbought levels that are seen once a decade, much less once a year, and it’s due for at least a pause at current levels. We could continue higher and get back to new bull market highs in the coming months, but at least in the short-term we’re due for a pullback.

Europe’s Debt Plan Delays The Debt Crisis

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

The eurozone has adopted a credible and ambitious response to the debt crisis,” said French President Nicolas Sarkozy. European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso added “Europe is closer to resolving its financial and economic crisis. With that said a bullish tide swept over Wall Street today, as investors cheered a long-awaited plan to address European debt. Most notably, European Union (EU) leaders agreed to recapitalize the region’s banks, and to boost the scope of the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF). Furthermore, under the terms of the deal, private investors of Greek debt will take a 50% write-down on their holdings which translated into a major boon for banks both at home and abroad. With the fiscal fate of the euro zone seemingly coming into focus, and thanks to a respectable uptick in third-quarter gross domestic product (GDP), the major market indexes now boast double-digit percentage gains for the month of October. The DJIA  12,208.55, touched an intraday peak of 12,284 before paring its gains by the close. Still, the blue-chip barometer tacked on a healthy 339.5 points, or 2.9%, when all was said and done, ending north of its 200-day moving average for the first time since Aug. 1, and extending its month-to-date gain to 11.9%. The S&P 1,284.59 rallied 42.6 points, or 3.4% — but not before topping out at 1,292.66 in late-session trading. Like the Dow, the SPX conquered its 200-day moving average for the first time in close to three months, extending its October lead to 13.5%.

The deal was hammered out in a marathon summit meeting in Brussels that stretched into the early hours of Thursday morning. It includes a commitment by banks and other private bondholders to accept a voluntary 50% writedown on Greek government debt, a boost in the lending power of the euro-zone bailout fund and a 106 billion euro ($148 billion) recapitalization of European banks. Economists fear the plan still lacks the heft and detail needed to ensure the debt crisis won’t again surface to threaten major euro-zone economies, such as Italy, and the region’s banking sector. The plans announced by euro-zone policy makers overnight look more like a pea shooter than the ‘bazooka’ previously promised to tackle the region’s problems

“Voiced” Details Not Written Law

-The European Financial Stability Facility, EFSF, is going to be leveraged four to five times. Currently the fund has $440 billion in it, but I have seen some reports that it has as little as $250 billion in it. In short, nobody really knows what it has in the fund. With the leverage, it would bring the EFSF to $1 trillion. That would suggest a current size of the EFSF of $250 billion.

-The European banks, such as Deutsche Bank (NYSE: DB), BNP Paribas, Societe Generale, and others have to raise a cumulative $178 billion in capital.

-Greek debt is getting a 50% haircut, but not all Greek debt. Greek debt held by the ECB will remain at par, while debt held by the banks will get cut. Additionally, the hope to get the debt to GDP ratio down to 120% n Greece by 2020. According to a report from Bloomberg, the bond holders were threatened with a full Greek default, so they took the 50% haircut. I suppose getting 50 cents back is better than nothing. The program may offer some support for now, but the underlying economic dynamics of the deal imply a lot more economic misery, centered around pressure on banks and pressure on countries to deliver more austerity.

-The banks are going to have to raise additional Tier 1 capital, with the level raised to 9%, up from 5%. It can be raised privately, nationally, or from the EFSF.

-Lastly, the EFSF will actually be two different funds. The first one will guarantee the first loss position, and the second fund actually buys the bonds in the private markets.

Despite all the “details” from this week’s summit (remember we had a summit on Monday too that did nothing), there are still a TON of questions.

-Is $1 trillion enough, especially considering Italy’s bond market is well over $2 trillion? The yield on Italian 10 year debt is under 6% now, but it is nowhere close to 5%. If the contagion spreads to Italy, the EFSF can not handle Italy plus everyone else. The Italian bond market could see a huge drop, or perhaps crash and burn, if the country does not follow through on the reforms it promised. The EFSF became a ”he said, she said” deal, and it still is, as no one knows how it will be leveraged.

-Will the banks be able to raise the additional Tier 1 capital in the private markets? If they can not, they that will constrain the EFSF. The banks need to raise $178 billion in capital. Since no one knows how they will leverage up the fund, how the fund gets to $1 trillion is anybody’s guess. $250 billion is barely enough to cover the banks additional capital needs, never mind buying bonds in the private markets.

-Will China take part in the EFSF? There have been rumors that China would take part in the EFSF, and European leaders are going over there this week to talk about it. It is in China’s best interest to have a healthy Europe, but what happens if the credit markets freeze up again? Will the world’s bankers (China) be happy? Probably not.

