Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Monoline End Games: String of Legal Wins Will Snowball Until ...

Last week, I wrote about a few developments that should boost RMBS litigation recoveries, especially for bond insurers ? Judge Crotty?s summary judgment decision in Syncora v. EMC (JPMorgan) and Syncora?s subsequent settlement with BofA, resolving all of the parties? ongoing relationships.? It appears I?m not the only one who has concluded that banks may need to reassess their potential payouts as a result of recent legal setbacks.

In this July 27 client alert, major financial services firm O?Melveny & Myers, which represents BofA in MBIA?s putback suit in New York, addressed the impact of Crotty?s Opinion [hat tip Manal Mehta from Sunesis Capital for passing this along].? While the alert is short and worth reading in its entirety, the gist of O?Melveny?s conclusion is as follows:

In light of a recent federal court ruling, banks may wish to reevaluate litigation risk from plaintiff insurers claiming injury from alleged breaches of representations and warranties regarding mortgage securitization notes that they insured?

Institutions facing such lawsuits may wish to re-evaluate their exposure, and possibly adjust reserves set aside to cover such risks, based on the type of plaintiff and the specific language of the securitization agreements at issue.

Hold the phone ? so BofA?s own law firm in its putback litigation with MBIA is publishing an alert saying that banks may need to adjust their loss reserves associated with monoline putback litigation?? This is essentially an admission that the firm sees the tide turning against the banks in these suits.? Shouldn?t this have generated some serious pushback from O?Melveny?s powerful client?

Short answer: yes.? According to Mehta, this alert was pulled from O?Melveny?s website shortly after publication, only to be re-posted today.? We can only speculate as to why the alert was pulled and then re-published (without significant revision), but I can imagine that there were a few heated phone calls in between.

Regardless, now that we finally have a definitive decision from a respected court on the proper standard for mortgage putbacks, we have enough guidance to begin discussing RMBS litigation end games in earnest.? Today, we?ll begin by looking at the bond insurer suits.

These, along with mortgage insurer suits, were some of the earliest filed pieces of RMBS litigation and have been prosecuted aggressively since the onset of the mortgage crisis by some of the most skilled and aggressive private legal teams in the business. And for good reason: the monolines issued what are known as ?financial guaranty? policies, which included a guarantee that insurers would make policy payments if losses mounted; they could not deny claims or rescind coverage.

This means that bond insurers have already suffered massive, company-crippling losses as a result of insuring pools of misrepresented loans, and have been forced to pursue years of contentious litigation just to try to recover the funds they paid out.? The good news for them, is that after 4+ years of litigation, they?re finally beginning to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

Monoline End Game Scenarios

As I mentioned at the top of this article, Syncora and Countrywide just reached a settlement of all their outstanding RMBS litigation and other issues, in which Syncora will receive a cash payment of $375 million and a return of certain of its preferred shares, surplus notes and other securities.? It?s no coincidence that this settlement comes on the heels of several wins for the monolines in their suits against the major Wall St. banks.? It demonstrates that the banks (or at least Bank of America), are beginning to realize that the bond insurers? claims in these suits are potentially expensive and difficult to defeat.? This settlement, in conjunction with BofA?s settlement with Assured Guaranty (AGO) back in April of 2011 and its proposed settlement of investor putback claims initiated in June 2011, show that BofA is making a concerted effort to put legacy Countrywide liabilities behind it.

This bolsters my long-held view that the most likely end game scenario for the monolines consists of party-by-party settlements with their various bank counterparties that address all of the outstanding legal issues between the parties.? As I?ve discussed in the past, the last thing that an issuing bank wants is for one of these cases to go to trial and to see the parade of horribles that the monoline will trot out before the factfinder, showing clear breaches of underwriting guidelines time and time again.? Not only would such a trial be long and embarrassing, but it would open up the banks to paying upwards of 75-80 cents on the dollar of losses to the insurers, rather than the 25-30 cents they might be able to pay in settlement.

Of course, the tougher questions surround the timing and the ultimate size of these potential settlements.? If we could get our arms around the size of prior settlements, this might help give us a ballpark of the size of the settlements to come.? In my prior article on the Assured Guaranty settlement (at item No. 4),? I noted that based on BofA?s estimates, they were covering about 55% of AGO?s losses.? The Syncora-Countrywide settlement is much more difficult to parse as the deal, according to Syncora?s press release was part of ?an effort to terminate other relationships between the parties,? aside from simply the putback disputes.? My guess is that the putback disputes constituted the bulk of the outstanding liabilities, but it?s difficult to assess the exact proportion, as well as the value of the other consideration received by Syncora.

