tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-211033572024-03-13T08:12:26.797-04:00Hamptons PoliticsA resident's perspective on local politics in The HamptonsD. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.comBlogger72125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-38020607615097857202011-07-05T19:53:00.001-04:002011-07-05T19:54:49.192-04:00The District Attorney Dilemma?<i>You can't build a reputation on what you are going to do.<br />Henry Ford</i><br />-- 1863 - 1947<br /><br /><br />With the media second-guessing Cy Vance, Jr. over a very high profile prosecution, the question becomes what is not known, as opposed to what IS known about the case. No one doubts that there was <a href="http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2011/07/post_dsk_maid.html">some form of sexual contact</a>, but it <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/04/nyregion/soon-after-strauss-kahn-arrest-now-shaky-case-seemed-solid.html">becomes murky beyond that.</a> The fact that the current statistics on rape in New York are frightening -- up by 62%, -- may be the subtext to this case, however. It’s the kind of crime and numbers that are very disturbing to women as well as men in a civilized society. D.A.’s are pressured by such alarming statistics.<br /><br />What was essentially a <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/27/nyregion/two-new-york-city-police-officers-acquitted-of-rape.html">slap on the wrist,</a> in the recent case involving two police officers accused of rape, may have become the backdrop for potential criticism of the D.A. – despite the fact that Vance’s office vigorously prosecuted the case. But, what is more likely, is that the speeding to indictment of DSK, a powerful international politician, may have backfired. Strauss-Kahn, as head of the IMF and previously, perhaps, in line to run for President of France, is not a man without resources -- despite his obvious lapses of judgment. And, if there is an undercurrent to this matter, the speed of indictment, as against the rising numbers of sexual crimes in our city, helped create a public rush to judgment. The publicity, the media, loves a good Greek Tragedy – a man of high station brought low by hubris. And, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schadenfreude">schadenfreude,</a> is not just a “disease” known to journalists and the paparazzi.<br />But, unlike other D.A.’s, Vance does support the original American theory of Justice – that one is presumed innocent until proven guilty. It’s just that the media makes that concept unwieldy. In New York there are many media voices, but, in suburbs like the Hamptons, it speaks with one voice – a fearful one where the D.A. controls every utterance – or else. <br /><br />Meanwhile, after leaving Riker’s Island, Strauss-Kahn hired one of the best criminal lawyers in the country and some of the <a href="http://www.guidepostsolutions.com/">best investigators</a> on the planet. And, he also hired a <a href="http://www.tdinternational.com/">prestigious “consulting” firm</a> of former Intelligence officers to work on the case. You don’t want former U.S. Attorneys, Secret Service Special Agents, retired CIA, and FBI investigative specialists on your ass if you have anything to hide. And, apparently, the victim did. Spooks are smart and dispassionate about their business. When they are in private practice -- you don’t want to go there. As occurred in the recent retaliatory strike against Bin Laden, a “dish served cold” is an appropriate phrase that comes to mind.<br /><br />But, what needs to be remembered here is that Cy Vance, Jr. ran for office as a Progressive. And during an interview we had several years ago in SoHo, what was clear about him is that he had purpose and was on a mission to open up the D.A.’s office, modernize it, and bring it to the people in the community. He has been doing that. Bob Morgenthau supported Vance and he was the clear choice over Leslie Crocker-Snyder, a Conservative take-no-prisoners, former Judge. <br /><br />During an interview of former D.A. Bob Morgenthau, known as “the Boss” he spoke of the heritage of the Hogan office and his groundbreaking DNA indictments in absentia – which preserved the statute of limitations on rape. In his nineties, though, he had had enough and wanted Vance to take his place.<br />Richard Aborn, who has done a tremendous job as head of the Citizen’s Crime Commission was also in the running, but had a less cohesive campaign organization. He was, nevertheless, an impressive Progressive candidate as well as an attractive candidate for the office. In our interview he was clearly a powerful presence.<br /><br />If the Manhattan D.A. made mistakes, the Hobson’s choice here may have been in deciding to not allow Strauss-Kahn to leave the country as opposed to speedily presenting the case for indictment as justification. While there was a fear that he would flee, he was an internationally known politician. He is not Roman Polanski. The vision of the Port Authority Police, whose most difficult work is patrolling the Holland Tunnel entrance for “terrorists,” dragging the President of the IMF off of a plane – is more akin to a Leslie Nielsen movie – than high-stakes law enforcement. <br /><br /><br /><br />Cy Vance is a District Attorney who is ethical and effective. His office may have erred on the side of caution and had the good grace to face the music personally. The Media is not always kind. But, in Manhattan, at least, it is not owned. Freedom of the Press is alive and well – unlike Suffolk County where it is owned and operated by the District Attorney. <br /><br />Cy Vance will heal from this, at worst, sin of omission and we should be grateful to have a District Attorney who deals in Justice, not in retaliation and intimidation to do his job.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-7203343091027355232011-02-01T20:36:00.011-05:002011-02-01T21:22:16.840-05:00Just When You Thought It Was Safe<span style="font-style:italic;">Economics is extremely useful as a form of employment for economists.</span><br />-- John Kenneth Galbraith (1908 - 2006)<br /><br /><br />With all of the conflicting reports about real estate and the housing market, perhaps a little perspective is in order.<br />In Manhattan, rents have settled and are trending higher. There are some great deals in the Battery Park/Wall Street area. Things are still a little desperate there but $2000 for a studio/one bedroom (depending upon how much sleeping space you need) is sort of the bottom rung. Sales are moving along in Manhattan but even formerly hot properties are still only lukewarm. Old line brokers like Robert Agee at <a href="http://www.quatrone.com/">Quattrone</a> are doing fine. Upstarts have had to trade in their new Mercedes.<br /><br />The story in the Hamptons is a little murkier. Since East End brokers tend to start telling the truth about business 3 or 4 quarters after reality is painfully obvious, it is safe to say that sales are very slow, prices are off by 30 to 50 percent (from 2006) – depending upon which Hampton and how exclusive the location is – and certain price ranges do not move at all. <br />From those brokers who will talk, we’ve learned that properties in the $300,000 to $500,000 price range are moving (Hampton Bays) and there are mortgages available. Properties sales in the $500,000 to $1 million range (Southampton) begin to get very dicey. And, from $1 million to $3 million sales (East Hampton) only occur when the original price has been discounted by at least 30%. Above the $3 million to $4 million range (Water Mill/East Hampton/Southampton Dune Road), sales begin to pick up – since that is generally the all cash purchase territory of celebrities and hedge fund buyers. Above and beyond that range it is all Goldman Sachs types using taxpayer’s money to fund their lifestyle, compliments of the Federal government (East Hampton Dune Road/Quogue Dune Road). Those have lots of hedges and front on the ocean for safety.<br />In Westhampton Beach Village, the <a href="http://whbpac.org/pages/index.php">Performing Arts Center</a> showed Inside Job for one day last weekend. In that Village, the government is partially asleep and numerous commercial establishments are shuttered and out of business. Since East End media has no “voice of opposition,” there is little to learn about the workings of each of the monolithic governments in power or its sycophants. Occasionally, a local blogger will spew forth half-truths and venom but mostly independent writers toe the party line or are shut down by local law enforcement. Freedom of Expression or Freedom of the Press gets in the way of politics on the East End and therefore accurate business news is almost as difficult to report as politics or corruption. Perhaps <a href="http://www.michaelmoore.com/books-films/">Michael Moore</a> will pay a visit soon. <br /><br />Commercial real estate continues to drop along with residential property values in the Hamptons (<a href="http://www.normareynoldssir.com/html/agent.jsp?aid=1000647&incfile=richard.html">Richard Silver at Norma Reynolds</a> in Westhampton Beach is reliable) and the trend will continue as New York City and New York State continues to attempt to find money. No one knows, yet, what affect the reduced number of real estate transactions has had on the Town of Southampton – and whether the Preservation Fund or its general coffers will affect civil service jobs. Default on interest payments and possible Chapter 9 bankruptcy has not yet been broached by Anna Throne-Holst or the Town Board but is a subject on every political leader in every one of the hundreds of municipal governments across America. Perhaps Goldman, Bank of America or Countrywide executives who might buy the newest mansion in the Hamptons might offer the Town advice on how to move the debt and risk “off balance sheet” as they did with Greece. A reader writes:<br /><br />“Goldman Sachs has admitted that it is under investigation for helping Greece to hide its vast debts. <br />The controversial Wall Street bank - nicknamed the Vampire Squid because its tentacles stretch far and wide - is accused of having profiteered out of a complex currency deal that helped Greece massage its finances. <br />The Wall Street giant is claimed to have received as much as £192m in fees by entering a complex currency transaction in 2001 that helped Athens borrow cash without putting it on the books as a loan. <br />Goldman Sachs was once seen as the invincible bank that could beat other firms hands down. It has always paid vast sums of cash to its employees, so it can employ the hottest talent in the financial world. <br />America's Securities and Exchange Commission accuses Goldman of misleading its own clients and encouraging them to invest in a product that was destined to fail. <br />The lawsuit centers on trades set up by its sub-prime mortgage trader Fabrice Tourre, who has since been placed on 'administrative leave'.”<br /><br />In general, the housing market has a very strong effect upon the health of the economy. And, the prognosis is the it will take <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/video/asset/housing-market-still-has-long-road-to-recovery-2011-01-31/CEEBDDC9-4E9D-43C1-B5FE-4E055AF24EB2#!CEEBDDC9-4E9D-43C1-B5FE-4E055AF24EB2">close to six years</a> before real estate can normalize.<br />There is a temporary lull in foreclosures as the banks dig out from under their own fraudulent behavior and there are some 11 million people whose properties are worth less than their mortgage. <br />A tsunami of foreclosures will resume some time this year or next and this will depress prices and add to the unemployment numbers. We are at the precipice of a “double-dip” recession which, for many, will just be a continuation of what has not seemed at all like the end of the last one.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-58000630278387585742011-01-01T12:30:00.001-05:002011-01-01T12:31:41.551-05:00The Double Dip - Part DeuxIf you want to tell people the truth, make them laugh, otherwise they'll kill you. <br /> -- Oscar Wilde<br /><br />As previously reported (January 22nd “Double-Dipping), there is renewed interest in what we have been writing about. Actually, what has currently been written about is tame by comparison to what is going to happen. The median drop in housing prices across the country is roughly 30% off the peak. In reality, many areas have experienced reductions in housing prices of nearly 60%. <br />In the Hamptons, property values have dropped an average of 50% from the peak in 2006, with the exception of certain, very limited “trophy” properties. Essentially, this means that the “fool and his money are soon parted,” theory is alive and well. Investors are still on the sidelines and starting to drink heavily. Commercial property continues to drop.