Friday, March 13, 2009

News Snippets


Neustar has been named to Forbes Magazine’s “25 Fastest Growing Tech Companies” list for 2009.

No. 17 NeuStarNeustar provides clearinghouse and directory services to the communications industry. Customers include communications service providers, Internet service providers, mobile network operators and cable television operators.

(note to Martha) Neustar is the registry for the .us ccTLD in our domain biz. Oh, they are also the TLD registry for .biz
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Household Net Worth Sees Record Fall

The net worth of American households fell by the largest amount in more than a half-century of record keeping during the fourth quarter of last year.
The Federal Reserve said Thursday that household net worth dropped by a record 9 percent from the level in the third quarter. The decline was the sixth straight quarterly drop in net worth and underscored the battering that U.S. families are undergoing in the midst of a steep recession with unemployment surging and the value of their homes and investments plunging. Net worth represents total assets such as homes and checking accounts minus liabilities like mortgages and credit card debt.
Family net worth had hit an all-time high of $64.36 trillion in the April-June quarter of 2007 but has fallen in every quarter since that time. The record 9 percent drop in the fourth quarter pushed total net worth down to $51.48 trillion, a level that is 20 percent below the third quarter 2007 peak.
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Can Marijuana Help Rescue California's Economy?

Democratic State Assembly member Tom Ammiano introduced legislation last month that would legalize pot and allow the state to regulate and tax its sale — a move that could mean billions for the cash-strapped state.
Pot is, after all, California's biggest cash crop, responsible for $14 billion in annual sales, dwarfing the state's second largest agricultural commodity — milk and cream — which brings in $7.3 billion annually.
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CRAMDOWN UPDATE

The bankruptcy loan modification legislation, a key part of the president's housing policy, is (get used to it) held up in the senate while leadership looks for sixty votes to break a filibuster of the bill. The legislation, which is opposed by the mortgage loan industry, would allow bankruptcy judges to modify primary home loans so borrowers can afford to pay them; currently, primary home loans are the only loans that judges cannot adjust during bankruptcy proceedings.
A Democratic senate aide, who wouldn't speak on the record while negotiations are on-going, tells me that Senator Dick Durbin, who is managing the legislation, needs to find a few Republicans to support cloture. After that, the bill will come to the floor -- it could be as soon as next week or after the Easter recess. More from the aide...

We are working with groups on all sides, major lenders, credit unions, Democrats and Republicans in an effort to try and get this language to a place where we can pass it. Opponents of the bill want to narrow it to only sub-prime mortgages, and that's pretty much a non-starter. Every argument opponents of the bill have offered is the same old song and dance, same stuff we've been hearing from the mortgage lenders for years. Doing this will increase rates across the board. Not true. Doing this will cause a flood of people going into bankruptcy, not true. Bankruptcy attorneys who support the bill and [Attorney Generals] who support the bill all say that bankruptcy is not a good thing, nobody wants to declare bankruptcy, [but this bill is necessary]. The opponents are not offering any alternatives.

Negotiators have already agreed to limit the provision to only mortgages issued at the time the bill is enacted, so future mortgage holders couldn't take advantage of the provision.
The usual suspects in the GOP are being approached -- Spector, Snow and Collins, as well as less frequently seen compromise players like Tennessee's Bob Corker and Florida Senator Mel Martinez. Martinez, whose state has one of the worst foreclosure rates, should be receiving a lot of pressure from his constituents to get behind the legislation.

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