What we do know is that in the five deals that were the subject of Syncora?s lawsuit against Countrywide, Syncora had already paid out $145 million in claims to policyholders and had received another $257 million in claims as of the filing of the Amended Complaint.? That?s $402 million in existing claims, and future losses and claims in those deals could drive that number even higher.? Plus, the settlement covered nine other MBS Trusts not at issue in the lawsuit.? Barclays projected out the lifetime losses for Syncora in those trusts and reached a figure of up to $1.4 billion (though I know it?s hard to trust anything Barclays says since the emergence of the LIBOR scandal, other commentators have checked Barclay?s work, and it appears to hold up).? Assuming this is a reasonable estimate, and putting aside the value of the other consideration given to Syncora and the value of the non-RMBS liabilities it released, the $375 million cash payment works out to about 27 cents on the dollar of claims.

So what does this mean other monolines, such as MBIA, might receive in settlement?? In my opinion, Syncora?s settlement with Countrywide merely sets a floor for MBIA?s case against Countrywide ? that is, it is the minimum amount per dollar of claims that MBIA can expect to receive from settling that case.? This is because MBIA is in a better position in many respects than Syncora.

For one, while Syncora claimed to have found approximately 75% of the loans it had reviewed to be in material breach of Countrywide?s reps and warranties, MBIA has alleged that over 90% of the loans in the deals it insured were materially defective.? A higher breach rate means a potentially higher judgment per dollar of claims should the putback claims go to trial, driving settlement values higher.? The fact that MBIA has actually sued on all of its Countrywide transactions, whereas Syncora only sued on 5 of 14, implies that MBIA?s deals may have been worse across the board, further elevating settlement projections.

MBIA is also further along in its case against Countrywide/BofA than Syncora was, having conducted significant potentially damaging discovery on issues such as Countrywide?s internal fraud reporting and successor liability.? MBIA is on track to present its summary judgment motion on Countrywide?s liability (referred to as ?primary? liability) on August 31, and its summary judgment motion on BofA?s liability (referred to as ?successor? liability) on September 21.? BofA is keen to avoid even the presentation of such motions by MBIA because they will publicly disclose (to the extent the information is not treated as ?confidential? and sealed) all facts that MBIA has uncovered in support of its positions.

This is especially true with respect to MBIA?s motion on successor liability, as the facts MBIA will use to establish that BofA should be on the hook for Countrywide?s liabilities could be used by any plaintiff suing Countrywide and wishing to bring BofA into the case as a guarantor.? That is, the facts supporting successor liability in MBIA?s case will be directly applicable to every other plaintiff?s case for successor liability against BofA.? Apparently recognizing this, just this week MBIA asked the Court for permission to file a motion lifting the confidentiality restrictions on certain documents received in discovery.? MBIA?s attorneys know that the threat of public disclosure of items like Brian Moynihan?s deposition transcript may be the best leverage they have to force BofA to the negotiating table.

Finally, MBIA has filed a fraud claim against BofA that is fairly well developed.? This claim has survived a motion to dismiss (and appeal of that decision) and a motion for partial summary judgment on loss causation.? Should that claim be successful, MBIA could receive compensatory damages for the full amount it has lost in connection with insuring the Countrywide trusts at issue (not tied to any breach rate of the underlying loans) plus punitive damages of up to several times compensatory damages.? Though punitives are rarely awarded, the treat of punitives will certainly increase MBIA?s settlement leverage (and what better case for the imposition of punitive damages if Countrywide is shown, as MBIA suggests, to have been engaged in the systematic encouragement and coverup of mortgage fraud?).

All this leads me to believe that MBIA will be able to force BofA into a much larger settlement per dollar of claims than the one Syncora received (the same goes for Ambac in its case against EMC/JPMorgan, as it has uncovered significant evidence of a fraudulent ?double-dipping? scheme in that case).? Of course, MBIA also has to contend with BofA?s litigation counterweight, in the form of its Article 78 and plenary actions challenging MBIA?s Transformation.? But as the Article 78 decision seems likely to go against BofA (and will be appealed, regardless), and the plenary action is falling way behind the putback action due to inactivity during the last several months, MBIA will likely feel as though it has all the leverage when it comes time to seriously talk settlement.

According to MBIA?s first quarter 10-Q, the bond insurer has incurred $4.8 billion of losses on its portfolio of insured first- and second-lien RMBS deals.? The monoline has also booked $3.2 billion in expected recoveries from putbacks (it has booked no expected recoveries from its non-contractual claims).? That works out to a 66.7% expected recovery rate per dollar of incurred losses.? This would be higher than the global settlements Syncora and AGO struck with BofA, but given MBIA?s superior position, at least in its BofA case as discussed herein, I can?t say those estimates are unreasonable.