<br />While prices of condos have maintained their “value” in Manhattan, renting is the new buying. Prices have temporarily stabilized on sales but have suffered from lack of financing. Neither is the case in the outer boroughs.<br />The Trump SoHo property, a condo-hotel, is entering foreclosure and suffers from a multitude of lawsuits from buyers who claim they were misled and want their money back. This particular development is an indication of the overzealous fantasies about real estate and its imperviousness.<br /><br />Of course, all of the above is really too optimistic. Few discuss the real El Grande problem, such as the Depression lurking around the bend.<br />If we limit discussions to housing and property values, the truth is that we will soon be experiencing a tsunami of foreclosures all across the country.<br />As a result of the “robo-signer” controversy which, basically, caught the banks with their pants down as they inspected the “irregularities” (translated=Fraud) in their foreclosure process. And, what was also exposed along with this problem is the fact that they may never have owned the properties in the first place. Establishing accurate title between the SIV’s (securitized investment vehicles) and the CDO’s (mortgage bonds) is next to impossible. Not even the bank’s foreclosure attorneys are sure that their clients own the properties that they seek to recover. <br /><br />The next problem, aside from the fact that no recovery will take place until banks start to lend again, is the fact that municipal bonds may go the way of Free Speech in America. Down the toilet. It is not only in Russia that the government tries to silence journalists. Mainstream media is in severe jeopardy for all sides. Besides the Internet threat, the severe drop in advertising and pressure from the government to curtail criticism of its policies – have dovetailed to make publishers vulnerable. <br /><br />The bonds that packed the toxic mortgage debt into CDO’s (which the prescient banks insured themselves against with CDS’s) are still held by Villages, Counties, States and Counties across America. And, these same municipal entities issued bonds in order to raise money for their bloated budgets – which counted on tax proceeds and transfer taxes for pay for everything from Police to Tax Assessors. Pensions are likely to be one of the targets eyed by bleary-eyed accountant/administrators. In the Hamptons, as in Suffolk County, retirement benefits are often a rigged game. For example, if you have 20 years of employment in civil service, the monthly retirement check is based upon the last year’s salary. Overtime can change the salary base dramatically. So, a job that paid a $75,000 salary for 19 years, can suddenly become a $150,000 a year job for the last year of service. The last year is used to calculate the retirement benefit. Police Departments use this ploy since emergencies often occur and overtime is arranged based upon seniority and political connections -- but politicians, as well, are among the most cynical players in making these arrangements for themselves.<br /><br />Obviously, this is tantamount to fraud and is intended to rape the taxpayers. During these horrendous economic times, while people are scrounging for food, a retirement based upon $150,000 per year when the regular salary for 95% of the employ tenure is $75,000, is stealing.<br /><br />As municipalities start to file Chapter 9, many unpopular decisions will have to be made. One of them is how many, not whether, employees have to be dropped. Pensions will need to be cut and in some cases eliminated.<br />While this inevitability may have been behind the supposed slowdown creating snowstorm problems in Manhattan (employee reductions), there simply is no choice. The Feds can print more money, the States cannot. And, if the international community rejects the dollar as the Reserve Currency all bets are off. Prices would skyrocket immediately.<br />At present, all of our imports are paid for in dollars. We do not have to exchange our currency into the currency of the exporting country– everything is dollar denominated. Were the Reserve Currency to be another denomination, we would first have to buy that currency and then pay the bill. Right now, if we are short on cash we just print more. Other countries are on to that and cannot do anything about since we issue the Reserve Currency. That would all change immediately if the dollar were rejected as the World’s medium of exchange.<br /><br />Until the foreclosure mess plays out and housing bottoms, municipalities deal with budget reality, pensions are reformed and expectations are lowered by everyone – the recessionary spiral will end in a Depression. It will be a Depression that has many wealthy people associated with major corporations and Wall Street. But, for those of us on Main Street it will be another 5 to 10 years before this is over.<br /><br />Be prepared for Code Enforcement, Police and Prosecutors to fine, arrest, indict, imprison and confiscate everything and everyone that they can get their hands on – simply to justify their employment. In this environment you justify your job by bringing home the bacon.<br />And, this includes the massive seizure laws that have made police departments and political coffers a thing of amazing beauty. <br /><br />But, the game is over. Every penny counts as we head into another major downtrend.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-34031979811653648922010-12-22T19:28:00.015-05:002010-12-23T00:13:37.831-05:00As Rome Burns<i>An honest man can feel no pleasure in the exercise of power over his fellow citizens.</i><br />-- Thomas Jefferson (1743 - 1826)<br /><br />Last month there was a <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MAuIYr_x_0">hue and cry</a> over a (previously removed) position being slipped back in over vocal objections at the Town of Southampton Town Board meeting. The pay scale was $150,000, roughly the same as most police in the Town after a couple of years.<br />Democrats were aghast that the 3 Republicans on the Town Board would try to slip this through without their approval.<br /><br />Although one could not say that Democrats are naïve, in Suffolk County where Republicans pose as Democrats long enough to get elected (County Executive Levy, D.A. Tom Spota), it should be no surprise that once the Republicans again got a firm grip on power in the Hamptons, it would be business as usual.<br /><br />Systemic corruption is different from actual corruption. The Republicans cannot escape the depth of the Heaney/Lombardo/Thiele/Schaeffer Hamptons monster, which gets its media support from the Southampton Press and Newsday. Without any real media unafraid of prosecution, only the Feds will have any interest.<br />Think about it. When was there last an article criticizing the power structure for what is currently called the “injustice” system in Suffolk County?<br /><br />With Villages, Towns, Counties, and States about to be thrown into the chipper financially – doesn’t it make sense to slip in a few patronage jobs?D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-57504633694383294302010-10-13T13:23:00.005-04:002010-10-13T14:48:06.698-04:00Bank Fraud of the Day<i>I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies.</i><br />-- Thomas Jefferson<br /><br />The economy has been reeling from the massive problems caused by the Wall Street creation of securitized bonds – CDO’s and synthetic CDO’s, which fueled the housing boom. While these securitized mortgage bonds were being sold off across the world, the banks were busy buying credit default swaps to protect that phony bet. We are now seeing how this was engineered and how it is being addressed as the <a href="http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/10/13/foreclosure-mess-thickens-experts-fear/">foreclosures come to market.</a> Almost daily, fresh disclosures appear in the media. <br /><br />The government handed out massive amounts of money, hundreds of billions of dollars, to support the perpetrators -- investment banks and insurers like Citibank, Bank of America, WaMu (JPMorgan Chase), Merrill Lynch and A.I.G., in order to protect the banking system. They paid back the T.A.R.P. money with near-zero percent loans that they used to invest but did not use to afford loans to the credit starved small businesses who were damaged by their excesses.<br /><br />What is clear about all of this is that any finger pointing in this entire charade belongs entirely pointed in the direction of these corrupt institutions, which ran a casino at which unsuspecting borrowers were playing a rigged game. The house, the banks, fully supported by the government, always wins. Even the bond ratings agencies like Moody’s and Fitch were complicit in rating inferior investments as AAA+.<br /><br />But, now full-fledged investigations by <a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20101013-710815.html">Attorneys General across the country,</a> point to a picture that has long been suspected. Banks, in collusion with mortgage bankers and brokers, foisted a huge fraud upon the American people. Dangerous loans were practically forced upon borrowers and investors in the form of “liar loans” and free money to buy and speculate with -- and are <a href="http://mandelman.ml-implode.com/2010/10/alright-banker-people…-that’s-enough-you’re-not-making-sense-and-you’re-making-me-dizzy/">culminating the fraud with doctored paperwork and illegal acts</a> – starting with the banks themselves and moving on through the attorneys processing the foreclosures.<br /><br />In New York, Eric Schneiderman, currently running for Attorney General, has promised to be the <a href="http://sohojournal.com/content/schneiderman-unveils-homeowner’s-agenda-protect-new-yorkers-fraud-and-foreclosure">Sheriff of Wall Street.</a> Should he win this Election Day, we have the promise of a full accounting of how Investment banks, mortgage brokers, foreclosure attorney mills and servicers who preyed upon homeowners – all worked together to perpetrate the biggest fraud in history.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-72795014761018495042010-05-13T23:02:00.006-04:002010-05-13T23:14:21.979-04:00The Flash Crash<i>Buy on the rumor; sell on the news.</i><br />-- Wall Street Proverb<br /><br /><br />So here’s the deal. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/video/asset/source-of-flash-crash-a-mystery-2010-05-12/02D473F5-3DE6-4C50-B95B-CED66FAA6A56">Flash trades</a> basically are handled by “bots” or computerized systems at close to the speed of light.<br />Buy or sell orders are handled in nanoseconds. In fact, orders are received and transacted faster if the physical location of the computer-generated trade is closer to the servers that exist for the Exchange – wherever that facility is actually located.<br />If the brokerage house/investment bank is closer to the Exchange, it’s possible to execute a trade faster than a local office of, say, Merrill Lynch, whose office could be in Iowa. The electronic time lag gives the edge to the broker near the Exchange. <br /><br />Goldman Sachs is known to have been making its money by having its systems closest to the action. Fully 70% of all trading is now flash trading. Goldman is said to account for nearly 48% of these trades and 35% of all trades. Flash trades enable the fastest “gun in the East” to get ahead of other orders and with a few million trades a day, makeing its money by executing in and out before its rivals. Investors who have stop loss orders are sold out and combined losses of hundreds of billions of dollars are estimated. Goldman makes money. In fact, Goldman regularly has $100 million days. <br /><br />Essentially, flash trades permits Goldman to see an order and choose its execution by inside information that is due to the faster (closer) proximity to the source of the information. The Flash Crash exposed this system.<br /><br />Mayor Motz of Quogue <a href="http://www.27east.com/story_detail.cfm?id=275084">was prosecuted</a> for this. Only, in his case it was called “Frontrunning.” Either Motz is innocent or Goldman is guilty. You can’t have it both ways. The only difference was speed.<br /><br />There you have it, folks.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-3565856579167464522010-05-07T16:34:00.002-04:002010-05-07T16:35:28.170-04:00Political Notes 5.7.10<i>Democracy becomes a government of bullies tempered by editors.</i><br />-- Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803 - 1882) <br /><br />As the economy “improves,” the volatility in financial markets as well as the quality of life continues to deteriorate. The anomaly is not really inexplicable. What is missing is accurate reporting about what is going on. The government is desperate to have us believe that everything is on the mend. Despite the fact that “they are rioting in Africa,” or rather, in Greece, all is well. Except, that all is not well. <br /><br />The fact is that the VIX, the market volatility index, is spiking and Wall Street had a wild ride on Thursday – down nearly 1000 points intraday.