Posted: August 8, 2011 | Author: bostonboomer | Filed under: U.S. Economy, U.S. Politics | Tags: Eric Cantor, gambling, George Soros, hedge funds, Standard and Poor's, The Daily Mail |

According to The Daily Mail,
A mystery investor or hedge fund reportedly made a bet of almost $1billion at odds of 10/1 last month that the U.S. would lose its AAA credit rating.
Now questions are being asked of whether the trader had inside information before placing the $850million bet in the futures market.
The Daily Mail suggests this might involve George Soros, but a knowledgeable source denied it. The article also suggests that whoever made the bet could have had inside information–arguing that Obama and Geithner seem to have known for some time that a downgrade by S&P was in the works. Of course The Daily Mail is a conservative rag.
The latest bet was made on July 21 on trades of 5,370 ten-year Treasury futures and 3,100 Treasury bond futures, reported ETF Daily News.
Now the investor’s gamble seems to have paid off after Standard and Poor’s issued a credit rating downgrade from AAA to AA+ last Friday.
Whoever it is stands to earn a 1,000 per cent return on their money, with the expectation that interest rates will be going up after the downgrade.
Recall that Eric Cantor was revealed to have an investment that would have paid off handsomely if the U.S. had defaulted. Salon reported on June 27:
Last year the Wall Street Journal reported that Cantor, the No. 2 Republican in the House, had between $1,000 and $15,000 invested in ProShares Trust Ultrashort 20+ Year Treasury EFT. The fund aggressively “shorts” long-term U.S. Treasury bonds, meaning that it performs well when U.S. debt is undesirable. (A short is when the trader hopes to profit from the decline in the value of an asset.)
According to his latest financial disclosure statement, which covers the year 2010 and has been publicly available since this spring, Cantor still has up to $15,000 in the same fund. Contacted by Salon this week, Cantor’s office gave no indication that the Virginia Republican, who has played a leading role in the debt ceiling negotiations, has divested himself of these holdings since his last filing.
Why are these kinds of investments bets even legal? This is nothing but high stakes gambling, and it’s just plain wrong.
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Posted: July 23, 2011 | Author: bostonboomer | Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, Democratic Politics, Republican politics, U.S. Economy, U.S. Politics, voodoo economics, We are so F'd | Tags: Barack Obama, Federal debt ceiling, Harry Reid, John Boehner, Mitch McConnell, Nancy Pelosi, Standard and Poor's, U.S. Credit rating |

Bloomberg reports that John Boehner
told Republican lawmakers they need to provide a positive signal on a plan to avert a U.S. default before Asian financial markets open tomorrow, Republican congressional aides said.
Boehner wants at least $3 trillion in spending cuts in a two-step plan to accompany an increase in the U.S. debt limit, one of the aides said. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner warned President Barack Obama and congressional leaders during a White House meeting today of a possible reaction by Asian markets, said an official familiar with the meeting.
Did what Geithner said light a fire under Boehner or is he getting pressure from other sources–like Wall Street donors?
The markets could be tumultuous if a plan isn’t negotiated over the weekend, said Christian Cooper, head of U.S. dollar derivatives trading in New York at Jefferies & Co.
“The markets will be under very real pressure at the open because the assumption will be there is really no resolution to this,” Cooper said. “The breakdown in negotiations has crossed the line from the political posturing of the last few weeks to potentially a very real crisis.
“The Tea Party is effectively playing Russian roulette with the bond market and they will, with certainty, lose,” Cooper said. Jefferies is one of 20 primary dealers that trade with the U.S. Federal Reserve.
So suddenly the drop dead day is no longer August 2, but tomorrow?
Derek Thompson of the Atantic wrote today that “Dave Beers, director of the sovereign debt division at S&P” told him that S&P is losing faith in the ability of Washington politicians to agree on anything.
“The debt ceiling is not the central preoccupation that we have,” Beers told me this afternoon. “We put the United States on credit watch because we’re growing less certain that this political debate can be resolved. This was not merely about the debt ceiling.”
What about other AAA-rated sovereigns, like France and Canada, who also have high debt burdens? “They all have a strategy that went through the political process, and we think those strategies are credible,” he said. “The problem with the U.S. is that there is no strategy. There is a debate about what the strategy would be. But there’s nothing close to a consensus. If consensus isn’t possible now, when will that be?”
Basically the kabuki nonsense that has been going on for weeks now between President Obama and House and Senate Republicans has already done serious damage to the U.S. credit rating. These guys look like fools to the rest of the world, and we all know the reason for the continuing game playing is that Obama actually wants massive cuts–especially in social programs. Anyone who is paying attention knows that now, even though Obama is still trying to put the blame on the Republicans, he owns this mess.
There is every sign at this point that Congressional leaders on both sides have decided the President just isn’t going to lead on this, and they have decided to work something out without him.
And, to emphasize responsibility now lies with Congress, Boehner and the congressional held their own meeting at the Capitol Saturday evening.
Pelosi and Reid left the meeting with Boehner and McConnell after less than an hour, retreating to Pelosi’s office across statuary hall in the Capitol. The two Democratic leaders refused to answer repeated questions from reporters. McConnell returned to the Senate side of the Capitol minutes later.
On Friday evening the Speaker announced that he was ending on-again-off-again talks with the White House with only days remaining before the Aug. 2 deadline when the U.S. will exceed its borrowing authority.
After a meeting in the White House with Obama, Harry Reid, and Nancy Pelosi, Boehner
told his colleagues that any deal will be a product of congressional leadership – not a compromise struck with the White House, the Republican source said, noting that “strategically not working with the president, but with the Senate could be better for him.”
Boehner was backed up by Democratic leaders Reid and Pelosi, when he said to Obama, “Mr. President, I need to deal with the House and the Senate because we [the White House and Congress] aren’t getting anywhere,” the source said.
Very interesting. It’s also interesting to note that Eric Cantor was not at that meeting this morning. Has Boehner decided to clip Cantor’s wings? We haven’t seen or hear much from him for the past few days.
Sam Stein at Huffpo is reporting that
House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) is set to call the Democratic Party’s bluff on the debt ceiling. The Ohio Republican, in a briefing with his conference on Saturday, announced that he would press for a short-term deal, with major spending cuts paired with longer-term deficit-reduction strategies, as a way around the current impasse.
That strategy puts the speaker directly at odds with the White House and allied Democrats, who have insisted for weeks that they would not support a short-term extension of the debt ceiling.
Actually, Obama already waffled on that, but other Democratic leaders seem determined that whatever deal they reach will carry through the 2012 election. So how serious can Boehner be if he still plans to play chicken on the short-term/longer-term-deal issue?
There are lots more stories out there tonight speculating about what will happen tomorrow. What kind of “positive sign” does Boehner plan to send to Asian markets? Will it convince the ratings agencies not to downgrade U.S. Credit. Will there be a massive sell-off of U.S. Treasury bonds (Our resident expert, Dakinikat, already dumped hers).
I know it’s late, but I thought I’d put all this out there, since tomorrow could be a big day for news on the debt ceiling kabuki fight. Dakinikat told me that Tim Geithner will be making the rounds of the Sunday shows tomorrow. Maybe we’ll learn something from those shows for a change. Stay tuned….
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