In fact, I think MBIA would recover a much higher percentage of its losses should it proceed to trial against counterparties like BofA.? The insurer could recover compensatory damages at 100% of losses if it wins its claims for fraud or rescissory damages, and damages in the range of 75% of losses if it?s forced to go the putback route, as my experience in these types of cases leads me to believe that at least 80% of MBIA?s alleged ineligible loans to be upheld by the factfinder.? Compared to these end game scenarios, a settlement in the 66% range may begin to look attractive as MBIA continues to pile up victories in its litigation.

This brings me to probably the tougher question on monoline end games ? timing.? Settlement timing is always difficult to estimate since so many factors are at play.? But there are certain points in litigation that I term ?inflection points? ? junctures at which settlement becomes more likely because of the threat of adverse legal developments.? The presentation of MBIA?s summary judgment motions in its case against Countrywide/BofA (especially the one on successor liability) create just these sorts of inflection points.? The time between when the summary judgment motions are fully briefed and Judge Bransten issues her rulings also constitutes an inflection point, as BofA may feel pressure to avoid yet another scathing Bransten decision.? Based on these upcoming inflection points in the case, I will go out on a limb and say that MBIA?s litigation against BofA is likely to settle before the end of this year.

This timing will be different for each monoline action depending on the individual circumstances, but what they all have in common is that they all are very likely to settle before trial.? Given the lack of viable defenses that banks have at their disposal, and the parade of damaging evidence that will paraded before a factfinder should trial ensue, I don?t see how any financial institution can logically allow any of these cases to go to trial.? Doing so would only expose the banks to potentially devastating precedent and damage awards, which they call ill afford at this time.

There are important differences between the monoline cases and the cases of RMBS investors, the other major group of plaintiffs attempting to recover their losses from the major banks.? Stay tuned over the next week as I tackle those differences and the status of investor recovery efforts in my next installment in my series on end game scenarios.

Source: http://www.subprimeshakeout.com/2012/07/monoline-end-games-string-of-legal-wins-will-snowball-until-settlement.html

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"Dark Knight Rises" wins sluggish weekend box office

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Batman movie "The Dark Knight Rises" earned $64.1 million at U.S. and Canadian theaters during its second weekend, topping box office charts in a sluggish overall market facing Olympic television coverage and the impact of the Colorado shooting.

The finale in director Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy starring Christian Bale added $122.1 million from international markets and has pulled in $248.2 million overseas since its July 20 debut, distributor Warner Bros. said.

Add in cumulative ticket sales of $289 million in domestic markets - the United States and Canada - and the global haul now stands at $537 million for the film that cost its backers some $250 million to make and tens of millions more to market.

Sales in U.S. and Canadian theaters dropped 60 percent from its debut weekend, a bigger decline than predecessor "The Dark Knight" or other recent superhero films.

In 2008, "Dark Knight" fell 53 percent during its second weekend to earn $75 million domestically, according to Hollywood.com Box Office. This year, summer smash "The Avengers" slipped 50 percent in the weekend following its opening in May, and June release "The Amazing Spider-Man" declined 44 percent.

While "Dark Knight Rises" ranks as one of the year's highest-grossing movies, sales are weaker than pre-release forecasts after the opening was overshadowed by the killing of 12 moviegoers at a midnight screening in Aurora, Colorado.

Through Sunday, total "Dark Knight Rises" sales in North America ran behind "Dark Knight," which hauled in $313.8 million domestically through its first two weekends.

IMPACT OF OLYMPICS, SHOOTING

Warner Bros. officials declined to discuss box office and its relation to the shooting for the second week, but industry watchers said the turnout for the Batman film and other movies likely suffered from some moviegoer reluctance after the massacre, as well as Friday's start to the London Olympics.

"It's been a double dose of things," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of Hollywood.com Box Office. "The Olympics has been dominating media coverage lately and probably kept a lot of people home Friday night, and then there's the Aurora shooting."

He noted that lackluster reviews for this weekend's new features likely further dampened theater attendance but predicted that next weekend will see a resurgence.

"There will be a bit more distance from the Aurora shooting, the Olympics will become routine, and there's some really exciting films coming out," Dergarabedian said, mentioning upcoming "Total Recall" and "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days."

Overall domestic ticket sales for the weekend came in 25 percent lower than the same weekend one year ago, according to Hollywood.com Box Office.

The No. 2 spot belonged to animated children's movie "Ice Age: Continental Drift," with $13.3 million. It beat out comedy "The Watch" and dance movie "Step Up Revolution," both of which made their theater debuts this weekend.

