Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Home forclosures reach 20-year high

Home foreclosures reach new high

By Ben Baeder, Staff Writer
Article Launched: 07/22/2008 12:49:03 PM PDT

Pasadena Star-News


LOS ANGELES - Foreclosures statewide were up 124 percent compared to the same three months last year, according to a report from a leading real estate tracking firm.

DataQuick Information Services counted 121,341 homeowners who received a "notice-of-default" on their home loans between April 1 and June 30, compared to about 54,000 the same three months last year.

"Over half the properties for sale are foreclosed," said Johathan Starr of REMAX Masters Realty in Covina. "I think it's a great time to buy. The prices are absolutely rock bottom.

In Los Angeles County alone, 21,632 notices of default were sent out, which is a 108 percent increase from the same three months last year.




Comments: 1 - 13 of 13

Radical Raul: Colorado Springs, CO

You can put a lot of this on the shoulders of your local elected officials for looking the other way while promoting the "American Dream", which in fact was another get rich quick scam, the biggest ponzi scheme in the history of mankind, and now us common taxpayers get to bailout the fat cats who reaped the profits while creating this mess.

Talk about the "American Dream".


Michael: Los Angeles, CA

I agree, but I also have to ask, when you buy a house, much like buying a car, you get a payment schedule, and you see what you will pay, including any increases,(i.e. balloon payments) and these people merely saw the "American Dream" and didn't see the truth. I personally know of three families who that occurred to, a fourth who went beyond their means by remodeling, buying a big SUV and then asking if the government could assist them. When I buy a car, or for that matter, even take out a credit card, I know the rules and my limitations, and although it goes against my religous beliefs, why should you and I (through the gov't) bail them out?


Haily:AOL

I'm just glad That I don't own a home!


Michael: Los Angeles, CA

Haily wrote:
I'm just glad That I don't own a home!

Yeah, who'd have thought renting would get you in a better place than the homeowners, huh?


lucas: Arcadia, CA

Radical Raul wrote:
You can put a lot of this on the shoulders of your local elected officials for looking the other way while promoting the "American Dream", which in fact was another get rich quick scam, the biggest ponzi scheme in the history of mankind, and now us common taxpayers get to bailout the fat cats who reaped the profits

while creating this mess.
Talk about the "American Dream".

i blame those idiots in office who just smile for the cameras and wear a suit and tie. the "american dream" does not exist anymore ever since MLK was assassinated. who in the hell is going to buy a home when the payments are always sky rocketting and never level off. greed has gone to far.


Patient Buyer: New York, NY


Michael wrote:

Yeah, who'd have thought renting would get you in a better place than the homeowners, huh?

Anybody who bothered to look at the ratio of median home price to median household income or median home price to monthly rent over the past 5 years. When those ratios double it's a pretty good indication that you are better off renting than buying until they get back to normal.


drw312: Chicago, IL

In Chicago, I rent a 1 BR apt. for $1,400 per month. If I were to purchase a similar unit in the same area, WITH a nice down payment, my monthly nut would be over $2,200 per month. Parking would be $250 more per month.

I cannot afford to buy at this time.


lucas: Arcadia, CA

drw312 wrote:
In Chicago, I rent a 1 BR apt. for $1,400 per month. If I were to purchase a similar unit in the same area, WITH a nice down payment, my monthly nut would be over $2,200 per month. Parking would be $250 more per month.
I cannot afford to buy at this time.

nobody cannot afford it. parking should be free or included in rent. no wonder everyone is homeless. this is just what greed ordered. the banks charged too much than what the customer could handle.


DESERT RAT: Phoenix, AZ


One of the dumber things I've read here.

Haily wrote:
I'm just glad That I don't own a home!


DESERT RAT: Phoenix, AZ


Why do you blame the elected officials? The home buyer, the seller and the bank/lender are all to blame. The buyer bought way over their head, the builder moved them into a home they knew was too much and the banker/lender used all kinds of trick financing including faking the earned income.

Live with it. That was greed on everyones part.