Sure the equity markets are rallying today, and credit spreads have eased up a little bit after the news came out last night, but that does not mean Europe was saved over night. Greece still has a massive debt to GDP ratio, and Greek pension funds are going to bear the brunt of the 50% loss. Greece is in a depression, and it does not seem like anything is getting better any time soon over there.

The Euro is rallying on this news, but Citi put out a research report this morning, saying to short the Euro all the way to $1.3150, and potentially all the way to $1.2860, which is the low of the year. This suggests that Citi does not believe that anything really was solved last night, that it was just smoke and mirrors. The stop loss on the trade is $1.4260.

Credit default swaps, especially Eurozone ones, are essentially worthless now, as the ISDA did not declare this a credit event, despite Greece technically defaulting on their debt. The CDS market has been made a mockery, but there have been calls to regulate CDS a hundred times if it was once, and it never happened.

Still, we have no details on how the fund is going to get leveraged, and whether the banks will be able to raise the capital in the private markets. It sounds like we were left with more questions than answers last night. There were some concrete details, of which Merkel, Sarkozy, and others are to be commended for. They got SOMETHING done, but not everything.

If the market fundamentally questions solvency, it will be perceived that the old debt will bear the burden and prices [for old debt] could fall further. That wouldn’t be a problem for the government, but it could put larger holes in the balance sheet of the banking system.

Others were less pessimistic, but portrayed the agreement as offering more of a breathing space that gives policy makers time to implement other needed measures rather than a lasting solution. Financial markets have tended to rally in the wake of past crisis summits, only to see investors disappointed as subsequent events show policy makers remain behind the curve. The Wednesday summit — the second gathering of EU leaders in four days — follows a July 21 gathering that had been touted as a lasting solution. The writedowns aim to bring Greece’s public debt down to 120% of gross domestic product by 2020. It also forms part of a €100 billion rescue plan for Greece that aims to keep the country funded through 2014. The reduction in Greece’s debt-to-GDP ratio, which has been forecast to peak north of 180% in 2013, won’t be enough to put its debt load on a sustainable footing. That still leaves Greece with a debt load similar to Italy’s. Italy, unlike Greece, enjoys a primary budget surplus, meaning that it is servicing existing debt rather than creating new debt.

Gap Up Means Markets Are Due for An Immediate Pull Back

VIX 25.46  -4.40  (-14.74%)  closed at 29.85 on Wednesday 11/26 and opened Thursday’s session at 24.72, down over 17 percent. At the same time, stocks surged, with the S&P 500 up nearly 3 percent at midday. While the drop in the VIX, the market’s fear gauge, indicates that some investors are becoming more complacent, others see this sharp drop as an opportunity to make money. The equity market is ahead of itself. The world is not saved with this meeting, there are not enough details. This as an opportunity to buy options including, short-term protection on the downside, especially in ETFs.

Europe Saves The World; Markets Gap Up

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

In a Earth moving event that has been culminating since October 3rd, with daily rumors on how the Euro zone will handle the Debt Crisis, has finally came to fruition. Europe was on the verge on creating a Lehman type event with Greece. That is no longer true as investors had agreed on a 50% haircut on Greek debt. To be exact €100 debt will be wiped off Greece’s balance sheet along with a revised favorable terms for the remaining debt owed. Is this something Greece can repay in the short run while implementing drastic reforms to spur growth for Greece’s future economy? That’s a whole other argument. In the interim, let’s join in the Europe euphoria. The DJIA surged above the psychologically-important 12,000 level, up 250 points. Is this excessive euphoria a signal for a temporary pullback? European and Asian markets rallied after the deal, although analysts pointed out the plan was light on details. The S&P target 1270 -1280 is an area of  caution. Take note of  TVIX, VIX, VXX and the US Dollar (UUP) as an indicator for weakness in the US indices. In any event in the short term, buy on any weakness.

On the contrarian/skeptic argument

A deal struck by euro zone leaders on Thursday to contain the region’s dangerous debt crisis was greeted sceptically in the two countries most in the firing line, Greece and Italy, with some saying politicians were dreaming. Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi submitted an ambitious set of reforms intended to boost growth and cut debt as part of the deal, but analysts questioned the ability of his fractious coalition to implement the plan. In Greece, opposition politicians and citizens feared further painful belt-tightening and years of recession, showing little enthusiasm for a plan for banks and insurers to accept a 50 percent loss on their Greek government bonds.