<br /><br />The dismay sown by the Communists in Greece has risen to the level of a few fatalities. So, while a loan package via the IMF and Germany has been extended, the rest of the PIGS will soon arrive with their collective hands out. That’s when the fun will begin in the Eurozone – and that’s when it will start to really get interesting here in America. <br /><br />We have Goldman Sachs, an investment bank that took TARP money because it was “too big to fail” unlike Lehman -- which had a hand in bringing down Greece through its “creative accounting” and credit-default swaps. GS is now arguably facing a criminal investigation – which the populace has been calling for, for years. The Eurozone is facing collective bankruptcy or at default on its Sovereign debt and the U.S. is facing the possibility of a double-dip recession. The current improvement in employment numbers may, in fact, be the predicted temporary rise in spring fever/seasonal employment for Small Business. Schiller, the Yale economic guru, has predicted a huge coming increase in foreclosures brought on by Alt-A and Prime loans which will reset this year and have a chilling effect going forward. The fact that nearly one third of all homes in America are worth less that the mortgage is important. Those that bought homes with the $8,000 tax credit have been told that the value of their homes dropped before the ink was dry on the loan documents. <br />As a backdrop to all of this, local economies from States to Counties, to Cities, to Villages have become the antagonists towards the one source of energy that can help solve the crisis – Small Businesses in America.<br /><br />With fully 65% of all jobs emanating from this source, it has become the target instead of the savior for every civil service agency from the IRS, to the NY State Tax Department, the NYC Traffic Enforcement Bureau, and the Worker’s Compensation people, ending with Code Enforcement personnel, which initiate fines. The list of antagonists to the energy and drive needed by Small Business owners is growing as the deficits caused by the Wall Street/Banks/Mortgage Broker fiasco plays out. <br /><br />The credit default swaps and phony mortgage products that were signed off on by unsuspecting borrowers – fueling the CDO’s and SIV’s that were sold off to pension funds, small banks, Countries, Cities, States, Counties and Villages across the country – are now spawning legions of civil service employees looking to make up the losses while creating a justification for them to keep their own jobs. Soon government will have no subjects to collect from and Hannibal Lector will be in charge of the feast.<br /><br />This is being played out with the same tactics used by the King. <br /><br />Threaten and tax the people -- who are the victims. Why? It’s easier than going after the banks. It’s cheaper. And, because we can. <br /><br />But, why are we killing Small Business? It is the real Goose that laid the Golden Egg in America. This is the conundrum which begs a political answer in this country -- if we are to succeed.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-6956590158167354902010-04-30T18:04:00.002-04:002010-04-30T18:05:04.053-04:00Just Desserts or Black Swan?<i>Men stumble over the truth from time to time, but most pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing happened.</i><br />-- Sir Winston Churchill (1874 - 1965)<br /><br />Trying to read between the tealeaves in this regenerating economy is no easy task. While the numbers appear to show that business is improving in certain sectors, employment has again dropped along with optimism and foreclosures have again surged in March.<br /><br />Improvements in certain real estate in some sections of the country have been noted. Condos in Manhattan have reportedly increased in both sales price and numbers of transactions. There is a market in Manhattan for higher-end apartments (above $3 million) and for Hamptons’ summer homes in higher price brackets (above $2 million) as well as very low priced housing (under $350,000). Most of these transactions follow a simple logic: FNMA mortgages are readily available up to $417,000 and for those happy souls with cash – the lack of mortgages is not a stumbling block. Discounts of 15 to 20 percent all across the board are common.<br /><br />Meanwhile the <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/us-foreclosure-filings-up-in-first-quarter-2010-04-15 ">foreclosure numbers</a> keep rising and more product comes on to the market. This ensures that home values will not appreciate to the top of the market (2006) until the year 2020 in many locations. Fully 25% of all homes are worth less than the mortgage on it. <br /><br />Businesses, on the other hand, are suffering. Unfortunately, small businesses employ more than 60 percent of the labor force. If loans are not available, most small businesses have few options: continue to operate at a loss, or fire a few people. When there are no people left to fire, the businesses must close.<br />Even the touted success that GM has paid back its government loans turns out to be like the <a href="http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/04/22/grassley-slams-gm-administration-loans-repaid-bailout-money/">shell game played on Canal Street.</a><br /><br />The hangover, of course, is that unpaid bills and taxes follow everyone around and it doesn’t matter that there is no business. With no financing, many small companies and their employees are enmeshed in a death spiral. The banks have seen to severe bankruptcy restrictions to prevent a sane exit from Dante’s new Inferno. <br />Even <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2010/SHOWBIZ/Movies/04/20/james.bond.film.postponed/index.html?eref=igoogle_cnn ">Hollywood is suffering.</a> <br />The government has attempted to deal with these issues in a variety of unsuccessful ways. Mortgage modifications are an acknowledged disaster, extended unemployment benefits has become the New Welfare, and rather than soften the crushing debt load for small businesses and individuals, 16,000 new IRS agents have been hired to tighten the noose. <br /><br />Goldman Sachs, that paragon of American Capitalism philosophy, was finally <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/18/business/18goldman.html?partner=rss&emc=rss.">charged with civil fraud</a> for working its magic<br /><br />After working diligently, sometimes hand-in-hand with JP Morgan Chase, to destabilize Villages, Counties and Countries with their credit-default swap derivatives – then perversely betting that their toxic handiwork would fail – they get a slap on the wrist from the SEC. Considering the degree of devastation caused by knowingly shopping their degraded bonds like Johnny Appleseed, while shorting them since they expected them to plummet, <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE63I2NH20100419?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+reuters%2FtopNews+%28News+%2F+US+%2F+Top+News%29&utm_content=Google+Feedfetcher">nothing short of scores of indictments</a> are in order. But, that will not likely happen. <br /><br />Here are some questions to be asked and answered: <br /><br />Were the banks complicit in creating mortgage products that <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE63G21Z20100417">they knew would implode</a> at some point<br /><br /> before they saturated the market through complicit mortgage brokers who created any and all documents to push them through – as recently came to light at <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/wamu-conspiracy-or-collapse-2010-04-13">Washington Mutual?</a><br /><br />Were they designed to self-destruct from day one? And, were the securitized mortgage bonds created after harvesting the deadly mortgages back from brokers and then sold off – WHILE purchasing credit default swaps so that they could sit and wait for the bombs to go off?<br /><br />Were homeowners and real estate investors duped by the fine print into accepting mortgages and easy money that were doomed to fail no matter they did? <br /><br />Will the Goldman investigation spread to all of the other banks like JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/deutsche-bank-under-pressure-after-goldman-probe-2010-04-19">Deutche Bank</a> and a few that were decimated, like Bear Sterns, Lehman, Merrill Lynch and Washington Mutual? Given the fact that companies like Countrywide, Ameriquest, Long Beach Mortgage and thousands of other independent mortgage brokers were peddling dynamite – will an extensive investigation find out that all of this was planned and carefully executed since at least 2005?<br /><br />Given the fact that no borrower ever had the time to read an entire mortgage document at a closing, was this the industry’s dirty little secret about duping the public? <br />Will this pass because the government has <a href="http://247wallst.com/2010/04/17/goldman-sachs-may-have-known-about-charges-for-nine-months/">no stomach for it,</a> or will Europe force our hand with its own investigations into the matter.<br /><br />Then, there is the other dangling shoe in Europe -- which is the <a href="http://247wallst.com/2010/04/22/bad-books-cook-greece/">Greek financial fiasco.</a> Of course, this too was partly constructed<br />by Goldman's "creative accounting." How many more of these <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE63L20N20100422?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+reuters%2FtopNews+%28News+%2F+US+%2F+Top+News%29&utm_content=Google+Feedfetcher">fiscal time-bombs</a> are buried within sovereign debt structures across Europe? <br /><br />Either of these problems is capable of morphing into a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_swan_theory?">Black Swan</a>D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-22081986326673446092010-03-03T20:45:00.003-05:002010-03-04T11:43:24.065-05:00The Motz Matter<i>Just remember in the winter<br />Far beneath the bitter snow<br />Lies the seed that with the sun’s love,<br />In the spring, becomes a rose.</i><br />-- Bette Midler <br /><br />It’s always a surprise that people lie to each other. There’s no question that this ridiculous sense of betrayal harks back to those days when we learned that our friends fudged and parents actually just sold us out. Since then, the downhill slide may have been more dramatic but a lot less surprising.<br /><br />Mayor Motz was popular in Quogue. His wife was the head judge. His son aspired to public office. He was adored by some, respected by others, vilified by those who lived outside of Quogue. It’s still a Village where you have to studiously observe the speed limit – unless you live there. And, we won’t delve into a recent imbroglio involving an accident that most locals know about where people died. Let sleeping dogs lie.<br /><br />So, here’s the deal: Motz was basically charged with switching tickets. Essentially, the attribution for trades was held in abeyance until everything was settled at the end of the day. ILLEGAL.<br /><br />But, get this. Goldman Sachs does trades in nanoseconds. By computer, trades are done BEFORE they are attributed to the buyer or seller – and the advantage is attributed to Goldman. NOT ILLEGAL. Forget the fact that GS has destabilized Greece.<br /><br />Is Goldman being investigated? Are they being indicted, arrested and forced to take pleas for trades where the firm inures to the firm’s advantage. And, who may I ask, is reporting this. The Southampton Press, Newsday? Anyone? <br /><br />Makes you wonder what THEY afraid of?D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-16189533795727442312010-02-25T22:19:00.007-05:002010-02-25T22:43:17.307-05:00EuroCrash vs. The PIGS<i>They’re rioting in Africa<br />They’re starving in Spain<br />There’s hurricanes in Florida<br />And Texas needs rain.</i><br />(The Merry Minuet)<br /><br />A business associate complained today that his house was falling into foreclosure, his credit-line second mortgage was in default, his credit cards were about to be charged-off, and he has been left, literally, with nothing of value. He lives on Long Island. He has a small business where he derives his income.<br />He was thankful that he has no assets. No one can attach them.<br /><br />Meanwhile, a woman who bought a brownstone in upper Manhattan bemoaned the fact that she could get nowhere with the Department of Buildings and was unable, after nearly two years, to complete its renovation legally. The property is now worth 50% of what it was purchased for in 2007. But, she refuses to hire a lawyer despite her tribulations, even after the useless employment of expediters.