Radical Raul wrote:
You can put a lot of this on the shoulders of your local elected officials for looking the other way while promoting the "American Dream", which in fact was another get rich quick scam, the biggest ponzi scheme in the history of mankind, and now us common taxpayers get to bailout the fat cats who reaped the profits

while creating this mess.
Talk about the "American Dream".



martscan: Arcadia, CA

Not one mortgagor in a thousand understood a negative amortization clause, which was explained in the boilerplate of their contract. However, lenders understood it very well and, IMO, relished the thought of receiving what was effectively usurious income from a certain percentage of mortgagors which was bound to grow as principal balances grew. And, I believe lenders failed to input into their algorithmic models a factor designed to provide a margin of safety, a risk offset, in the event of what I term a "credit Armageddon." Moralists and philosophers would call the resultant meltdown "poetic justice."


martscan: Arcadia, CA


DESERT RAT wrote:
Why do you blame the elected officials? The home buyer, the seller and the bank/lender are all to blame. The buyer bought way over their head, the builder moved them into a home they knew was too much and the banker/lender used all kinds of trick financing including faking the earned income.
Live with it. That was greed on everyones part.


You can't put ANY blame on local elected officials.


martscan: Arcadia, CA

There is plenty of blame to go around involving the entire spectrum of characters in the housing debacle.

If blame must be assessed, one could justifiably start with Alan Greenspan, who lowered the Fed Funds rate to 2.0% in December of 2001 and keeping it there, or less, until the first of 2005. In fact, during that period, the rate was at a mere 1.0% for 12 months. While the borrowing rate of depository Fed members to one

another is the shortest term of interest instruments, it eventually percolates through all interest vehicles, including the 10 year Treasury Note which, along with LIBOR rates, determines most real estate interest rates in the Western world.

Naturally, the increased liquidity in capital markets spurred aggressive marketing...and who wouldn't take advantage of the lowest rates in decades..if not in history? Capitalism and competition being what it is, after all, the profit motive is the heart and soul of the system....new forms of loans sprung up like mushrooms and consumers jumped on them...meanwhile, the top end of the daisy chain, Wall Street, was making huge profits packaging, securitization, these loans, intermixing them and their high returns with other, traditionally lower yielding, instruments and selling billions and billions worth of them all over the world...with the paid imprimatur of agencies charged with rating their safety...such a deal! Back at the kitchen table, mom and dad learned they are expecting # 3, or 4...and their little 2 BR won't cut it any more and its time for their second...bigger, newer, nicer house...so mom falls in love with the kitchen, the guy likes the 2 car garage w/work bench and space for his beer frige..so when the loan 'broker', former used car salesman, tells them its OK, they have a "no doc, liar loan" program..mom and dad only want to know what the monthly

payment is...oh, they can handle THAT! They have no idea what an 11th District Cost of Funds index is or the constant yield of the 10yr T-note is, not to mention the 1 month LIBOR, and they "BUY" the house..ignorant of all these terms plus pre-payment penalties, caps, 3/5s, 3/28s, neg ams, non-assumable and blah, blah.

Everybody is happy until the teaser rate runs out, the monthly payment jumps $300 or more..pop didn't get a raise...all the new furniture needed to fill the bigger house is driving the Visa hickey up..they were 3 minutes late on the Cap One card and the rate is now 4,000% and one night they again sit at the kitchen table, look at each other and, in harmony, proclaim, "we're screwed." Not unlike mom and dad at the kitchen table, but at a gleaming directors' table maybe 60 stories in the sky...an executive calls his PhD minions, computer geek types, to a meeting and asks them how much their mortgage backed bonds, carried on

company books in the amount of, say,$15,000,000,000, are really worth? One geek looks at the guy next to him and says "I don't know", that guy turns to the fellow next to him and says, "I don't know, do you?" and so it goes round the table....a year or so later a bunch of nit-wits, myself included..spend hours on blogs swearing and cursing at people we don't know....is this a great country or what?



Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Regulators to Schumer on IndyMac: Please shut up

Money & Company
Los Angeles Times



Regulators to Schumer on IndyMac: Please shut up
5:47 PM, July 2, 2008

Sen. Charles E. Schumer publicly taunted bank regulators last week about IndyMac Bancorp's financial condition, which helped trigger a sudden outflow of deposits from the Pasadena thrift. Now the New York Democrat is getting some harsh blowback from one current and one former regulator.

Their message, distilled: Zip it, Chuck.

As noted here on Monday, Schumer sent letters to the Office of Thrift Supervision, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco, saying he was "concerned that IndyMac's financial deterioration poses significant risks to both taxpayers and borrowers."

Schumercharles IndyMac, which has suffered huge losses on defaulted mortgage loans, "could face a failure if prescriptive measures are not taken quickly," Schumer wrote.

Uh, wait a minute -- how could Schumer know that? And since when are regulators supposed to tell the public in advance that a particular institution has been earmarked for possible failure? All that would do is guarantee a collapse. If depositors are within FDIC insurance limits they have nothing to worry about, anyway.