Berlusconi’s pledges include raising the retirement age and making it easier for firms to lay off staff but few expect a scandal-ridden government with a poor track record of pushing through reforms to be able to do so while battling for survival. “It’s hard to believe that yesterday’s intentions can really be transformed into the biggest plan of market reforms Italy has ever put on paper,” Antonio Polito wrote in the Corriere della Sera daily, pointing to coalition tensions and lack of faith in the government. An editorial in the left-leaning La Repubblica daily described the plan as a “book of dreams”. In a sign of the challenges Berlusconi faces, Italy’s biggest trade union CGIL responded by pledging to fight the reform plans and called on smaller unions to unite against “targeted attacks” on Italian workers.

Investors have fretted about Italy’s chronically sluggish growth and the sustainability of its 1.9 trillion euro debt, which at 120 percent of GDP is second only to Greece’s in the euro zone. Extending austerity measures will force economies towards a recession as has done so with Greece by example currently reading  -6.5% GDP.

US Economy On the economic front, the U.S. GDP rose at a 2.5 percent annual rate in the third quarter, its fastest pace in a year, according to the Commerce Department in its first estimate. That was a big improvement from the 1.3 percent rate in the previous quarter and met matched economists’ estimates.

Weekly jobless claims slipped last week by 2,000 to a seasonally adjusted 402,000, according to the Labor Department. Economists had forecast claims falling to 400,000 from the previously reported 403,000, according to a Reuters poll.

Meanwhile, pending home sales declined 4.6 percent to 84.5 in September, falling for a third consecutive month, according to the National Association of Realtors Pending Home Sales Index. Economists were expecting sales to edge up 0.1 percent, according to a Reuters survey.

Investors To Take 50% Haircut On Greek Bonds

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

European Union leaders announced an agreement early Thursday on debt crisis measures, including a hard-fought deal with private sector investors to take a 50% loss on Greek bonds.

The agreement came at the end of marathon talks to finalize the details of a comprehensive policy response to the government debt and banking problems threatening the stability of the euro currency and global economy.

Under the new plan, Greek bondholders voluntarily agreed to write down the value of Greek bonds by 50%, which translates into €100 billion and will reduce the nation’s debt load to 120% of economic output from 150%.

The agreement also calls for the creation of a new financing program with the International Monetary Fund worth up to €100 billion, according to an official statement. Stronger bailout fund: The leaders agreed on two ways to increase the firepower of the EU bailout fund, known as the European Financial Stability Facility. The methods will each leverage the fund by four or five fold, the statement said, boosting its resources to about €1 trillion.

The fund will be used to partially ensure new issues of government bonds. In addition, it will be supplemented by the creation of one or more special investment vehicles, which will be open to private sector players such as sovereign wealth funds. China has already expressed interest in backing the special investment mechanism. The possibility that China could back the the rescue effort helped lift U.S. stock prices late Wednesday.

Bigger bank reserves: The EU heads of state also agreed to raise capital requirements for banks vulnerable to losses on euro-area government bonds. Banks would be required to sharply increase core capital levels to 9% to create a buffer against potential losses.
Based on market rates in September, banks will need to raise a total of €106 billion to meet the new targets, according to the European Banking Authority. That compares with estimates from the International Monetary Fund and private sector economists that ranged between €100 and €300 billion. The banks would have until the end of June 2012 to meet those new requirements, according to a statement.

Markets In Volatile Mode As Euro Crisis Focused

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

U.S. stocks fell, following the biggest drop in three weeks for the S&P, as a European official said the capacity of the region’s bailout fund may not be determined until November. The S&P  fell 0.3 percent, down .39 to 1,224.92, after climbing as much as 1.2 percent or 1241. In a matter of 20 minutes, the S&P swung a full 19 points in volatile fashion. That holds the key as to capital markets’ ability to be able to absorb any of these continuous overpromising and underdelivering coming out of Europe. Expectations are just so low that any hint that they are making progress will push stocks higher. A Greek bond writedown of 50 percent on half of the Greek debt is pretty much assured.

Stocks erased gains as a European Union official said EU leaders may ask national finance ministers to determine the capacity of the expanded European Financial Stability Facility by the end of November. The leaders meet in Brussels later today and will back two EFSF leveraging options set out last week, the official said on condition of anonymity because the meeting hasn’t taken place yet. Global stocks rallied earlier after Germany’s lower house of parliament approved a plan to increase the capacity of the European bailout fund. European leaders hold the 14th crisis summit in 21 months today to discuss the Greek bailout, shoring up banks and strengthening the 440 billion-euro ($613 billion) rescue fund without pouring more taxpayers’ money into it, are the subject of fierce debate in Europe’s largest economy and biggest contributor to the fund. . The motion states that the European Central Bank (ECB) will no longer need to buy bonds on the secondary markets, and that the rescue fund cannot be financed through the ECB. The vote provides Chancellor Angela Merkel with the mandate she needs to negotiate at a key euro summmit later in Brussels.