<br /><br />In Manhattan, real estate brokers took solace in the hordes of Europeans who, after the destruction of Lehman Brothers reportedly hopping off their 747’s onto the tarmac before the plane landed and immediately lined up behind shopping carts at Tiffany’s and filled out broker’s applications in order to scoop up condos with their rapidly appreciating Euros.<br />Builders in the Hamptons were stepping over ½ acre lots in Hampton Bays in order to pick up those 3-5 acre parcels in Water Mill to build mini-McMansions that were so popular with those Eurozone émigrés.<br /><br />It was convenient to believe that Europe has much less exposure to the subprime mess. But, as the game has played out, it wasn’t simply those CDO’s and SIV’s that did them in.<br />Goldman Sachs, for example, was an advisor to the <a href="http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2010/02/greece-outlaws-cash-transactions-above.html<br />">Greek government</a> and proceeded to do <a href="http://247wallst.com/2010/02/25/bernanke-the-fed-and-sec-examining-goldman-sachs-greece-issues/">two very neat tricks:</a><br />First, they showed the pencil-pushers how to hide a lot of debt, “off balance sheet” – then, knowing that this was an hourglass that would certainly run out, the boys at <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/25/business/global/25swaps.html?partner=rss&emc=rss">GS bought a whole lot of CDS’s</a> <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/noose-tightens-on-the-credit-default-swap-market-2010-02-25">(credit default swaps)</a> which essentially bet that the value of the Greek debt would degrade to the point of default. <br />That’s the same play they used with mortgages and took TARP money from Paulson (Treasury Secretary and former Goldman CEO) in addition. Few people know about the private letter ruling that allowed Paulson to meet and do business with Goldman during the meltdown (read “To Big to Fail”).<br /><br />Europe is now rapidly becoming the wagging tail that follows the American dog.<br />Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain (PIGS) now face the possibility of default on their debt. Not to far on the heels of already defaulted Iceland and Dubai – which recently rescheduled its debt while offering only 60 cents on the dollar.<br />No moral hazard here folks. That’s only for individuals. Corporations and countries walk away from debt all the time.<br /><br />As Kenneth Rogoff of Harvard writes, this is just the beginning:<br /><br /><i>The Federal Reserve last week raised the discount rate charged to banks for direct loans, and plans to end its $1.25 trillion purchases of mortgage-backed securities in March. President Barack Obama’s administration is proposing a $3.8 trillion budget for fiscal 2011 to spur the recovery.<br />“When they start tightening monetary policy even a little bit, it’s going to send shockwaves through the system,” Rogoff said.<br />In an interview a month before Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. went bankrupt in 2008, Rogoff said, “The worst is yet to come in the U.S.” and predicted the <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/video/asset/news-hub-more-troubles-ahead-for-us-banks-2010-02-23/21BF289D-81EF-44DB-BE17-F9C53708FAA7">collapse of “major” investment banks.</a> His 2009 book 'This Time Is Different,' co- written with Carmen M. Reinhart, charts the history of financial crises in 66 countries.<br />“We almost always have sovereign risk crises in the wake of an international banking crisis, usually in a few years, and that’s happening,” he said.<a href="http://247wallst.com/2010/02/24/greece-slits-its-own-throat/">"Greece</a> is just the beginning.”</i><br /><br />Few real estate brokers are now touting the advantages of a Manhattan market supported by the soon to be expected plummeting Euro. In fact, those who did buy condos and hopped back onto the plane are now worried about higher maintenance fees from enlarged shares of unsold or defaulted apartments and value dropping like a rock. At 311 West Broadway, a 68 unit condo in SoHo, for example, there are rumors of a huge inventory of unsold apartments with a developer whose monthly loan vig is $6 million a month. StuyTown value dropped from $5.8 Billion to a current value of $1.8 Billion. Rental prices are also dropping substantially despite what any broker tells you.<br /><br />And, in the Hamptons, where the newly installed Supervisor Anna Throne-Holst has been the poster girl for the <a href="http://www.27east.com/story_detail.cfm?id=262079&town=Southampton&n=Moody's%20downgrades%20Southampton%20Town's%20bond%20rating">Moody’s investment rating for Southampton Town</a> (which has dropped) – and the fact that it has only dropped a couple of notches shows you how both drugs and alcohol can be useful while reading through “news” reports. With a multi-million dollar budget loss that no one can figure out, a devastating indictment of a previous Supervisor Skip Heaney in a report by Linda Kabot, and rapidly disappearing revenues, only a fool would believe that the Town’s credit rating is anywhere near investment grade. <br />Construction of new homes is non-existent (certainly on spec), the value of the real estate tax credit has already been discounted and, considering the fact that there is no industry beyond real estate in the Hamptons, property tax receipts, transfer taxes, and home values have plummeted. It is much cheaper to rent than to <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/us-new-home-sales-fall-to-record-low-level-2010-02-24">buy anything.</a> Values are 50% lower and are still dropping regardless of what anyone tells you.<br /><br />Perhaps Goldman Sachs was the budget advisor in Southampton as well?<br /><br /><br />This economy has a minimum of another three years before it stabilizes, IF we do not have a double-dip and IF there is no credit bubble that bursts due to multi-trillion dollar deficits and the printing of fiat money.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-6669085141020608622010-02-11T12:29:00.006-05:002010-02-11T12:48:45.925-05:00The Debt Bomb<i>He that dies pays all debts.</i><br /> -- William Shakespeare (1564 - 1616), "The Tempest", Act 3 scene 2<br /><br /><br />Few people have a handle on the real financial crisis that we are experiencing.<br />The trickle down from Wall Street’s implosion is talked about but not well attended. What is happening on Main Street and on Madison Avenue is the disappearance of credit. Few businesses can operate without credit. The uneven flow of stock to sell (whether it be lettuce or Chinese handbags) requires money to smooth out the wrinkles. Those wrinkles are the cost of electricity, garbage removal and last, but not least, salaries. We won’t mention taxes – which the government regularly demands – if you’re not yet dead.<br /><br />The recipients of the TARP, arguably nothing more than a palliative, went to the banks. They kept the money after filling some holes in their balance sheets and the rest have gone for bonuses. We’ll never see any of that money. Dimon (JPMorganChase) got $17 million, Blankfein (Goldman Sachs) got $9 million -- if you believe the media – and a variety of top bankers got from $500,000 on up. All told, they gave out nearly $30 Billion to reward them for creating the morass.<br /><br />Now, facing the next wave of this rolling disaster, <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/commercial-loan-losses-could-threaten-system-cop-2010-02-11">commercial loans,</a> the real problem is coming home to roost. Since there can be no <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/early-signs-of-a-double-dip-in-housing-prices-2010-02-10?link=kiosk">“double-dip”</a> according to Geithner, we have to punt. Along with the evaporation of the dollar’s value and the rolling implosion of <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/eu-leaders-gather-as-markets-wait-on-greece-news-2010-02-11">foreign “sovereign” debt</a> (that means that countries are defaulting on their loans), we have the commercial real estate and credit to small businesses going the way of dinosaurs.<br /><br />When commercial loans default, it is usually due to the fact that business is drying up and the value of the mortgage loans is higher than the value of the property. With that comes the following: business failures, commercial foreclosures, and loss of jobs due to companies going out of business.<br /><br />This doesn’t have to happen but it will happen. Why?<br />Because, small business loans were always a tenuous proposition. The SBA, for example, only gave loans to business owners who had collateral (usually in the form of real estate) to guarantee the payback. At this point, there are about 10 different reasons why that cannot work (credit scores, drop in value, foreclosures, reduced business, etc.). If SBA loans didn’t work before, they will be impossible now – unless the government stepped in to help. That will not happen despite the PR, which the administration will spread around.<br /><br />We’re all in for a long and difficult recovery. But, it has not yet started. We are still heading into a nosedive.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-24309525229003108212010-01-22T10:26:00.012-05:002010-01-22T12:20:55.851-05:00Double Dipping<i>Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's character, give him power.</i><br />-- Abraham Lincoln (1809 - 1865)<br /><br /><br />Most economists but not all politicians admit that we are in the midst of a recession, at the very least. Some call it the Great Recession and some call it a mini-Depression. According to <a href="http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2010/01/senate-dems-not-sure-they-can-get-enough-votes-to-reconfirm-bernanke.html">Bernanke</a> and <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/21/AR2010012104935.html">Geithner</a> we are on the mend and while somewhere between 10% and 25% are unemployed (if you calculate the various categories of <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/jobless-claims-surge-in-the-latest-week-2010-01-21">Not Working</a>), the government’s standard line is that we are on track to recovery. Maybe later this year, maybe next year at the latest. Of course, if you are a Federal or State Civil Service employee, you are more likely to be unaffected by economic events around you. Federal and State governments have so far been loath to fire or lay-off civil service workers. But, that too could change if things get bad enough. To wit, California.<br />Then there’s Lloyd Blankfein and the Goldman Sachs “Bank,” formerly known as an “Investment Bank.” The latter gets no government bailout money; the former can take whatever it can get. And, it certainly did.<br /><br />Obama’s big mistake was in not sweeping out the Goldman Sachs employees (current and former) so as to emulate FDR’s clean sweep of the crooks. Instead we have Geithner and Bernanke in the shadows of the biggest con man, former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, who saved Goldman but killed Lehman and Bear Sterns. Of course, as a former CEO, he knew where the stock warrants were buried. While all of us were getting the picture on Main Street, Washington was still under Blankfein’s control. At least when Joe Kennedy was picked to run the S.E.C., he was known to be a crook who would catch the others.<br /><br /><br />What was on the horizon last year was the possibility of a double-dip or, even more ominous, a VW. The first refers to a second downdraft and the second refers to yet another uptick after the double-dip, followed by still another drop in economic activity.<br />Somewhere along these lines comes the possibility of Depression.<br />There were numerous drops in the Dow back in Depression number one and the last, which occurred in 1933, was the killer. At that point, the Dow had lost 90% of its value.<br /><br />Recently, in addition to the bad news about Dubai’s default on its Sovereign debt, there is speculation about a default in Greece. The <a href="http://www.thedailycrux.com/content/3891/Credit_Crisis">Greek economy</a> is now saddled with debt totaling 133% of GDP. Souvlaki can’t solve that alone. And, Germany is entering double-dip territory. Recently, there have also been figures in the U.S. that belie a cause for concern that we may also suffer that fate. We now may be heading down again.<br />The fact that China is now tightening its belt while our own banks take more of the remaining <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/credit-card-firms-get-crafty-in-skirting-law-2010-01-21?link=kiosk">credit</a> off of the table, does not bode well for small businesses or their shrinking employment roster.<br /><br />If we are entering a double-dip recession (which to some appears to be a Depression), some trends will accelerate. <br />In Manhattan, restaurants, clothing stores and real estate agencies continue to tout their special sales while beginning to close up shop.