That pretty much sums up the content of a letter to Schumer today from John M. Reich, director of the Office of Thrift Supervision.

"As a regulator of insured depository institutions, we do not publicly comment on the financial condition or supervisory activities related to open and operating institutions," Reich wrote. "We believe it is critically important to maintain the confidentiality of examination and supervision information."

He went on: "Dissemination of incomplete or erroneous information can erode public confidence, mislead depositors and investors, and cause unintended consequences, including depositor runs and panic stock trades. Rumors and innuendo cause damage to financial institutions that might not occur otherwise and these concerns drive our strict policy of privacy."

John D. Hawke, the U.S. comptroller of the currency (regulator of national banks) from 1998 to 2004, had more pointed words for Schumer in a story in the American Banker newspaper today.

"If Schumer continues to go public with letters raising questions about the condition of individual institutions, he will cause havoc in the banking system," Hawke said.

"Leaking his IndyMac letter to the press was reckless and grossly irresponsible. I don't see how he can be trusted with confidential information in the future. What this incredibly stupid conduct does is put at risk the willingness of regulators to share any information with the [congressional] oversight committees. After this, you'd be crazy to share information with Schumer."

The senator's office didn't respond to a request for comment today. On Monday, Schumer aide Brian Fallon offered this explanation for Schumer's action: "The home loan bank system has an obligation to lend responsibly and police its members. But it has not been doing its job. We have found the only way to get the home loan bank system to act appropriately and positively is to make public the concerns we've already expressed privately."

If that's Schumer's policy on the U.S. financial system's troubles overall, it's going to be a long, hot summer.



http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/816965/30826560




I am an agent who, during the banking crisis of 1988 - 1992, investigated many, many failed banks. I also frequently run cases that are the subject of Congressional scrutiny.

From my vantage point, Schumer was way out of line in making his comments public. It was his chocie whether his letters to OTS and FDIC were made public; he did it on purpose - just to get more attention. He could have sent it privately but he chose not to. An irresponsible "look at me" exercise.

Members of the House and Senate get briefed on classified and otherwise confidential matters all the time. Unfortunately, I've never met a Member that didn't have an agenda, so these leaks happen all the time. Conduct like that displayed by Senator Schumer is why there is now a rule that says matters currently being investigated criminally are exempt from Congressional oversight.

Frankly, he should be censured or sued.

Jennifer, while you have a very valid point about the pain that is inflicted when a bank is closed, I'm afraid you missed what is really happening during the probationary period - the regulators and the bank are trying to work out a resolution that avoids the bank failing. These efforts are often successful and, when they are, they manage to avoid inflicting the pain on the public, the employees and the DIF. Some examples of resolutions which avoid pain are bringing in a new management, having another institution merge with the troubled bank or outright assumption by a healthy institution. So there is a reason they don't slam the door shut at the first whiff of a CAMEL 5 rating.

Bank Exec was right - confidentiality in banking regulating is vital. If banks can't speak freely with regulators for fear of Senators making these kinds of irresponsible statements, banks will stop talking to regulators - period. Then no one is going to know what's happening and the banking system will be in more jeopardy than it is today.

Indy may or may not be a troubled institution (even if I knew, I wouldn't say so publicly). But it is appropriate for all depositors and investors to know their banks - just as the banking industry is constantly reminded to "know their customers." So do your own research. If your bank's stock is crashing, and the loan loss reserves look inadequate, and they suddenly start offering CDs with seemingly outrageous rates of interest, use your best judgement.

Be safe...

Posted by: TheBankDick | July 04, 2008 at 11:18 AM


First, it is my understanding that Sen. Schumer had brought the matter of IMB to regulators' attention privately, but did not receive any feedback and, thusly, made it a specific point to go public with the express intent of putting pressure on the agencies, who he considered were being lax in their duties and responsibilities.