A Greek bond writedown of 50 percent on half of the Greek debt is pretty much assured. However, Slovakia’s Prime Minister Iveta Radicova said Wednesday afternoon that private investors should accept a haircut of more than 50 percent on their holdings of Greek debt. “Slovakia is saying that the haircut has to be more than 50 percent,” she told reporters before leaving for an EU summit in Brussels. Negotiators remain divided on the issue of what will happen to the remaining 50 percent of the current outstanding 205 billion euros ($284.9 billion) of debt load. Indications are that the remainder will be divided into a cash sweetener, Greek Sovereign paper and paper from the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), the name of the currency zone’s bailout fund. The exact mix remains to be determined and remains a key point of debate. Indications are that the deal on a writedown—or “haircut” in current parlance—bears no resemblance to the original 21 percent PSI haircut, but will remain voluntary, though this word’s meaning is becoming increasingly fuzzy, sources said.

financial markets have been hoping for weeks that Wednesday’s summit, scheduled to start at 1500 GMT with a gathering of all 27 EU leaders, followed at 1730 GMT by the meeting of the euro zone heads of state, will produce detailed figures on how to combat the debt crisis, there is now little likelihood of concrete numbers, sources say. The numbers are not yet finalized — you have to have all parameters in place and see what is needed and what the leverage factor would be. It needs a lot of technical work to come up with a number,” one EU official said, adding that discussions would continue on Wednesday to forge a pre-summit consensus. The leaders will agree on the options tomorrow, but whether it will be an agreement with all details remains to be seen.

Prospects for a comprehensive deal to resolve the euro zone debt crisis at the summit on Wednesday look dim, with deep disagreement remaining on critical aspects of the potential agreement, including how to give the region’s bailout fund greater firepower. EU officials and European diplomats are lowering expectations of a breakthrough when the 17 euro zone leaders meet, despite Franco-German assurances only weeks ago that a “comprehensive solution” to more than two years of debt and economic turmoil would be found by the end of the month.

Today is a big day for Europe and, quite possibly, a defining day for U.S. share price performance. A concrete and credible solution out of Europe is likely to encourage another wave of short covering which could propel the market higher. Further delay will only add to the overall costs of a fix, while outright disappointment is likely to be met by share price weakness.

Talks over a haircut on Greece’s debt continue to be the main stumbling block in forging a resolution package at the EU Summit. While this evening’s summit will take place as planned, details of the Greek bond exchange appear unlikely to be finalized until a later meeting of EU finance ministers. The next meetings are not officially scheduled to take place until the 7th and 8th of Nov., but it would be possible to schedule an earlier meeting if necessary.

Markets Down As Euro Nerves For Certainty

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011

World stocks and the euro stumbled on Tuesday after the cancellation of a meeting of European finance ministers raised doubts that an upcoming summit will result in a clear plan to rein in Europe’s debt crisis. A summit of European leaders remains scheduled for Wednesday, but the gathering of finance ministers — known as Ecofin — was canceled because details of the meeting had not been finalized. Shocking to say the least as markets have been rising on “HOPE”

Also on Tuesday, Germany said it opposes a phrase in a draft conclusion for the summit that calls for the European Central Bank to continue buying bonds in the secondary market. The ECB has been buying Spanish and Italian bonds for more than two months in order to hold down the countries’ borrowing costs and contain the region’s debt crisis. Earlier in the global session, world stocks hit seven-week highs and the euro notched a six-week high against the dollar on signs that euro zone policymakers had neared agreement on bank recapitalization and on how to leverage the region’s rescue fund. Officials said euro zone leaders are unlikely to provide many hard numbers to flesh out their debt crisis response on Wednesday because the size of banks’ losses on Greek bonds is still under negotiation and an increase in the firepower of the bailout fund is tough to quantify. MSCI’s all-country world stock index fell 0.8 percent, after having earlier hit its highest level since early September.

U.S. stocks fell sharply, with weak corporate results, including from diversified manufacturer 3M Co and movie rental company Netflix Inc, adding to the cautious tone. (Read a report from WSG from December 2nd, 2010.) The DJIA was down 122.23 points, or 1.03 percent, at 11,791.39. The S&P was down 15.54 points, or 1.24 percent, at 1,238.65.

