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Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Who on Wall Street Got Fed Loans - NYTimes.com

Who on Wall Street Got Fed Loans? Hedge Funds Got Fed Help, Too

5:54 p.m. | Updated
Wall Street banks weren’t the only ones approaching the Federal Reserve for help.
When the credit markets nearly froze up in the fall of 2008, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York helped hedge funds, mutual funds and other big investors buy highly rated securities backed by car loans and student debt, among other assets.
The institutional investors, which collectively borrowed $71 billion through the program, included such market giants as Pimco, T.Rowe Price and BlackRock.
In a statement, BlackRock said that it borrowed the funds “on behalf of both institutional and mutual fund clients.”
The California Public Employees Retirement System, the nation’s largest pension fund, also borrowed through the program, known as the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF. The Major League Baseball Players Pension Plan was another pension fund participant in the program.
Hedge funds made the list as well. Magnetar Capital, an Illinois-based hedge fund, received seven loans from the Fed.
Magnetar was the subject of a ProPublica investigative report over the fund’s bets against risky mortgage-related securities that Magnetar itself sponsored.
The program was a “resounding success in providing liquidity to the consumer credit markets,” a Magnetar spokesman said in a statement.
Frontpoint Partners, the hedge fund that recently made news when a portfolio manager brushed up against an insider trading investigation (he was not charged), received a few dozen TALF loans.
“On behalf of clients, FrontPoint was an early participant in the Government TALF program,” said a spokesman for the firm. “With our clients, we were able to support the government in this important initiative.”
The Fed used the loans to entice investors into the largely frozen asset-backed securities market. Most of the loans came cheap and lasted for a year. The program ended earlier this year.
Morgan Stanley, which is in the process of spinning off FrontPoint, was the only investment bank on the list of TALF recipients under its own name.
The disclosures of loan recipients come from Federal Reserve’s release of volumes of previously undisclosed information about the trillions of dollars in loans it made during the financial crisis.
One crucial Fed lending program was the Primary Dealer Credit Facility, a cheap overnight loan system for banks that was similar to the Fed’s discount window.
You name the big broker-dealer, and they’re on that list. Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America and Citigroup all borrowed through this program.
One surprise, however, is that JPMorgan Chase borrowed only three times, all in the fall of 2008. The program started in March 2008 and ended February 2010.
Citigroup, Bank of America and Morgan Stanley kept borrowing through the spring of 2009.
There was a clear advantage to keep borrowing: As time went on, the Fed’s interest rate kept falling. When Bank of America drew its last loan in May 2009, the $375 million loan carried a nominal 0.5 percent rate.
In the same week in October 2008 that banks received TARP funds, Goldman took out overnight loans worth as much as $60 billion. Morgan Stanley borrowed as much as $34 billion in one day that week.
Foreign banks also received assistance. Societe Generale, headquartered in Paris, and the Italian bank Intesa Sanpaolo, received loans through the Fed’s Term Auction Facility, or TAF. So did a few Canadian banks as well as the Arab Banking Corporation. The firms all have offices in New York.
The Fed created the TAF program in late 2007 when some banks balked at borrowing from the Fed’s discount window. The program offered 28-day loans to generally healthy depository institutions.

Who on Wall Street Got Fed Loans - NYTimes.com

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Tuesday, August 17, 2010

NYTimes: Broadway and the Mosque

From The New York Times:
OP-ED COLUMNIST: Broadway and the Mosque
A concert of Broadway show tunes sung by a diverse cast brings to mind reasons why it is O.K. to build a mosque near the World Trade Center site.
I totally agree!!! This is how you show the world the meaning of liberal ideas! Through inclusion, not by outlawing it.
http://nyti.ms/cxfrqt