<br />Several condo developments have been abandoned in favor of hotel projects but the sluggish sales at locations like Trump SoHo, 350 West Broadway, and 311 West Broadway – are a signal that brokers still manipulate the truth. There is money around but the number of sales is off significantly and the discounts are deep.<br /><br />In the Hamptons, as the new government takes shape under Anna Throne-Holst in Southampton, the Town is still struggling with anemic property tax receipts and evaporating transfer taxes. Available funds are becoming harder to come by.<br />The investigation into what happened to the missing $13 million in Town coffers is shifting from Linda Kabot to former Supervisor Skip Heaney – according to a <a href="http://www.27east.com/story_detail.cfm?id=255284">lengthy document</a> she forwarded to the investigating team. For the first time, Heaney criticized the Southampton Press for its coverage in this regard – a highly unusual complaint given its heavily pro-Heaney and pro-Republican history. With a Republican Party that is fractured and a Democratic Party that has never had a strong grip on reality, both the Independent Party (led by Al Gregor) and the Conservative Party (Frank McKay) have become more important.<br />Wherever that $13M investigation leads, the Town now needs the money. Loss of numerous Town jobs and a further contraction in available cash is now more of a possibility.<br />Restaurants have closed, real estate agencies have gone out of business and more and more shops are for rent.<br />Sales of properties beyond the upper limit of $750,000 are scarce and prices are still dropping. <br /><br />Look for Bridget Fleming to fill the vacancy created by Throne-Holst who was elected Southampton Town Supervisor – and keep an eye on <a href="http://www.reginacalcaterra.com/Press.html">Regina Calcaterra</a> for State Senator, who is challenging Ken LaValle. She is strong on gay rights and has the bona fides to pull off an upset over the incumbent.<br /><br />Times really are a’changin.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-69719300393234316522009-12-17T12:12:00.005-05:002009-12-18T09:56:11.937-05:00Happy Holiday?<i>I have enough money to last me the rest of my life, unless I buy something.</i><br />-- Jackie Mason (1934 - )<br /><br /><br /><br />As we anticipate the possibility of snow, politicians who have been elected (or re-elected) are being sworn in. Most face the difficult task of doing more with less as New York City and New York State look for loose change to cover the growing financial shortfalls. California evidently was a harbinger of things to come and now falls somewhere between <a href="http://www.thedailycrux.com/content/3650/World_News/eml">Greece,</a> Latvia, Iceland and Dubai, in economic decline. Look for more of the same to spring upon us.<br />Governor Paterson and Mayor Bloomberg clearly have their hands full and when the MTA looks to cut service for the elderly and disabled, you know the problem is beyond voter rage.<br /><br />In the Hamptons, newly elected Southampton Town Supervisor Anna Throne-Holst (a cipher who is a skillful politician that has managed to defeat Linda Kabot) will need more than just cooperation from the Republicans to keep things moving. Perhaps the success of the Shinnecock Indians in having gained tribal recognition from the Federal government should now be considered a godsend in improving the economy. This was written about years ago in the SoHo Journal when “Skip” Heaney (former Supervisor) and the Republicans fought casinos in the Hamptons. Looks pretty interesting now as a source of incredible income, which could offset the cost of keeping police, teachers, and social programs intact – while lowering property taxes. It’s something to seriously reconsider.<br /><br />If you follow the meanderings of Wall Street, it is difficult to tell what the pundits are predicting -- since all things point to a resurgence of inflation, more prolonged pain on Main Street, an increasing number of foreclosures and job losses, a commercial real estate collapse this year -- come with record bonuses at Goldman Sachs -- along with a 50% increase in the Dow Jones. <br />All things point to improvement that investment bank employees experience -- coinciding with more financial and emotional pain for the average citizen. It is clear that the unemployment numbers are likely to continue to rise as inflation cures some of our problems temporarily. The fact that the employment numbers are “better” is no solace for people who are out of work, out of money and entering foreclosure. There is the possibility of a double-dip recession in spite of the numerous bailouts (like unemployment insurance) that keep the sans-culottes docile – and, as we wait for the credit bubble to burst, leading us into the Depression predicted for 2012-2013 – as a result of all of the money we have been printing.<br /><br />Read between the tealeaves and hope that the spring selling season brings us some temporary relief from the pain. But, don’t be fooled by the economic shell game that does not hide a fragile economy where, instead of allowing the “too big to fail” banks -- to fail -- we have simply propped up bankers who want their bonuses at our expense and at any cost. <br />Remember, there were several drops after 1929 and they were much more severe than Black Friday.<br /><br />PS. Since there is now an openly gay Mayor of Houston, the challenge of Regina Calceterra (www.reginacalcaterra.com) for State Senate takes on a new meaning. It is likely that State Senator LaValle will now face a credible and serious challenge to his incumbency. While there is certainly controversy over Gay Marriage, there is little disagreement over the need for equality – in long-term relationships and in civil rights. For many, it boils down to the use of the word Marriage. And, that is eroding. Keep your eyes open on this challenge in a typically conservative county on Long Island.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-52986162832585454302009-11-02T13:13:00.015-05:002009-11-02T20:40:49.170-05:00Hamptons Election Views<i>If voting changed anything, they'd make it illegal.</i><br />-- Unknown<br /><br />In the Hamptons, D.A. Spota, who holds the most powerful elected position in Suffolk County, will be re-elected along with a host of other candidates who were cross endorsed. This leaves only the Southampton Town Supervisor race as one of the few obvious, contested elections. While a few of the Town Board slots are in question, only the Supervisor race -- and that of Highway Superintendent are important. Alex Gregor, a strong local candidate wants to take over that sensitive, contract-laden post of Highway Superintendant in Southampton. All should support his run for good government.<br />Prior to this, that job was a huge source of largesse via political contributions.<br /><br />Anna Throne-Holst is vying for the incumbent’s job as Supervisor, currently held by Linda Kabot.<br />The election melodrama has a long history with players from several political directions.<br />But, essentially, the Republican Party has had a lock on Suffolk County (where the Hamptons are located) for the last several decades. Although interrupted briefly, Republican conservatism has been the area’s moral (in theory) and political structure. <br /><br />While “Skip” Heaney, the former Southampton Supervisor who now works for the County Executive, was a Republican – he was defeated by Linda Kabot (also a Republican) in a vicious Primary fight two years ago. Heaney did not take this lightly and there have been reports that he has not so surreptitiously thrown his support to Throne-Holst: the theory being, better to support the enemy of your real enemy, than your political adversary. <br />To complicate matters, the current Supervisor Linda Kabot was charged with a D.W.I. and arrested in September. She is not only fighting the legal battle but the “moral” battle in front of the voters.<br /><br />How this will play out is anyone’s guess. <br />Political gamblers have their bets on Throne-Holst who seems to have had the good sense to not attack Kabot and is riding the coat-tails of the Democratic resurgence. While the support of Heaney and his grip on some Republican stalwarts may be a double-edge sword that will help Throne-Holst now (since the voters had rejected him for Kabot), it remains to be seen how this will play out later. It could backfire on Throne-Holst in the next election if she wins this time. Both Malone and Nuzzi are supported by Heaney and the traditional Republicans and the objective is clear. One is reminded how DePirro had relied on Fred Thiele in her Democratic administration. <br /><br />Kabot’s D.W.I. issue is not at all uncommon in the Hamptons during the winter. Bus service, car services and designated drivers are about as common and available as are jobs these days. Now that – cash and jobs – is the real issue. No matter who wins. There seems to be some serious denial about where all of this Great Recession is going. We are only in the eye of this financial storm right now.<br />The only issue that seems to be relevant in Southampton is the budget and the missing Town money (anywhere from $8 million to $20 million depending on which report you read) – and that seems to have predated both Throne-Holst and Kabot.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-64586540854827176982009-09-14T14:24:00.010-04:002009-09-14T16:20:05.898-04:00Faux Pas in the Hamptons<i>You can observe a lot just by watching.</i><br /> -- Yogi Berra (1925 - ), Berra's Law<br /><br />After the screaming died down and the blogs and websites vented their bile over the <a href="http://www.27east.com/story_detail.cfm?id=233783&town=&n=Southampton%20GOP%20chairman%20to%20step%20down">DWI arrest of Town of Southampton Supervisor</a> this past week, some reality has set in. DWI’s are a longstanding problem on the East End and also affect the restaurant business in the mini-Depression that we are all enduring. Bars and restaurants would wind up closing even earlier in the season if one could not stop in and have a couple of drinks after work. This does not make is smart or right to ever get behind the wheel while impaired – regardless of whether you are under the legal limit. It is one of the biggest problems in a suburban or rural area, such as the Hamptons, where transportation (both public and private) is an issue.<br />Fortunately, Kabot did not hit a pedestrian, do any property damage, or hurt herself. Having said that, she deserves her day in court – not to be tried in the court of public opinion – and, the opportunity to address the mistake no matter how it plays out. She’s already paid a price.<br /><br />Of course, this was a gift to the Republican Party because she has had the gall to run against the machine and win in the previous Primary against Skip Heaney two years ago and went on the win the Supervisorship in the last General Election. The threatened Primary between Kabot and Maloney this year was called off because the <a href="http://www.27east.com/story_detail.cfm?id=233783&town=&n=Southampton%20GOP%20chairman%20to%20step%20down">Party</a> knew she would win and essentially, by their actions, threw the race to Democrat Anna Throne-Holst by pulling a few party lines out from under Kabot. That’s politics. Holst is a good candidate and would benefit the Town. But, that isn’t the point.<br /><br />Essentially, the lesson to be learned here is that making a stupid or dangerous decision -- is simply that. If you have a high profile it WILL be used against you. If you have friends in town, as in the past, coverage will never get published. If the ruling clique is after your ass, they will spread as much unsubstantiated dirt as they can against you. Linda is popular and she’s one of the people. Time will tell if they see through the smear and support her in spite of her mistake.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-56715234661713731232009-08-10T21:04:00.001-04:002009-08-10T21:06:50.406-04:00Summer in the HamptonsIllusion is the first of all pleasures.<br /> Oscar Wilde.<br /><br /><br />This turned out to be the summer that never happened in the Hamptons. Between the rain, cool temperatures and lowered expectations, many local businesses that do not serve alcohol suffered. Even restaurants suffered. Beaches were often empty. At times, it was actually quite pleasant not to be buzzed by Porches and Bentley’s trying to find a parking spot at Roger’s Pavilion in Westhampton Beach.<br />The Real Estate industry continued to contract and several brokers closed-up shop. Estimates of total price drops hover between 35% and 50% from their 2006/2007 highs and the main selling areas are now in the under $500,000 range. While there are sales in the million-dollar territory, price reductions and hard bargaining are now the norm since mortgage money in that category is difficult to obtain. While there are actually some new no-income verification loans available, generally a 30% deposit is required.