With respect to comments of 'TheBankDick', I find it contradictory, and hypocritical, that he would find Schumer's public release of his letter so 'irresponsible', yet mention that Congressmen all have an agenda and "these leaks happen all the time." When, BankDick, have you last called for a "leaking" Congressman to be "censured or sued"? And, pray tell, on what grounds would Schumer be sued and by whom? Also, BankDick states that the type of conduct displayed by Schumer precipitated a rule exempting Congressional oversight of matters that are being criminally investigated. BankDick, what specific case triggered the rule and is IMB being criminally investigated? Additionally, has the Senate Banking Committee ever recommended such an investigation of a bank to the DOJ? If so, what is their authority for doing so? Further, is IMB on some sort of "PROBATIONARY" status? If so, when did this occur and what is the source of your information? Regarding a CAMEL 5 rating and "slamming the door shut"...since there is no CAMEL 6 rating, what IS the criteria for "slamming the door shut"? BankDick goes on to say, "If banks can't speak freely with regulators for fear of Senators making these kinds of irresponsible statements, banks will stop talking to regulators - period." Is this meant to be a joke? Since when do banks have the option of answering regulators questions "freely" as to the banks solvency? For someone claiming to be a bank examiner of some kind...this is utter fol de rol, nonsense of the first rank. And, to suggest that the average depositor preempt the regulatory agencies functions by "knowing their banks", and satisfying the depositor's requirements of the bank's loan loss reserves is beyond ludicrous. Frankly, I'm embarrassed for BankDick..who should have signed his phony didactical piece, PiggyBankDick.

Posted by: martscan | July 06, 2008 at 01:07 AM


Regulation Man:

I don't know where it has been written that Senator Schumer's letter to the regulatory agencies was meant to be a service to IMB's customers. I'd like to see your source for this. IMB's customers and stockholders were already screwed before Schumer's letter.

a) It is my sense that Senator Schumer wrote the letters, and made them public, because of his LACK of confidence in the agencies.

b) To what other "highly classified material" are you referring? Aren't you speculating?

c) Contrary to your assertion that the FDIC is "very circumscribed" as a result of bank failures wrought by the Depression, the fact of the matter is just the opposite. The FDIC strives to be highly transparent for the public's benefit. Just ask them. Your statement, "This allows banks to trust the FDIC with sensitive information...", is patently ridiculous on the face of it. Are you telling people that banks can arbitrarily withhold information, say, a little financial statement, from the FDIC? Banks DO NOT have any options when it comes to providing ANY financial information requested of them by a regulatory agency under whose authority they answer to. PERIOD. OUGHT. ZING. ZERO. S**T!!

Regarding your claim that a woefully uninformed person, who I take to be me, erroneously stated something to do with interest not being insured... Take a lesson. I said I bought CDs less than $100K because interest plus principal in excess of $100K is NOT covered. Your scenario of mom, dad and the 2 kids apparently fails to take that fact into consideration as you maxed out the account combinations, and accrued interest on your $1.2M accounts would NOT be covered. Really, not too smart.

d) Woeful conspiracy hogwash.

Reggie, you can't convince me you're not the type that doesn't think there are boogiemen under your bed...if there are any, they should be ethically and criminally investigated.
Posted by: martscan | July 06, 2008 at 02:08 AM


To Martscan:

You missed the point.

Confidentiality and full disclosure to regulators allows the regulators to assist troubled institutions resolve their capital and liquidity problems without having to close them down. Usually thisd is done by getting another instutuion to assume some or all of the failing institution. Such negotiations occur under intense secrecy to prevent a run.

Schumer, whose legendary hubris is surpassed only by the national debt itself, just had to make another press release showing how important he was, "looking out for the people" and triggered a $1 billion + run on IndyMac by making the confidential information public. A $1 billion shift in the metrics like that kills rescue deals and, by midweek, no longer was a suitable merger was possible. Hence, he caused the closure.

So who should sue Schumer? How about the depositors who had in excess of $100,000 in deposits; there are about 10,000 of them (according to media reports). Their total loss wil be some part of $500 million (to be determined in the months and years to come - it takes that long to liquidate an institution and distribute assets).

How about the DIF? Rather than selling part or all of IndyMac back into industry, the FDIC had to go in and close it. The impact on the $53 billion DIF? Estimated to be something on the order of $5 billion (give or take a billion) - or about one tenth of the DIF funds available. And we have a lot more banks to close coming up.

Unfortunately, senators get some sort of immunity from suits for actions taken while in office, so a lawsuit actually wouldn't go forward. Pity. In one moment of poor judgement, Schumer cost thousands of employees their jobs, thousands of depositors millions of their dollars, and the DIF approximately one tenth of its reserves.

And you think the Senate's ethics panel shouldn't censure him? In China, they'd execute him for what he did.

So let's review the facts: there was no report that IndyMac was under criminal investigation, so Congress could inquire as to its condition. Under conditions of confidentiality, Schumer was briefed. When he didn't see enough activity in the media, he put it there. That started the run, which collapsed any chance for a resolution, which forced the bank's closure.

Thanks, Chuck. At least you could publicly apologize to all those you hurt...

Posted by: TheBankDick | July 12, 2008 at 08:21 AM


I just learned on the news this morning about IndyMacs takeover by the feds.