The dollar hit a record low versus the yen, raising expectations of official intervention to stem the yen’s strength. The dollar hit a fresh low of 75.73 yen, just below the previous low of 75.78 yen reached late last week. In the oil market, Brent crude fell 97 cents at $110.48 a barrel. U.S. crude rose $2.30 to $93.57 a barrel.

US States Have $4 Trillion Of Debt

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011

The total of U.S. state debt, including pension liabilities, could surpass $4 trillion, with California owing the most and Vermont owing the least, a new analysis says. The nonprofit State Budget Solutions combined states’ major debt and future liabilities, primarily for pensions and employee healthcare, unemployment insurance loans, outstanding bonds and projected fiscal 2011 budget gaps. It found that in total, states are in debt for $4.2 trillion. The deficit calculations that states make “do not offer a full picture of the states’ liabilities and can rely on budget gimmicks and accounting games to hide the extent of the deficit.” The housing bust, financial crisis and economic recession caused states’ tax revenue to plunge, and huge holes have emerged in their budgets over the last few years. Because all states except Vermont must end their fiscal years with balanced budgets, states have scrambled to cut spending, hike taxes, borrow and turn to the federal government for help.

Read about CINN (California, Illinois, New York, New Jersey here

Rhode Island issue here

Conservative economists say the pension investments will have annual returns of around 4 percent, while many funds expect returns in line with the average of the last 20 years — closer to 8 percent. FYI markets fell off the map in 2007 and 2008 -20% & -35% respectively. How are 8% returns reasonable. Using the higher pension gap number, State Budget Solutions said California is in the biggest financial hole — with total debt of more than $612 billion. New York follows with $305 billion of debt, and then Texas, with total debt of $283 billion. Vermont has the lowest amount of total debt at just over $6 billion. The group also looked at the financial shape of states using the Pew pension projections. It came up with a total debt of $2 trillion for all states. California still owes the most under the alternative computation, but the state’s total debt drops significantly, to $307 billion. With the Pew numbers, New Jersey follows with $183 billion of debt and Illinois is next at $150 billion. According to the analysis, California has also borrowed the most from the federal government to pay for unemployment benefits, $8.6 billion. Michigan was next, taking out $3.1 billion, and then New York, borrowing $2.9 billion. As unemployment shot up, some states could not pay for the surge in demand for jobless benefits. The federal government loosened its lending rules to keep states from having to cut other areas of their budgets. But last month the U.S. government again began charging interest on the outstanding loans and may levy extra taxes on businesses in states with outstanding loans. Looking at just state annual financial statements, the group found Connecticut has the highest debt per capita, at $5,402, and nine states have debt of more than $3,000 per capita.

US: Rhode Island Small State Big Debt

Monday, October 24th, 2011

As many analyst’s like myself have been alerting investors to the forth-front, is the debt issue home and abroad. The Euro-Zone debt crisis is taking center stage following the US Credit downgrade. While we are all aware of the PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, Spain) debt issues abroad, what about the issues on our home soil. We’re aware of the CINN (California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York) are the  most indebted states in the US. I wrote about them awhile back. Municipal debt at home will take center stage in the states and eventually make its way towards the state level then to Federal. They too will eventually will require Federal Bailout. Meredith Whitney has signaled that a catastrophe is in fruition. Here’s an interesting article on the Rhode Island from the NY Times.

This is an article written by 

By MARY WILLIAMS WALSH
Published: October 22, 2011 in the NY Times

Gina M. Raimondo, a financier by trade, rolled up here with news no one wanted to hear: Rhode Island, she declared, was going broke.

Maybe not today, and maybe not tomorrow. But if current trends held, Ms. Raimondo warned, the Ocean State would soon look like Athens on the Narragansett: undersized and overextended. Its economy would wither. Jobs would vanish. The state would be hollowed out.

It is not the sort of message you might expect from Ms. Raimondo, a proud daughter of Providence, a successful venture capitalist and, not least, the current general treasurer of Rhode Island. But it is a message worth hearing. The smallest state in the union, it turns out, has a very big debt problem.

After decades of drift, denial and inaction, Rhode Island’s $14.8 billion pension system is in crisis. Ten cents of every state tax dollar now goes to retired public workers. Before long, Ms. Raimondo has been cautioning in whistle-stops here and across the state, that figure will climb perilously toward 20 cents. But the scary thing is that no one really knows. The Providence Journal recently tried to count all the municipal pension plans outside the state system and stopped at 155, conceding that it might have missed some. Even the Securities and Exchange Commission is asking questions, including the big one: Are these numbers for real?

“We’re in the fight of our lives for the future of this state,” Ms. Raimondo said in a recent interview. And if the fight is lost? “Either the pension fund runs out of money or cities go bankrupt.”