<br />There are many differing opinions on when the market will return to some semblance or normality, but right now properties languish on the market for up to two years if they are not priced aggressively – translated: take a beating or sit with an unsold home. <br />East Hampton has done better in terms of rentals and sales and Southampton has had the biggest drop in activity. This summer, renters started out by offering owners 50% off the listed price. Buyers have brutalized brokers as well as sellers – often walking away after they got their price. Despite this, one $25 million dollar mansion rented for half a million dollars for the month of August only. <br />Nevertheless, the shake-out will net fewer real estate brokers, fewer rental units and fewer businesses to service them by next summer. Let’s just say that it was not a summer to be in the lawn sprinkler business.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-456532539853952672009-07-28T22:32:00.008-04:002009-07-29T23:48:20.569-04:00The Double Cross<i>I once said cynically of a politician, 'He'll doublecross that bridge when he comes to it.'</i><br /> -- Oscar Levant (1906 - 1972)<br /><br />The recent news pieces about election time in the Hamptons have evidenced a panoply of sub rosa deals and three-dimensional chess moves. Most of the reports focus upon a Republican deal in which Jim Malone was to have dropped back to run for Town Board instead of challenging Linda Kabot for Supervisor of the Town of Southampton. Current Supervisor Linda Kabot was to have a clear run in November, having apparently made peace with the Republican Party to avoid another Primary contest (she won the last one two years ago against incumbent Skip Heaney). But, apparently, the antagonism among Republicans who supported Heaney has deep strong roots and the deal to have Malone run for a Town Board seat and to step aside for Kabot to take the race to November against Anna Throne-Holst, <a href="http://www.27east.com/story_detail.cfm?id=224518&town=Southampton&n=Kabot:%20Loss%20of%20Conservative%20Party%20line%20a%20'betrayal">has blown up.</a> <br />With the Conservative Party endorsing no one in November for Supervisor, the several lines on the ballot gives an edge to Throne-Holst. Postings on 631politics (http://twinforks.com/ "Conservative Party Tricks") have some blog entries that describe the gory details.<br /><br />Malone is still running for Town Board but the tacit agreement that the Republicans would support Kabot for re-election has been side-tracked with the removal of support by the Conservative party endorsement. <br /><br />The tea leaves point to a bait and switch whereby the Republicans would rather hand the election to Throne-Holst for Supervisor this round and place their bets on the contest for Supervisor next time around between Throne-Holst and Malone – than allow Kabot to have another term. Of course, one should not underestimate Kabot’s political acumen or popularity with residents. An internal struggle that would remove Heaney’s grip on the party may now be playing out between Kabot and Heaney forces.<br /><br />No matter what you think about Skip Heaney, though, he continues to land on his feet and exert his influence over Southampton Town politics.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-48999947340496325492009-07-18T10:00:00.009-04:002009-07-19T09:25:09.308-04:00The End is Near?<i>It's a recession when your neighbor loses his job; it's a depression when you lose yours.</i><br />-- Harry S Truman (1884 - 1972)<br /><br />After several years of doom and gloom blogs and articles that point to the potential for devastation in the local economy as well as the national financial health, we are knee-deep in muck and mire. And, it’s not the vaudeville act by that name appearing in the Catskills. Few remember the fact that in 1982, prices for homes in the Hamptons actually dropped. This time around <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aXEt83qIc23w"> it is much worse.</a><br />Real Estate brokers were embarrassed and sellers were stunned in 1982. Now, they are heading for the exits. <br />It is now more akin to a <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE56F0XK20090716?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews">creeping Depression</a><br /> – which some think we have already entered. When you factor in falling tax revenues, missing money, increased budget needs, <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/given-cit-small-business-owners-need-a-plan"> evaporating credit markets </a> and rising unemployment, the picture is getting worse by the week. Given the fact that employment figures are rarely accurate and do not reflect numbers of workers whose benefits have run out and drop-outs who have lost hope, the real unemployment numbers are likely to be closer to 15% than the much-advertised 9.5%.<br /><br />Many optimists thoughtfully point to the recent stock market rally which in many previous recessions was thought to be a prognosticator of future rebounds. They thought that in 1932 too, after the 1929 drop was “over” and just before the market lost 90% of its value -- in 1933. <br />And, with the price of oil seemingly stabilized – it, too, is also in a dangerous decline. Comments by some economical professionals have warned of a precipitous drop. It is said that $60 dollar oil is manageable, but that <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=aQBXqFcd5gJo">$20 oil</a><br />will foment revolution in countries like Russia.<br /><br /><br /><br />The Hamptons have had their fair share of scandals this summer – from accusations of mortgage fraud to politicians dipping into the Preservation fund – but, nothing compares to what a month of summer rain can do. Pool companies, contractors, real estate agents, landlords, car dealers and purveyors have felt the pain of a double-whammy. <br />All have suffered from the disappearance of Bear, Sterns and Lehman Brothers bonuses and have experienced what has been an increasing problem – no customers and no cash.<br />We are about to enter a winter on the East End with no reserves, no cash, no credit and no prospects for nearly a year when the Spring "buying season" arrives. Main Street already has empty stores and the bankruptcies as well as business collapses are just around the corner. Foreclosures on many prime loans are just beginning, as distinguished from subprime products that banks foisted upon borrowers – and <a href="http://247wallst.com/2009/07/16/commercial-real-estate-woes-back-in-focus-jpm-bxp-lry-ofc-spg-pld-dlr-amb-cbg/">commercial real estate</a> is just now heading down. <br />Independent lenders are predicting that this whole process will take another 3 to 5 years at a minimum. Some say that value in the Hamptons will not return to “normal” until 2020. By next year, the value of property is likely to have dropped by 50% across the board.<br /><br />This will be the Winter of nearly everyone’s discontent no matter what the <a href="http://247wallst.com/2009/07/16/the-government-gums-up-the-mortgage-business">upbeat Obama officials tell us.</a>D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-85416973920163495472009-05-06T21:26:00.003-04:002009-05-08T11:13:46.866-04:00Imagine<i>If I'd written all the truth I knew for the past ten years, about 600 people - including me - would be rotting in prison cells from Rio to Seattle today. Absolute truth is a very rare and dangerous commodity in the context of professional journalism.</i><br />-- Hunter S. Thompson<br /> <br /><br /><i>The people shall not be deprived or abridged of their right to speak, to write, or to publish their sentiments; and the freedom of the press, as one of the great bulwarks of liberty, shall be inviolable.</i><br />-- James Madison<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Imagine that you are a journalist in a country where the ruling party and its government does not tolerate criticism or a difference of opinion. Or, were you to voice opposition to the government, you would be killed or destroyed – using any means possible. That the focus of the government attacks may be couched in some other mainstream, popular vehicle, permitting vast media resources (including PR and phony leaks) to create an adverse frenzy is merely part of a strategy. Think about reporters waiting for you at every turn, walking around your apartment and offices, asking accusatory questions based upon innuendos and lies to sell tabloids and gain viewers. Almost any excuse can be used by a government to make you, yes you, a criminal to be pursued.<br />What is widely viewed as legitimate business practices, can, with a twist of focus by a government official, become an illegality.<br /><br />In Russia, several journalists and human rights advocates have been the focus of convenient, high profile murders that were never solved. Court cases pointed accusatory fingers but juries have acquitted them – as arranged. In Iran, North Korea and other countries, similar actions have caused journalists following important issues to be tried and imprisoned simply for investigating and writing. <br /><br />For a journalist in America, with financial devastation facing many publications, prospects for the continuation of Free Speech and Freedom of the Press is in severe jeopardy. Even the New York Times is in serious trouble and may be sold within a year. Only bloggers, themselves journalists, have a real handle on many issues and continue to carry the torch for truth, even if biased at times.<br />A journalist or blogger now must often choose between writing the truth, conveying a sense of the real subtext in his or her political environment or community, and being able to live one’s life unmolested. There is a heavy price to pay for speaking out. <br /><br />Who will uncover truth in our society if these trends continue and more and more media slip into the mist of history? How will we continue as a Democracy if the forces of the State are allowed to destroy people using whatever means at their disposal?<br /><br />Imagine that you had a point of view that you were afraid to voice in America. Will we now crucify and destroy those who disagree with us? Is this the new journalistic reality? Is this our future?<br /><br />If we lose our liberties, there is no end to the slide into totalitarianism and terror.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-17820879418968422962009-04-03T10:40:00.009-04:002009-04-03T10:47:30.034-04:00The Hamptons Meltdown<i> I get no respect. The way my luck is running, if I was a politician I would be honest.</i><br />-- Rodney Dangerfield <br /><br />As the politicians and media play out their roles in the recent real estate hysteria in the Hamptons, all eyes are looking away from the mismanagement and incompetence in the face of this financial Armageddon.<br /><br />General Motors is facing the possibility of bankruptcy, Citigroup is certainly not making Saudi Prince Al-Waleed happy and AIG stumbles along on Federal loans.<br /><br />Those who have been reading the tealeaves, including financial consultants and media gurus, watch Wall Street galloping away from the true cause of our potential financial demise – the derivatives market. Yes, that’s the $700 Trillion dollar elephant in the room. AIG is only a small element of that giant scheme which wrote insurance on sums that could never have been covered in case of a default.<br /><br />Of course, that’s more difficult to comprehend and impossible to prosecute. It is an amorphous ride into Hell that makes Dante’s Ninth Circle seem like a trip to the Caribbean. Warren Buffet warned us all many years ago, as he started to unwind counterparty positions, that there was a ticking time bomb in our financial system. Even he has lost billions as a result. <br /><br />As we consider the <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/Home-values-sink-record-pace/story.aspx?guid=%7B2AEA804A%2D2895%2D440A%2D828B%2DD6C60A8553B6%7D&dist=SecMostRead">non-existent sales market</a> -- auctions, short sales, and foreclosures have grabbed the headlines. But, until there is liquidity and a return to lending, all bets are off. Look for a shrinking of the commercial real estate market, downsizing of almost all businesses and the quiet disappearance of many real estate brokers. Jobs will also be difficult to find, except in the seasonal summer months.<br /><br />This time around, unlike the crisis which began with the 500 point drop in the Dow in 1987, it is possible that the Great Recession may last anywhere from two to five years longer. Some predict that we will not be out of this until 2020.