I voted for Senator Schumer in past elections and I have my current mortgage with IMB....well had. This whole thing has me wanting to start a campaign to flood this guy's office with phone calls, letters, etc expressing my extreme displeasure with his actions.

Granted, Jennifer makes some relevant points in her post. However, the bottom line is that there are protocols for this type of information to be shared and he didn't follow them. If this happened with every institution that may be having trouble, think of the outcome....We all might as well go out now and buy fireproofed mattresses.

I'm really shocked by what I feel are his reckless actions that have not only added to the current panic of the economic state of this country, but has also directly impacted others who were dependent on IMB to survive.

I hope this isn't any posturing on his part for a cabinet or other higher level position within the potentially new administration.

In the meantime, I'm trying to find out what this means for me as an individual being a NYer with an IMB backed mortgage.

Schumer, if I could have my vote back, I'd definitely take it back from you.
Posted by: IndyMacMikeNYC | July 12, 2008 at 10:04 AM

Good news for democrats=bad news for the US.

If you haven't figured this out:

the democrats WANT economic calamity, as the economy is percieved as one of the key strenghts of the democratic party.

caveat:
63% americans believe weare in a recession...we aren't.
56% of americans believed Saddam Hussien had something to do with 9/11...he didn't.

just as the WH slow walked us into Iraq, the democrats are slow walking us into an econmic crisis. We aren't there yet, and the more we do now, the less the impact later. unfortunately, the democrats LOVE where we are now, and will do nothing to help, and everything to hurt.

If you fell things are bad now, what plan of action have the democrats offerred. Not the punishing of indivuduals, the actual means of getting out of the impending mess.


Posted by: paul | July 12, 2008 at 11:07 AM


BankDick:

I get the point, loud and clear.

Rather than address the remarks I made in the first sentence of my critique of your prior comments, to wit: "First, it is my understanding that Sen. Schumer HAD brought the matter of IMB to regulators' attention PRIVATELY, but did not receive any feedback and, thusly, made it a point to go public with the express intent.........", you utterly ignore them and assume a didactic position by lecturing me on confidentiality and disclosure to regulators (I presume by banks). Could you not agree that my prior first sentence obviously evidenced my cognizance of exactly what you mention in your "point" rebuttal?

You go on to sarcastically describe Schumer's hubris as being of the stature of the national debt. Can we agree that you have been 'anti-Schumer', for lack of a better term, long before this flap? By extension, is it fair to presume, Mr. BankDick, that you are a Republican?

Are you aware of the price of IMB stock in the month prior to Schumer's revelations? In the 3 months prior? In the 6 months prior? Are you aware of ANY negative press concerning the financial state of IMB prior to Schumer's revelations? Would you agree, Mr. BankDick, that it is fair to suppose that most IMB depositors having in excess of $100K in the bank were aware of IMB's press coverage in the month before Schumer's revelations? You would agree, wouldn't you, that most stockholders of IMB were certainly aware of IMB's stock price in the month, the 3 months and 6 months prior to Schumer's revelations? Wouldn't it be fair to say, Mr. BankDick, that any reasonable person could safely assume that most depositors and stockholders of IMB were aware of IMB's deteriorating financial condition prior to Schumer's revelations? I'll take this answer as an unqualified 'yes'. Given all these conditions, isn't it fair to say that IMB was headed for insolvency and if, indeed, that is the case, isn't it fair to say that, barring the bank's successful attempt to rid their $500M+ portfolio of inferior quality Alt-A loans which they had been aggressively shopping with no takers in sight, and other attempts to shrink their balance sheet and meet mandated reserve ratios, that it was only a matter of time before the bank would be in receivership? You know perfectly well the answer to this question is a resounding YES! Ergo, did Schumer CAUSE the closure? NO. Did Schumer's actions speed the process? YES. As I have said, Schumer's only indiscretion was that he did not act SOONER. Had he brought public pressure, rightful humiliation in my view, on the reg agencies a year earlier, when IMB was in a better position, along with the industry, to peddle their junk...the bank could have been saved.

Mr. BankDick, please, stop with the law suit talk, its not only ludicrous on the face of it but it would have not get past the court house front door. A class action lawsuit brought by disgruntled depositors savvy enough to accumulate in excess of $100K, $200K in joint accounts, because the excess of $100K is not covered by the FDIC in a bank that the depositors knew for months was falling apart, against a United States Senator that did nothing but make the facts of the bank's financial condition known to the public...his employers, so to speak. Excuse me, I'm taking a laughing break.