All of this might seem small in the scheme of national affairs. After all, this is Little Rhody (population: 1,052,567). But the nightmare scenario is that Ms. Raimondo has seen the future of America, and it is Rhode Island. As Wall Street fixates on the financial disaster in Greece, a fiscal wreck is playing out right here. And the odds are that it won’t be the last. Before this is over, many Americans may be forced to rethink what government means at the state and local level.

Economists have talked endlessly about a financial reckoning for the United States, of a moment in the not-so-far-away when the nation’s profligate ways catch up with it. But for Rhode Island, that moment is now. The state has moved to safeguard its bond investors, to avoid being locked out of the credit markets. Last week, the General Assembly went into special session and proposed rolling back benefits for public employees, including those who have already retired. Whether the plan will succeed is anyone’s guess.

Central Falls, a small city north of Providence, didn’t wait for news from the Statehouse. In August, the city filed for bankruptcy rather than keep its pension promises to its retired firefighters and police officers.

Illinois, California, Connecticut, Oklahoma, Michigan — the list of stretched states runs on. In Pennsylvania, the capital city, Harrisburg, filed for bankruptcy earlier this month to avoid having to use prized assets to pay off Wall Street creditors. In New Jersey, Gov. Chris Christie wants to roll back benefits, too.

In most places, as in Rhode Island, the big issue is pensions. By conventional measures, state and local pensions nationwide now face a combined shortfall of about $3 trillion. Officials argue that, by their accounting, the total is far less. But with pensions, hope often triumphs over experience. Until this year, Rhode Island calculated its pension numbers by assuming that its various funds would post an average annual return on their investments of 8.25 percent; the real number for the last decade is about 2.4 percent. A phrase that gets thrown around here, à la Rick Perry describing Social Security, is “Ponzi scheme.”

That evening in September, Ms. Raimondo walked into the Cranston Portuguese Club to face yet another angry audience. People like Paul L. Valletta Jr., the head of Local 1363 of the firefighters union.

“I want to get the biggest travesty out of the way here,” Mr. Valletta boomed from the back of the hall. “You’re going after the retirees! In this economic time, how could you possibly take a pension away?”

Someone else in the audience said Rhode Island was reneging on a moral obligation.

Ms. Raimondo, 40, stood her ground. Rhode Island, she said, had a choice: it could pay for schoolbooks, roadwork, care for the elderly and so on, or it could keep every promise to its retirees.

“I would ask you, is it morally right to do nothing, and not provide services to the state’s most vulnerable citizens?” she asked the crowd. “Yes, sir, I think this is moral.”

FOR many Americans, the Ocean State conjures images of Newport mansions and Narragansett chic. The overall reality is more prosaic. Rhode Island today is a place where the roads and bridges rank among the worst in the nation and where jobs are particularly hard to find. Unemployment rose faster during the 2008-9 recession than in any other state. The official jobless rate is now 10.6 percent, versus the national average of 9.1 percent.

The textile mills and jewelry manufacturers that once employed thousands here have dwindled away. The big employers today are in health care and education, both of which rely heavily on government spending that has been drying up.

Many states and cities can credibly say their pension plans are viable, even when those plans are not fully funded. That is because state retirement funds, like Social Security, pay out benefits bit by bit, over many years.

But unlike, say, California, with its large, diverse economy, Rhode Island is so small that there is little margin for error. Leaving the state, to escape its taxes, is almost as easy as moving to the other side of town. Efforts to balance the state budget by shrinking the public work force have left Rhode Island with a problem like the one that plagues General Motors: the state has more public-sector retirees than public-sector workers.

More ominous still, in each of the last 10 years, the state pension fund paid more money to retirees than the fund collected from state employees and taxpayers combined. The fund is shrinking, even though the benefits coming due are growing.

For all the pain here, one important constituency — Wall Street — seems satisfied enough. To reassure its bond investors, Rhode Island passed a special law this year giving them first dibs on tax revenue. In other words, bondholders will be paid, whatever happens. Ms. Raimondo has at times been accused of selling out ordinary Rhode Islanders to Wall Street interests, but she says hard choices must be made.

Ms. Raimondo remembers better times in Rhode Island. She grew up in a suburb of Providence, rode public buses to public schools and played in public parks. Her grandfather, who arrived from Italy, studied English in the evenings at the Providence Public Library. (That library system lost its financing from the city in 2009, closed branches and shortened its hours. These days, it is seldom open after 6 p.m.)