Sent from my iPad

Friday, August 8, 2008

The Race Now Begins at Kindergarten



The New York Times



August 6, 2008

Where the Race Now Begins at Kindergarten

Parents who sent their toddlers to the well-regarded Mandell preschool on the Upper West Side used to count on getting into the private school of their choice.
But with the recent boom in the city's under-5 set, the competition for kindergarten places can rival that of Ivy League admission. This spring, for the first time, several of the 43 Mandell preschool graduates found themselves without anywhere to go. So Mandell, which has been around for generations, decided to do its part to ease the kindergarten crunch by opening its own $2 million elementary school, in a 17,000-square-foot storefront on Columbus Avenue at 96th Street.
"I think we've reached a crisis level in terms of capacity," said Gabriella Rowe, Mandell's head of school. "Although the majority of our families are still going to be able to send their children to their first-choice school, it's clear that it's going to become more difficult every year if these numbers continue to increase."
The new school, financed through bank loans, will start with 50 kindergarten students in two classes. Ms. Rowe plans to expand to 450 students through 8th grade by 2017. Tuition is $28,000 for the 2008-9 school year, rising to $30,000 the next year.
Despite mounting layoffs on Wall Street and the broader economic downturn, private schools in New York City continue to thrive, with administrators and consultants saying this year has been the most competitive yet for admission to kindergarten. Some estimate that several hundred children were rejected from every place they applied.
About 150,000 students are enrolled in private and parochial schools in New York City; about 1.1 million attend the city's public schools.
Emily Glickman, a private school consultant for Abacus Guide Educational Consulting, which helps parents gain admission to private schools, said competition had intensified not only for brand-name schools like Dalton, Collegiate and Trinity but also for lesser-known and newer schools, as more couples opt to have two or more children; more families remain in the city rather than moving to the suburbs; and the wealthy in New York get wealthier.
The Claremont Preparatory School, which started in Lower Manhattan in 2005, is expanding to seven kindergarten classes from three after receiving more than 1,100 applications this year, up from 700 the year before. Claremont, which has nearly 500 students in kindergarten through eighth grade, also plans to open a high school in September 2009.
In Brooklyn, a group of parents and educators in Fort Greene and Clinton Hill are also opening a new private elementary school, the Greene Hill School, which will emphasize hands-on learning in art, music, and physical education and cost $13,500 a year, according to Diana Schlesinger, the school's co-director and a former director of the education program at the American Folk Art Museum.
On the Upper West Side, the Mandell School was started in a brownstone on 94th Street in 1939 by Ms. Rowe's grandfather, Max Mandell, who had worked with runaway boys at Bellevue Hospital Center. Every morning, he stood outside in a suit and tie to greet his students.
Ms. Rowe, 42, a petite woman with red hair, grew up above the preschool and used to help empty the trash and paint the classroom walls. She attended the Nightingale-Bamford School on scholarship, then majored in French and European history at Bryn Mawr College. She worked as an investment banker at Merrill Lynch and as a management consultant before joining the family business in 1999.
Ms. Rowe said she began planning an elementary school five years ago to allow families to continue their education at Mandell, which emphasizes a progressive curriculum of academics, citizenship and community involvement. She pushed up the timetable in December when she saw the increased demand for private school slots. By February, she had received 50 applications for the first kindergarten class of 25, including two from children in Mandell's preschool. In March, she opened up a second 25-student kindergarten class, and received 100 more applications within 48 hours.
Colette Alderson, whose 5-year-old son was in preschool at Mandell, said that she and her husband, Scott, the president of a software company, looked at other schools but decided not to apply. "I knew the fit was right, so I didn't see a reason to change schools," said Ms. Alderson, 40. "I didn't really view it as a new school, but as an extension of a very established, well-known preschool."
Another parent, Cheryl Wischhover, chose Mandell's elementary school for her 5-year-old son over a public-school gifted program, saying she liked the focus on teaching to each student's strengths and weaknesses, the well-planned curriculum and the school's close relationship with families. Ms. Wischhover, 37, a pediatric nurse practitioner, said she applied to five other private schools for her son, but was rejected by one school and wait-listed by the other four.
"Many people I know got into at least one school, but I definitely know people who didn't," she said. "It was a really tough process."
Ms. Rowe has hired 20 new teachers, including specialists in fine arts, music, drama and physical education, and a psychologist, and promises a five to one student-teacher ratio for the elementary grades. She is also negotiating for an additional 47,000-square-foot space nearby for the upper grades.
She said she had been fielding calls all summer about kindergarten in the fall of 2009, though applications will not be officially available until Aug. 18. "I expect the real chaos will come in September," she said.
Mandell's preschool students are guaranteed a place in the elementary school, and seven families have already said they plan to attend in 2009-10, Ms. Rowe said. She added that she would continue to help preschool students get into other private schools if they prefer. This spring, five students were admitted to Dalton, four to Brearley, and three each to Chapin, Collegiate, Trinity, Spence and Nightingale-Bamford, some of the most competitive private schools in the city, she said.
With the first day of school looming, Ms. Rowe checked on the construction last week at two lower floors of the red-brick high-rise that will house the elementary school. She raced from one end to the other, pointing to empty spaces that would soon hold a first-grade classroom, an art studio, a music room, a nurse's office, a teachers' lounge and a school psychologist's office. "I know the floor plan in my sleep," Ms. Rowe said, stepping nimbly over construction materials piled on the concrete floor.




 

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