And how about the DIF? Are you telling me an entity organized to perform a certain function is not allowed to perform that function under pain of mortal sin? So the DIF is out $5B, that is exactly why it was formed, isn't it? Yes or no, Mr. BankDick? Now member banks will get a dues assessment to bring it up to $53B...they should think ahead and raise it to $100B, they're going to need it.

Mr. BankDick, YOU don't seem to get the point. If any public official is culpable of misfeasance here it certainly is NOT a U.S. Senator..it is that, those, official(s) WITH THE EXPRESS RESPONSIBILITY OF REGULATING FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS TO THE EXTENT THAT THE PUBLIC'S MONEY IS PROTECTED. The banking regulatory agencies DID NOT do this. What is so difficult to understand?

Mr. BankDick, on an emotional note, that you would allude to the execution of Sen. Schumer, however remote the simile, metaphor or comparison, I find reprehensible, disgusting, spiteful and indicative of your totally blind, authoritarian partisanship and contrary to everything which our country aspires to stand for. As an American, I am deeply offended by your remarks.
Posted by: martscan | July 15, 2008 at 11:15 PM

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Fwd Mail: BIG OIL .......Hmmmm

Bill Phillips spent nearly 50 years in the US oil and gas industry; most of his career was with the Phillips Petroleum Company. Bill is a descendant of Frank Phillips. Frank Phillips, along with his brother Lee Eldas (L.E.) Phillips, Sr., founded the original Phillips Petroleum Company in 1917 in Bartlesville, OK. Do you remember Phillips 66 gas stations? Phillips Petroleum Company merged with Conoco, Inc. in 2002 to form the current ConocoPhillips oil company.

So, when Bill talks about oil and gas issues, I tend to listen - very closely. I think that you will find Bill's thoughts and facts very revealing, very compelling and very difficult to argue with.

As you prepare to cast your crucial ballots this Fall, please think long and hard about the far-reaching, cumulative effects of the US political philosophies, policies and legislation that have contributed to the current and future US oil supply situation.

May 28, 2008

"Big Oil"
Did you know that the United States does NOT have any big oil companies. It's true: the largest American oil company, Exxon Mobil, is only the 14th largest in the world, and is dwarfed by the really big oil companies--all owned by foreign governments or government-sponsored monopolies--that dominate the world's oil supply.


With 94% of the world's oil supply locked up by foreign governments, most of which are hostile to the United States, the relatively puny American oil companies do not have access to enough crude oil to significantly affect the market and help bring prices down. Thus, ExxonMobil, a "small" oil company, buys 90% of the crude oil that it refines for the U.S. market from the big players, i.e, mostly-hostile foreign governments.. The price at the U.S. pump is rising because the price the big oil companies charge ExxonMobil and the other small American companies for crude oil is going up as the value of the American dollar goes down. They will eventually bleed this country into printing even more money and we will go into runway inflation once again as we did under the Carter reign.

This is obviously a tough situation for the American consumer. The irony is that it doesn't have to be that way. The United States--unlike, say, France--actually has vast petroleum reserves. It would be possible for American oil companies to develop those reserves, play a far bigger role in international markets, and deliver gas at the pump to American consumers at a much lower price, while creating many thousands of jobs for Americans. This would be infinitely preferable to shipping endless billions of dollars to Saudi Arabia, Russia and Venezuela to be used in propping up their economies.

So, why doesn't it happen? Because the Democrat Party--aided, sadly, by a handful of Republicans--deliberately keeps gas prices high and our domestic oil companies small by putting most of our reserves off limits to development. China is now drilling in the Caribbean, off Cuba but our own companies are barred by law from developing large oil fields off the coasts of Florida and California. Enormous oil-shale deposits in the Rocky Mountain states could go a long way toward supplying American consumers' needs, but the Democratic Congress won't allow those resources to be developed. ANWR contains vast petroleum reser ves, but we don't know how vast, because Congress, not wanting the American people to know how badly its policies are hurting our economy, has made it illegal to explore and map those reserves, let alone develop them.

In short, all Americans are paying a terrible price for the Democratic Party's perverse energy policies. I own some small interests in tiny, 4 barrel-per-day oil wells in Wyoming. We have 14 agencies that have iron-hand jurisdiction over us. If we drop any oil on the ground when the refinery truck comes to pick up oil from our holding tanks, we are fined. Yet down the road the state will spray thousands of gallons of used oil on a dirt road to control dust. When it rains that oil runs into rivers and creeks. Yet a cup of oil on the ground at our wellhead is a $50,000 EPA fine plus additional fines from state regulating agencies. They treat oil as if it were plutonium that has the potential to leak into the environment. We are fined if our dirt burms are not high enough around a holding tank, yet the truck that picks up our oil runs down the road at 60 mph with no burm around it. People wonder why there is no more exploration in this country. It's because of the regulators; people who have lived their whole lives doing nothing but imposing fines on small operators like us for doing mostly nothing.