But Ms. Raimondo also learned early on about economic forces at work in her state. When she was in sixth grade, the Bulova watch factory, where her father worked, shut its doors. He was forced to retire early, on a sharply reduced pension; he then juggled part-time jobs.

“You can’t let people think that something’s going to be there if it’s not,” Ms. Raimondo said in an interview in her office in the pillared Statehouse, atop a hill in Providence. No one should be blindsided, she said. If pensions are in trouble, it’s better to deliver the news and give people time to make other plans.

BY any standard, Ms. Raimondo is a high achiever. She graduated from Harvard, collected a law degree from Yale and attended Oxford as a Rhodes scholar. After a stint in New York in the venture capital business, she helped found Rhode Island’s first venture capital firm, Point Judith Capital.

Then, in 2009, with zero political experience, she ran for the state office of treasurer. Although she is a Democrat in a heavily Democratic state, she stood out because she refused to promise that state jobs and pension benefits would be protected no matter what. She won by a landslide, receiving more votes than any other candidate for any state office. Her long-term ambitions, in politics, business or both, are the subject of speculation in Providence.

No sooner had she been sworn in than the S.E.C. called. She learned that the commission was investigating the finances of various cities and states, including Rhode Island, to determine whether bond investors were receiving truthful information. At the heart of the S.E.C. inquiry were pension funds.

Ms. Raimondo said she wasn’t entirely surprised. When she disclosed the investigation, she said: “For months, Rhode Island has been listed among several states with precarious finances. This challenging position is, in part, due to our significant and growing unfunded pension liability.” Her first priority, she vowed, would be to ensure that the numbers were right.

Others made similar pledges before. Rhode Island has been trying to fix its pension system for years; it has announced four “reform” plans since 2005, each of which has claimed to reduce costs for the state and cities. It has raised minimum retirement ages, slowed accrual rates, capped cost-of-living adjustments — but always for the youngest or least senior public workers. Retirees, and workers poised to retire, were spared, even though the numbers clearly showed that reducing payments to retirees was the only sure way to fix things quickly.

In recent months Ms. Raimondo has crisscrossed the state in an attempt to sell a different remedy, one in which everyone takes a hit. Yes, it would hurt. But at least the state would avoid having to come up with yet another plan in a year or two. The defined-benefit structure, very popular with public employees, could survive. Still, the battle lines are clear. Eight public workers’ unions have already sued, saying the pension changes of 2009 and 2010 were illegal.

On a September evening out in North Scituate, at the historic Old Congregational Church, Ms. Raimondo told a crowd about what had happened in Vallejo, Calif. That city filed for bankruptcy in 2009 and, after grueling negotiations, left pensions intact but drastically cut bus service, police patrols and other government functions, along with the pay of the city workers who provide all those services.

“That’s not what we want for Rhode Island,” Ms. Raimondo said. “That’s not the future we want for our children.”

Others in the crowd had their own stories. Several retired teachers said they had played by the rules and sent a part of every paycheck to the pension fund, as required by law. One man demanded pension cuts for state troopers and judges. A woman said her aged father would be unable to buy medicine if the state stopped adjusting his pension for inflation.

I feel your anger,” Ms. Raimondo told the crowd. “In many ways, I’m angry myself. Many of the shenanigans that went on in past years were just wrong.”

In some ways, the central question is not only what the government owes to pensioners but what citizens owe to one another. From the pews of the church, Cindy Gould, a fourth-grade teacher, said that under the current system, she had 11 years to go until retirement. Under Ms. Raimondo’s plan, she might have to work longer. But, Ms. Gould, 54, said she was willing to do so if that meant the elderly would get the medical care they need.

Since the last recession hit, states and cities around the country have embarked on pension changes, often following the Rhode Island pattern. Benefits for state employees who have not yet been hired are usually the first to be cut. Then come changes for those now on the payroll, often in the form of higher mandatory contributions.

Retirees have mostly been off-limits, until now. In many instances, laws or legal precedent shield them. In the corporate sphere, they are supposed to bear losses only in bankruptcy. But those rules do not apply to states, which may not declare bankruptcy in any case. If a government homes in on retirees, a lawsuit is sure to follow, and the resolution will take years. But Ms. Raimondo says Rhode Island doesn’t have years. This isn’t a question of politics or law, she says, but of simple math. To get the numbers right, Ms. Raimondo quickly assembled a panel of experts that included academics, mayors and union officials. The goal was to figure out what a public pension should be and what Rhode Island could afford. Inflation protection every year, for people who in some cases retired in their 40s, started coming into focus.