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-40972639825731662462009-03-22T13:15:00.013-04:002009-03-23T16:46:20.305-04:00Puffery in the Press<i>Advice to writers: Sometimes you just have to stop writing. Even before you begin.</i><br />-- Stanislaw J. Lec (1909 - 1966), "Unkempt Thoughts" <br /><br /><br />Well folks, the boys and girls at the <a href="http://www.27east.com/story_detail.cfm?id=200755&page=1">Southampton Press</a> are at it again. We’re not really in a Recession or even a mild Depression, because the “bridge and tunnel crowd” are all around us buying out the stores in the Hamptons. In fact, there’s barely any room to park those Mercedes’. Lizzy Grubman says so. Even though her comments are made from home in Manhattan.<br /><br />After trashing Grubman mercilessly in their rag a few years ago, they now want to quote her to revive the local economy. The comments following the article all focus on Grubman and, of course, the negative remarks were all published. Press editors usually filter out negative comments about them or the publication if they appear online. <br /><br />And, in a sideswipe at the New York press, (not to mention this blog) which has been reporting the fact that real estate sales are non-existent and that rentals are a disaster, this article practically oozes confidence in the Hamptons chic. In other words, maybe someone at Town Hall thinks that, “Gee, maybe we do need the New York people to pay the bills here, after all!” But, no one can seem to admit that and simply say it.<br /><br />Of course, the fact that the author, “investigative journalist” Michael Wright, quotes PR people and advertisers found in the Southampton Press, begs the question: from what planet does the writer hail? Or, better yet, did the assignment to find optimism come from Joseph or Donald Loucheim, the current publisher. Is advertising down, perhaps? <br /><br />Now, before anyone gets too testy, let’s understand our terminology. The “bridge and tunnel crowd” a term used by the Southampton Press writer, was coined to describe visitors from New Jersey and the Boroughs (as in Queens, Bronx, Staten Island and Brooklyn), who regularly visited Manhattan on weekends, to party. Referring to those from Manhattan obliquely as part of the “bridge and tunnel crowd” is not only incorrect – it is indicative of the negative attitude towards all New Yorkers. As, in, “we love to hate them but they bring cash.” In fact, the only cash that is likely to prop up the Hamptons. And, in truth, on an income basis, it is more likely that a Manhattan resident would be the owner of a weekend retreat in the Hamptons. Jerseyites generally visit and buy on the Jersey shore – where it is more fun, cheaper, and has less Code Enforcement police to hassle them in a summer rental. While the summer rental crowds from the Boroughs as well as Manhattan still do come to the Hamptons, they have been disillusioned by the anti-New Yorker attitude that has chased away summer house shares, which used to proliferate in the Hamptons and supported so many local businesses. Skip Heaney, as Supervisor, saw to it that they were treated as targets by Town government. <br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_ytIi1dtuuUQ/Scb7OzlaDzI/AAAAAAAAAKg/3TkPqBs4X-c/s1600-h/CIMG0730.JPG"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_ytIi1dtuuUQ/Scb7OzlaDzI/AAAAAAAAAKg/3TkPqBs4X-c/s400/CIMG0730.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5316212641941294898" /></a><br /><br /><br />Now, the Town wants that money to come back because McMansions are no longer selling. With no mortgage money available, dwindling Community Preservation Fund money to dip into, evaporating property taxes, missing Town funds, and a budget deficit -- rentals may now be the only form of hard currency for the Hamptons. Think about that folks. <br /><br />While the reporter acknowledges that Sag Harbor has seen no such uptick in business (except for the American Hotel), that fact is merely a tag line in this puff piece trying to pass as news. And, although Westhampton Beach Village was recently visited by another, stellar reporter named Jessica DiNapoli, no mention was ever made of the fact that in that village numerous businesses have closed up, several establishments have ceased to exist and large stores are vacant or closed with no date for re-opening (National, Westhampton Bowling Lanes, Westhampton Movie Theatre, the Health Food store and a few others). In addition, several stores have shrunk or downsized. Apparently, no one who attempts to write at this newspaper talks to each other about such “facts” to check. <br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_ytIi1dtuuUQ/Scb7Pq_VYeI/AAAAAAAAAKw/Z5bRL5TDlEs/s1600-h/CIMG0721.JPG"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_ytIi1dtuuUQ/Scb7Pq_VYeI/AAAAAAAAAKw/Z5bRL5TDlEs/s400/CIMG0721.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5316212656813990370" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_ytIi1dtuuUQ/Scb7Pe9mNYI/AAAAAAAAAKo/wVPqObED6b8/s1600-h/CIMG0727.JPG"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_ytIi1dtuuUQ/Scb7Pe9mNYI/AAAAAAAAAKo/wVPqObED6b8/s400/CIMG0727.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5316212653585479042" /></a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_ytIi1dtuuUQ/Scb7OG_roYI/AAAAAAAAAKY/z7NrB243cR4/s1600-h/CIMG0717.JPG"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_ytIi1dtuuUQ/Scb7OG_roYI/AAAAAAAAAKY/z7NrB243cR4/s400/CIMG0717.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5316212629971902850" /></a><br />There is no line for a space to park your Mercedes in Westhampton Beach. Nor is there ever a sighting of the Mayor or Village Board. Perhaps, those elected officials should visit Water Mill or East Hampton and pick up a few tips on bringing in business. Or, the reporter might give them a lecture on how to arrange for those crowds milling about in Water Mill, like zombies from “Night of the Living Dead,” to move their operation in front of some shops on Main Street?<br />It is likely that the business experienced in the last week was due to the numerous, rolling, spaced out St. Patrick's Day revelers that has brought some restaurant activity in many villages, but little else. The same holiday is celebrated for weeks in different East End Towns and Villages.<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_ytIi1dtuuUQ/Scb7NiGNx3I/AAAAAAAAAKQ/X-9eo0Dlp8Y/s1600-h/CIMG0611.JPG"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_ytIi1dtuuUQ/Scb7NiGNx3I/AAAAAAAAAKQ/X-9eo0Dlp8Y/s400/CIMG0611.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5316212620067194738" /></a><br /><br />And, should it be pointed out that parking spaces and window-shopping do NOT bring in cash. Just as calls to brokers do not translate into sales or rentals. <br />In other words, folks, this bizarre puff piece has all of the earmarks of a plant for PR purposes, supported by PR operatives, designed to encourage more business from people who the writer wittingly, unwittingly or dim wittingly is insulting (“bridge and tunnel crowd” a.k.a New Yorkers) and who the Town continues to target if they rent a summer house and try to pay for it the old-fashioned way – sharing it with friends. In fact, last weekend saw another wave of Code Enforcement “visits” to no less than 40 properties owned by various New York landlords to check for rental permits. This is a prelude to more heavy-handed actions against Latinos and young New York renters—which is the reason why the new law was passed. It should be scrapped completely.<br /><br />This article was, as they say, an attempt to put lipstick on a pig. The pig, in this instance, is the <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/Fears-grow-more-consumers-just/story.aspx?guid=%7B504D22FD%2DCC66%2D4FC1%2DBF8D%2D2F199C2AD042%7D">disastrous economy</a> in which we are all suffering. To think that people, who are losing their jobs and cannot afford their apartments, will drop everything and flee to the Hamptons to line up in <a href="http://247wallst.com/2009/03/22/as-americans-make-more-coffee-at-home-starbucks-sbux-faces-trouble/">Starbucks</a> – because of this puff piece -- is approaching madness. And it is an insult to those who are suffering in this deflationary recession. While Wall Street may be responsible for the derivatives-driven economic meltdown, New Yorkers are not stupid. <br /><br />However, the article is.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-42612749923888859402009-03-15T20:35:00.014-04:002009-03-15T23:49:04.621-04:00The Sun Also Sets<i>People everywhere confuse what they read in newspapers with news.</i><br />-- A. J. Liebling (1904 - 1963)<br /><br /><i>The journalism industry, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs, for no good reason.</i><br />-- Hunter S. Thompson (1939 – 2005)<br /><br /><br />As the apparent economic implosion arrives with full force more and more businesses are reading the tealeaves and what the facts portend. <br /><br />It is already March and in the Hamptons real estate-driven economy – where the only form of financial engine pays for everything from summer rentals, to hamburgers, to newspapers – desperation has begun to set in.<br />This is playing itself out in a few ways. The election process, which has always been a Republican <span style="font-style:italic;">fait accompli</span> at the polling stations, is now seeing inroads from a previously dysfunctional Democratic Party. That is no longer true and there have recently been real challenges and successes – including Sally Pope on the Town Board and possibly Anna Throne-Holst as Supervisor in November. <br /><br />Many New Yorkers have moved from Manhattan, relocated to the East End, and become more involved in Hamptons politics along with the artists of previous decades. With them has come a more progressive view of how business should be done at Town Hall.<br />What cannot change overnight, is a response to the Wall Street debacle initiated by the creation of <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/derivatives-new-ticking-time-bomb/story.aspx?guid=%7BB9E54A5D-4796-4D0D-AC9E-D9124B59D436%7D">a derivatives market</a> which has poisoned the well for everything from corporate debt and mortgages, to bonds and credit-default swaps for esoteric debt instruments. As this plays out on the economic stage, the Hamptons will suffer more than the canyons of SoHo, Tribeca and Wall Street where condos and coops will first experience defaulted common charges (to be assumed by the others in the building), and then move on to actual foreclosures.<br />Right now, the outer boroughs are contracting at an alarming rate and the default and foreclosure rates are soaring. The SoHo Journal has been writing about this for several years as Wall Street plumbs the depths of the Dow.<br /><br />In the Hamptons, the big lie is that it is just going to be a “later season.” In fact, many real estate brokers are saying that the lack of phone calls is scary.<br /><br />Where will this lead? Well, everyone will be cutting prices on everything. There will be a summer but you know that things are difficult when lawyers start calling for business. Many lawyers and brokers no longer do any closings because there are simply no mortgages, no customers (above the $350,000 range) and more than two year’s worth of product sitting in the pipeline. This will lead to layoffs at Town Hall, in the police departments, at local stores and at many real estate agencies. When the money runs out and the flood of tourists dwindles because they have lost their jobs, the economy WiLL contract. That is already happening. <br /><br />How is this reality being handled? <br />Well, among the die-hard Republicans and old boy network, they try to protect their friends. <br />Instead of reaching out to New Yorkers, where the money has always kept this Ship of State afloat, those who criticize the local economy and lack of foresight – as well as the corruption among the politicians who have brought us to this place in time -- it has always been popular to attack the opposition.<br /><br />The only source of Hamptons news has traditionally been the Southampton Press, a Louchheim publication that has always taken its direction from the Republican Party, Town Hall and Law Enforcement (whom they fear) operating on instructions and fealty to its advertising base – the Republican Party regulars. They employ inexperienced “reporters” who take direction on the slant that the publication should produce for so-called public servants, like <a href="http://hamptonspolitics.blogspot.com/2008/04/southampton-shuffle.html">Town Attorney/Assistant District Attorney Joe Lombardo</a> (who has been sued in Federal Court for his irresponsible and unconstitutional behavior) and conducts smear campaigns on assignment from Loucheim. <br />Since there is no real news organization in the Hamptons, efforts by the likes of Jessica DeNapoli, a “reporter” whose <a href="http://www.whbqt.info/template_permalink.asp?id=551">journalistic expertise</a> rises to the level of “What I did on my summer vacation” and who apparently follows instructions to target political opponents of the Loucheim dynasty and its political handlers. Joe Lombardo, who works for the Town and its Heaney holdovers as well as his boss Spota call the shots and provide the leads. No matter that they are criminals hiding behind a political appointment.