So, America enjoy your $4.00 per gallon gasoline. Your dollar is now worth 0.62 Euro-Cents. The lack of American production of GNP, the massive trade deficit (as labor markets have moved overseas to fight insanely high union imposed labor costs in America) and the run away printing of money (backed by nothing of value here in America) has caused the dollar to become more worthless on the international market. And that's where our oil comes from. It's paid for with dollars that become more worthless everyday. If we had just kept par with the Euro we'd be paying $62 dollars per barrel for oil (42 gallons) o r abou t $1.50 instead of $2.50 a gallon for crude oil..

What the US government also does not tell you is that it is the leaseholder and royalty recipient of most oil production and receives 25% of the gross oil sales before we pay for electricity to lift the oil, propane to keep the oil-water separators from freezing in the winters. We pay a pumper to visit each well everyday plus we have equipment failures all the time. We pay for that out of our 75% of gross sales. The government does not share in any expenses to run any production well. So, if the Big Oil Companies are making record profits, then so is the federal government from it's 25% tax on every molecule of oil sold to a refinery in this country. Why isn't the government on the stand for "Record" profits? &nbs p;What you don't see is this 25% of the sales price of crude oil being siphoned away by the government. That money plus the road taxes, state taxes, etc. amounts to over $1 per gallon of gasoline you are buying while the governments only admit to about 50 cents per gallon.

To all you Democrats, when you go vote for your candidate, a blazing liberal like Barrack Obama or Hillary Clinton, just keep in mind that their liberal spending habits will further decrease the value of the American dollar on the world market and your gasoline costs will hike even higher. As they introduce more give-away programs, raise taxes on everyone to pay people not to produce or work, your dollar will continue to dwindle on the world market and you will be paying $10.00 per gallon at the next election. Cheap hydrocarbon fuel is all over. Enjoy! Enjoy the fruits of your decision to elect these folks when you are there in that voting booth and you stab your pin through a Democrat's name.

William "Bill" Phillips



Marty's:

Oh brother! There is no way an oil family Phillips member wrote this, no way! One has only to read in the first paragraph , "Did you know that the United States does NOT have any big oil companies." to realize that what will follow will be, excuse the expression, total dreck. And it is. Further, this isn't about oil, about which the true author (the ubiquitous pimply faced Atwater/Rove Nazi Youth, Goebbels wannabe), knows nothing. This a cheap, bargain basement political tract that isn't worth the paper, or keyboard, it was written on. The poor kid's zits must have been suppurating.

Anyone who has the chutzpah to characterize American oil companies as "relatively puny" should, contrary to my liberal anti-death penalty stance, be taken out and shot.

Jesus Christ, the statements made here and the innuendos and assumptions are beyond belief for shear, brazen hyperbole. These are QUOTES: 1. "Thus, ExxonMobil, a 'small' oil company, buys 90% of the crude oil that it refines for the U.S. market from the big players, i.e., mostly-hostile foreign governments.." Well, we'll define "small" oil companies later, but this statement says that Exxon buys less than 10% of its crude from our largest suppliers Canada, Mexico and, say, Norway among other "mostly-hostile"(sic) governments. Yea, right! In addition to this nonsense, for lack of a more vulgar term, hostile countries "charge" us...as if markets had nothing to do with determining, price discovery, current and future, anticipated, prices. Mercy, spare me this gibberish.

"The United States--unlike, say, France--actually has vast petroleum reserves." Really? We have half the world's oil wells, 521,000, in the United States pumping less than 11 bbl/day, where the hell are these "vast" reserves?...Please, no laundry list of ANWR, continental shelf or Colorado shale. When the economics of deep sea drilling and oil extraction from shale pencil out, it will happen. If the oil oligopoly wanted to drill for oil at State and Madison in Chicago, they'd drill at State and Madison in Chicago. Forgetting demand elasticity for the moment, wouldn't any company that has a profit margin of say, 10%, prefer to sell their products at $10.00 rather than $1.00?