Analysts also took a close look at the projected long-term investment return for the pension system: 8.25 percent. Everything rested on hitting that target, but the state’s actuary said there was less than a 30 percent chance that would happen over the next 20 years. The board voted to lower the assumption to 7.5 percent. (Given the recent run in the financial markets, even that figure may seem optimistic.)

As a result of that change, the state’s pension shortfall instantly rose to $9 billion from $7 billion. The unions said Ms. Raimondo had manufactured a crisis.

She denied it. “This is about the truth,” she said, “and about doing the right thing.”

Then, as if on cue, Central Falls declared bankruptcy. The city’s pension fund wasn’t just underfunded. It was completely out of money. A receiver for the city sought court permission to reduce by as much as half the base pensions of retired police officers and firefighters.

Suddenly the pension crisis wasn’t an abstraction any more. The unthinkable had happened, and the odds were that it would happen again unless the state acted quickly.

Other mayors began stepping forward and warning that their communities were on the brink, too. Here in Cranston, Mayor Allan W. Fung said that unless things changed, he would have to eliminate trash collection, services to the elderly and recreation programs for children, as well as reduce the size of the police force and fire department.

Over in Woonsocket, John W. Ward, the president of the City Council, said that all summer parks programs had been eliminated and that teachers were working with larger classes than their contracts allowed. Half of Woonsocket’s streetlights were out because the city couldn’t afford to replace them. His son, daughter-in-law and granddaughter had moved to another state.

“To allow the pension system to remain largely unchanged will make it impossible for Woonsocket, and every other urban community, to survive,” Mr. Ward said.

AT the Portuguese Club in Cranston, José M. Berto raised his hand. At 62, he told Ms. Raimondo, he was on the cusp of retirement.

“We’re looking at a Ponzi scheme that would make Bernie Madoff look like a Boy Scout,” said Mr. Berto, a supply officer for the state.

He asked if Rhode Island’s pension problem was the worst in the nation.

Ms. Raimondo said it was.

“I don’t like her message,” Mr. Berto said after the session. “But she has been honest, forthcoming. We’re in trouble. We’re just in so much trouble.”

US Markets Gap Higher; Optimism In Earnings

Friday, October 21st, 2011

U.S. stocks opened sharply higher Friday on the heels of a handful of robust earnings reports and amid some euro zone optimism ahead of the upcoming EU summit on Sunday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 162 points, or 1.4%, the S&P gained 13 points, or 1.1% to 1231. Current resistance lies ahead for the S&P remains 1260-1280 range.

Europe is still the main concern. Earlier this month, we had these two big fears about recession in the U.S. and worries about Europe. The worries about recession are starting to recede a bit, and in Europe, we’re expecting to get some definitive answer in the next week. European leaders confirmed that they will meet multiple times over the next week to approve a key plan to resolve Europe’s debt crisis. In a joint statement, French president Nicolas Sarkozy and German chancellor Angela Merkel said that the elements of a comprehensive response to Europe’s debt crisis will be discussed in depth at Sunday’s European Council summit, and a plan will be adopted by next Wednesday at the latest. Originally, investors were expecting a plan to be hashed out by Sunday.

Still, with little news expected out of Europe Friday, investors were focusing on the latest corporate earnings reports.

Shares of General Electric (GE, Fortune 500) slid after the company announced earnings of 31 cents per share in the third quarter, up two cents from a year earlier and in line with expectations.

Verizon (VZ, Fortune 500) shares nudged higher after the the company reported a third-quarter profit and revenue that was roughly in line with forecasts.

McDonald’s (MCD, Fortune 500) earnings beat expectations, driven by higher sales of new menu items as well as traditional staples.

After the closing bell Thursday, Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) reported fiscal first-quarter earnings and sales in line with analyst expectations. Microsoft’s revenue rose to a record $17.4 billion, up 7% from last year. Shares edged up slightly.

Groupon reduced how much it hopes to raise in its initial public offering by 28% to $540 million. The company is putting 30 million shares up for sale, hoping they’ll receive between $16 and $18 a piece.

US Economy

Investors will be listening to speeches from three voting members of the Federal Reserve’s policymaking committee for hints about whether the central bank is considering another asset-buying program to boost the economy.

Ben Bernanke’s No. 2, Vice Chairman Janet Yellen, will give a speech on “The Outlook for the U.S. Economy and Economic Policy,” at 3 p.m. ET in Denver.

Meanwhile, Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota will be speaking at 1 p.m. ET, and Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher speaks at 1:20 ET. Kocherlakota and Fisher recently dissented from moves to spur economic growth, fearing the impact on prices.

In a speech Thursday evening, Fed Governor Daniel Tarullo called upon the Fed to start buying more mortgage-backed securities.