Thoughts From Joe - January 11, 2013January 14, 2013 Posted by: Joe Morgan, CFATop Eight The Defense Department is already cutting back in expectation we go off the "Spending Cliff" in March. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has ordered cuts of $52 billion this year and frozen civilian hiring. The post-fiscal cliff temperature in Washington is tepid indicating the end of urgency. Jack Lew likely to be next Treasury Secretary. President Obama has nominated the White House Chief of Staff to replace Tim Geithner who is scheduled to step down at the end of this month. Lew is very different from Geithner signaling a shift to a less public Treasury Department that is more content with getting the daily duties done rather than making the big splash with major announcements. This is also a good indication that the administration feels future challenges to be faced by the department will be more mundane as the economy muddles through.Another round of bank settlements for mortgage activity occurred this week. Bank of America, Citigroup, JP Morgan, Wells Fargo, and five other large home lenders settled government lawsuits this week over lending practices that led to the liquidity crisis. Cash will be used to make some borrowers whole and support mortgage activity today. Unfortunately, the march to punish lenders has not included much clarity on how home purchases should be financed in the future. The best we have is listed in item #5 below.Money market mutual funds are now disclosing daily share prices. Perhaps representing an olive branch to the SEC, major fund families have decided to disclose the underlying NAV for their money funds - though the money funds themselves will retain a stable $1 NAV. Additional disclosure is usually a good thing and this is another example. However with additional information comes the responsibility to analyze it properly. Fund health can never be broken down to a single number so it remains important to utilize market expertise when evaluating investment choices.Consumer regulatory agency sets new mortgage rules for private sector lenders. The CFPB approved two ways for lenders to ensure borrowers can afford loans. First, total debt payments cannot exceed 43 percent of pretax income. Second, loans must qualify...
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