"This would be infinitely preferable to shipping endless billions of dollars to Saudi Arabia, Russia and Venezuela to be used in propping up their economies." True. But why fail to mention Canada and Mexico? When it comes down to it, we have no use for Canucks..and their "socialistic" health system..not to mention curling! (any word that Canada has had a higher standard of living than the U.S. for at least 20 years is strictly verboten). And, God forbid, we all know what SPICS represent! And why is there no mention of what our reciprocal trade accounts look like with these horrible, no good, low down, dirty bastard countries? If we presently didn't enjoy the export business we have we'd be in a depression! And isn't the policy of this administration to spread the "values", you know, the family values we cherish along with democracy and capitalism..to the rest of the world? Isn't that why we've killed untold numbers of Iraqis, so they may enjoy the values of democracy ?Or does this policy only extend to those targets of our imperialism which we have yet to conquer? Doesn't it make sense that countries prop up their economies so they will be more prosperous, better trading partners, freer markets, healthier and happier citizens that will contribute to a growing global economy...and benefit OUR interests in the process as well?

Quote: "So, why doesn't it happen? Because the Democratic Party--aided, sadly, by a handful of Republicans--deliberately keeps gas prices high and our domestic oil companies small by putting most of our reserves off limits to development. China is now drilling in the Caribbean, off Cuba...." OK, Republicans had the hat trick of government control for 6 years, Executive, Legislative and Judicial and didn't do squat...IMO, because the oil oligopoly control them and the Democrats...both parties are but pawns to be manipulated by big dough, big companies...govt is the farm team system for global mega-corps. Why would oil companies want gas prices low? They are sovereign unto themselves, they are not patriotic, they don't care in which currency their profits accrue, they are making the goal of their existence, profits, in amounts never seen before in the history of mankind...why in God's name would they want to change this? It would not surprise me in the least to learn that Exxon and others actually funnel money to 'treehugger' and environmental organizations...they have NO scruples, no morals...the compass of their soul is permanently fixated on p-r-o-f-i-t. Period. They are neither Republican, Democrat, Libertarian, Socialist, Czarist or any "ism"...they are apolitical in the sense of govt form and only favor any govt that is tractable...and the cost of it.

China's drilling off the coast of Cuba, and Cheney's saying China is drilling 60 miles off the coast of Florida, is bullshit. Bullshit! Talk about Hitler and Goebbels big lie theory, Dickhead Cheney has it down pat. Ask Senator
Mel Martinez of FL, a Republican, or Jorge Pinon, the energy expert at the Center for Hemispheric Policy. This is false...but of course, chapter and verse from the Nazi propaganda masters constantly reiterated the necessity of changing the facts when they didn't fit with the political agenda. Mention of 'propaganda' and 'Nazi' today in any political context immediately draws guffaws, smirks and heehaws, but don't kid yourself, there are political operatives today who study and learn the Nazi PR lessons...well. This "Phillips" piece is an egregious example of distortion, innuendo and outright lies.

"small" oil companies? PetroChina largest in the world at $1T? It so happens I know quite a bit about PTR..having recommended its purchase at $20.00 in 2003..before Warren Buffett bought it...as much for its stand alone value as the potential of the yuan/dollar exchange rate of its ADRs per the float requisite for membership in the WTO. It reached $266.00. Here's where these lying bastards get away with this stuff. PetroChina, PTR, has billions of shares authorized but only 2.2% of those shares registered on the Shanghai exchange..which trade at a huge premium to shares trades anywhere else....and multiplying the artificial price X the total of authorized shares does, of course, total over a trillion...but its hardly a true indication of the value of the company, which is more like $400B, less than many companies including Sinopec and China Natl Petroleum. PetroChina's revenues are in the area of $110B....would you rather own it or ExxonMobil with revenues of $347Billion? There are at least 25 companies in the world with revenues greater than PTR including: Shell, BP, Chevron and ConocoPhillips. Isn't proof of this kind of finagling, altering facts, sufficient for most reasonable people to say, "enough", we are not lemmings to be led over the cliff by diabolical REPUBLICAN political operatives with agendas that best serve their own interests?

And now the coup de grace, "To all you Democrats, when you go vote for your candidate, a blazing liberal like Barrack Obama or Hillary Clinton, just keep in mind that their liberal spending habits will further decrease the value of the American dollar on the world market and your gasoline costs will hike even higher." Inasmuch as Republicans have effectively controlled all energy policy for 7.5 years...whatever it might be since Cheney conducts it in secret..plus all SPENDING bills, not to mention off-budget, deficit, war costs....this blatantly spurious statement is laughable on the face of it...and needs no refutation for the edification of anyone with more than oatmeal for a brain.