<br /><br />The search for reasons why the derivative market is THE reason for killing the world economy (all $700 Trillion of the bets that are burying us); the Wall Street boiler rooms which created the foreclosure meltdown by securitizing and selling off worthless debt; the fact that mortgage brokers were psychologically beaten and threatened to create more and more product – is nowhere to be found in the local press. What this “news” organization focuses on is the DWI’s in local police blotters, dogs being brought into Town Hall, and noise violations in Westhampton Beach. Instead of bringing New Yorkers closer to the Hamptons, targeting and attacks are the new “journalism.” The institutional racism, which has spawned numerous Federal lawsuits, against Town Attorneys and politicians, has received little or no follow-up. <br />Where are the reports about the true costs for legal fees due to the unconstitutional actions that hide behind the Towns legal decisions? Where is the investigation of <a href="http://hamptonspolitics.blogspot.com/2008/01/southamptons-final-solution.html">Code Enforcement personnel</a> that target landlords who rent property to immigrants – under the direction of the Town. Why are there no apologies for targeting landlords in news pieces that are completely false and pander to Town officials?<br />Why? Because it is too dangerous to the ad budget and would displease the Republicans. It would also open up the Loucheims to unwanted scrutiny and lawsuits. Best not to go there.<br /><br />Watch for more “leaks” and attacks against political opponents or New Yorkers via DiNapoli which the Press despises and tries to pass off as “investigative reporting” from a “news” organization that cannot even spell-check its articles properly. The Southampton Press is a throwback to the type of local targeting mechanism-for-hire that takes orders from its political handlers who have a lot to hide. <br /><br />The Howell Raines imbroglio at the New York Times comes to mind – but, of course, even those fictitious journalistic entries by Jayson Blair were not ordered by the local political party in power.<br /><br />Let’s see how this plays out.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-14011026938429066902009-03-11T21:19:00.010-04:002009-03-11T22:01:44.279-04:00Hamptons Politics<i>Morality, like art, means drawing a line someplace.</i><br />-- Oscar Wilde (1854 - 1900)<br />Election rumors in the Town of Southampton are heating up. Between the <a href="http://sagharborexpress.sagharborpublishing.com/shexpress/page-1/state-to-audit-systems-2347">missing money</a> that no one can seem to find and the implosion underway in the economy, it will take clean hands and moral strength to pull the Hamptons through this storm. The bucolic East End was a sleepy rural area at one time but that was decades ago before McMansions and heavy Republican politics. Many of the former politicians like Skip Heaney were from “up Island” and influences from neighboring towns saw the money, which flowed through the Preservation Fund coffers and moved in.<br /><br />This years contests include the Supervisor’s post, Town Board slots, Town Clerk and Town Highway Superintendent. Nuzzi is running again for a slot on the board and, surprisingly, while a Crookhaven transplant and Heaney protégé he’s come out on the right side of a few issues. But, the real contests are Town Supervisor and Highway Superintendent.<br />First, <a href="http://weblogs.newsday.com/news/local/longisland/politics/blog/2007/10/gregor_is_new_southampton_inde.html">Alex Gregor</a> is rumored to be considering a run for William Masterson’s position as Highway Superintendent. This is not the first time they would be squaring off against each other. However, the previous race was marred by dirty tricks on the part of the Heaney Republicans and a lot of local voters remember the bad taste in their mouths over that campaign and how Masterson won. Gregor would likely win this contest and it would be a major vote for good government. <br />The Kabot/Throne-Holst race is a bit different. Kabot was a step up from Heaney and the Republicans who controlled Town Hall for decades. The animosity between Kabot and the Heaney controlled machine was palpable. Unfortunately, Kabot has squandered her victory and has appeared to play it safe at every turn and has not come out with strength on any important issue. Unfortunately, she has also recently dwelled upon a non-issue and leaked a negative press piece to the local organ of the Republican Party – The Southampton Press – about Throne-Holst bringing her dog to work, of all things. Try as it might, the Press’s anachronistic attempt at journalism always manages to fall on its face and show its reactionary roots. If ad sales continue as they have with other major news organizations, however, the days of the online and printed version of this publication may be numbered.<br />Clearly, while <a href="http://www.town.southampton.ny.us/TownBoard.ihtml?mode=detail&id=49">Anna Throne-Holst</a> has had minor missteps in the service of improving the environment, she is an outspoken reformer. The Town now has an opportunity to make a fresh political start in a resort area that will now be severely challenged by world economic events and its local history of punitive values. The little understood financial realities that have trickled down from the derivative disaster – which has caused everything from subprime defaults to the evaporation of credit -- is something that the new Supervisor must cope with. The financial investigation that is going on in the Town, the prospects of a severely reduced budget, and the realities of the Preservation Fund drying up – will be challenging. And, all are Republican-made problems that are a result of greed and, to be charitable, mismanagement.<br />Throne-Holst has a steady hand and does not owe her success to any group. While the Democrats supported her in her Town Board election, they do not own her vision.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-90012771602727230902009-03-02T21:28:00.012-05:002009-03-03T16:52:23.059-05:00The Panic Phase<i>The only way not to think about money is to have a great deal of it.</i><br /> -- Edith Wharton (1862 - 1937)<br /><br /><br /><br />It is difficult for most of us to believe that we now may be looking over <a href="http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/beginning-now-the-panic-phase-of-the-collapse-29932">the precipice.</a><br /><br />A series of Doom and Gloom pieces published here were somewhat unpleasant – but now there is the real prospect of a very serious drop brought on and also perpetuated by a deflationary spiral. If you’re out of work in the Hamptons and you’ve been trying to figure out what to do next, there is no surprise about what’s out there. What was unthinkable before now seems possible.<br /><br />Rentals are off, jobs are difficult to find, and home sales are few and far between and the blame game is now beginning in earnest. When in doubt, indict someone.<br />The press is not immune and the bloodletting in that industry is just beginning. Newspapers are filing Ch. 11 at an alarming speed. Suffolk Life was one of the first local publications to go after the Improper Hamptonian bit the bullet. More will follow. It has little to do with newsworthiness. The problem is lack of advertising. Businesses that typically advertise, which are failing, hasten the demise of publications -- and then there is the readership move to the Internet. Hamptons.com and 27 East, for example, have had some success -- but that does not sell newspapers. Regardless of the merits of those publications, people have stopped buying newspapers, stopped subscribing, and will not pay for Internet access. It’s a deadly combination for publishing since reporters and office staff still needs to get paid. This week the venerable <a href="http://www.mlive.com/opinion/flint/index.ssf/2009/02/rocky_mountain_news_closure_ma.html">Rocky Mountain News</a> ceased publishing,<br />The New York Times faces a possible Chapter 11 and most newspapers operate in the red.<br />To make matters worse, it has been open season on journalists. In Russia they <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=100885559&ft=1&f=1004">shoot them,</a> in Somalia they murder them, in Iran they <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/03/02/iran.journalist/index.html?eref=rss_topstories">arrest them,</a> in Suffolk they terrorize and indict them.<br /><br />The 401K that was supposed to allow boomers to retire in style are now worth 50-70% less than they did a year ago. And, the Buy and Hold crowd is thinning out. Enrollment has dropped at private schools. Real Estate prices are dropping in the Hamptons and in Manhattan and are expected to arrive at a point that is at least 50% below what they were a year and a half ago. There are some who predict that drops of 90% in value are possible if we truly hit the panic phase in the stock market and deflation accelerates. That’s possible. Not likely, but possible. This era of deflation may take all of ’09, ’10 and ’11 to play out. Not a pretty picture.<br />If that happens, none of us are safe from the financial devastation that will ensue. Social unrest will follow as it already has in the Eastern block countries. <br /><br />Right now, newspapers and websites dwell upon salacious stories of fraud, murders, disasters and mayhem. Law enforcement personnel, like prime time players in old episodes of Law and Order, are busy trying to find someone to blame. Meanwhile, Wall Street continues to hand out bonuses for having papered the world with securitized debt that was worthless before it was packaged. <br /><br />If they ever find out where the money went at Town Hall in Southampton, people might wonder if it really was all of those New Yorkers who are responsible for the mess after all. <a href="http://www.27east.com/story_detail.cfm?id=196645">The Feds</a> are at least looking to find out where the money went.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21103357.post-90576931337792948492009-02-18T10:35:00.006-05:002009-02-19T15:07:04.376-05:00The Other Shoe<i>I never did give them hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell.</i><br />-- Harry S Truman (1884 - 1972)<br /><br /><br />As the Monty Python players famously remarked, “No one ever expects the Spanish Inquisition.” Similarly, in the Hamptons economy, which is driven by real estate, no one ever expected the kind of financial problems like those in <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/02/18/budget.states/index.html">California and Kansas.</a> Still fewer expect the kind of dire financial problems about to hit New York – not to mention the Hamptons.<br /><br />While the current difficulties were clearly predictable several years ago, it is only now that there is a sense if dire fiscal eventualities, that will soon be upon us. Manhattan is no exception. With a predicted loss of 275,000 jobs on Wall Street; the disappearance of Investment Banks –-which was the driver of the worldwide expansion of money and credit; and virtual elimination of mortgage lending – a one to two year recession may take five years to play out. There are those who think that this country will not recover from this bout of <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/newscommentary/specialreports/deflation">deflation,</a> which may turn into hyperinflation from printing all of those trillions for bailouts, until the early 2020’s.<br /><br />The Spring selling season in the Hamptons has all of the earmarks of a temporary lift, which will last 3 or 4 months. Small properties, those in the $300,000 to $500,000 are starting to sell. Larger properties are sitting with <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601068&sid=aovjsitjEZNQ&refer=home">no activity.</a> <br /><br />And, while there are some rentals, local businesses in the Hamptons will face stiffer competition and budget conscious tourists. The Town of Southampton may need Federal money to remain viable. The “business-as-usual” trend towards increased fines, increased taxes and harassment of New Yorkers may not be a good idea in these economic times.<br />The immigrant problem, which created lots of bad blood and a very negative attitude, will be solved by economics. Everyone is leaving town due to lack of work.D. Clark MacPhersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12022489208036655980noreply@blogger.com0