"The Watch" came in third, earning $13 million at domestic theaters. The film stars Ben Stiller, Vince Vaughn and Jonah Hill as men who start a neighborhood watch group to battle aliens. The movie earned largely negative reviews, with just 14 percent of critics praising the film on website Rotten Tomatoes.

"The Watch" also was affected by real-life events. In May, 20th Century Fox changed the movie's title from "Neighborhood Watch" to distance it from the fatal shooting of black teenager Trayvon Martin by neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman in Florida.

Ahead of the weekend, Fox saw the $68 million production pulling in $13 million to $15 million.

"We didn't really know what to expect," said executive vice president for domestic distribution at Fox Chris Aronson, speaking on the box office climate, post-shooting. "It's a wild-card weekend for sure."

Aronson said he "hopes for a bounceback in the overall marketplace," which he predicted would benefit all films.

"Step Up Revolution" finished in fourth place with $11.8 million domestically. The movie about a group of flash-mob dancers in Miami is the fourth in a franchise that has grossed more than $400 million around the world. Its distributor had forecast a domestic opening in the low- to mid-teens.

Comedy "Ted" rounded out the top five with $7.4 million.

"Step Up Revolution" was released by a unit of Lions Gate Entertainment. "The Watch" and "Ice Age" were released by 20th Century Fox, a unit of News Corp. Sony Corp's movie division distributed "Spider-Man."

(Reporting By Lisa Richwine and Andrea Burzynski; editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dark-knight-rises-tops-box-office-sales-drop-164021454--sector.html

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Monday, July 30, 2012

U.S. loves cops and firefighters - but not their pensions

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Pharmacist Michael Nastro is full of admiration for how police responded to a deadly robbery in his suburban New York neighborhood in 2011.

A gunman walked into a pharmacy near his own on Long Island, killed four people and fled with a stash of painkillers. Police in the area, which is part of wealthy Suffolk County, best known for the exclusive Hamptons beach towns, boosted patrols and gave advice on what to do if the robber hit again. They caught him three days after the shooting.

But Nastro, 50, admits he's torn about police officers' pay and retirement benefits. "I'd be lying to you if I said I wasn't conflicted," he said. "I want good police work, but I'm a taxpayer too. There's got to be a middle ground."

The average annual pension for Suffolk County cops who have retired since 2007 was $86,702, according to figures from the Manhattan Institute, a public policy think tank, against $37,270 for other county employees, excluding teachers. The county, facing a three-year deficit of $530 million, declared a fiscal emergency in March.

Traditionally, U.S. voters have backed generous pay and benefits for the cops and firefighters willing to risk their lives to keep citizens safe. That was especially so after the deaths of many emergency workers in the September 11, 2001, attack on the World Trade Center in New York.

But as economic conditions have worsened and many local governments have run into severe fiscal problems, that attitude has started to change. Since the 2007 recession, some cities have tried to roll back pension benefits and pay, among the most rigid and, in some cases, highest expenses in municipal budgets.

From New York to California and points in between, cops and firefighters have been drawn into pitched battles over their pay and benefits.

In San Diego and San Jose, California's second and third biggest cities, voters in June overwhelmingly backed sweeping pension reforms. In San Jose, all employees will have to choose between reduced benefits or higher retirement contributions.

In the mid-sized California cities of Stockton and San Bernardino, officials say public safety costs were among the factors that forced both to declare bankruptcy. In Vallejo, a former U.S. Navy town near San Francisco that emerged from a three-year bankruptcy last year, public safety pay and benefits were consuming three-quarters of the city's general fund.

Detroit, plagued with one of the highest crime rates in the country, nonetheless cut pay and healthcare benefits for city workers, including police, by 10 percent just over a week ago, a move the mayor says will save the cash-strapped city $102 million a year.

A legal challenge by the Detroit Police Officers Association failed, even as union President Joe Duncan publicly complained of what the cuts would mean for Detroit's ability to hire police, noting that the city is "already 50th on the list of pay for the biggest 50 cities in the United States."

St. Louis this month approved an overhaul of the firefighter retirement system that rolls back decades of increases, while Miami officials trying to plug a $60 million budget gap this week declared "financial urgency," which will let them alter employee contracts. Among the city's proposals: limit overtime for firefighters and require higher health care contributions.

According to an analysis by New York-area newspaper Newsday published last month, police and sheriff's department employees in Nassau and Suffolk counties reached nearly two-thirds of each county's payroll.

"That is why a lot of municipalities are choosing bankruptcy, because it's the only way - other than getting a state control board - of getting out of these salary and pension requirements,'' said the former top official of Suffolk County, Steve Levy.

SAVINGS AND SAFETY

Striking the right balance between savings and safety is a touchy business, though.

While it's become almost routine for voters to rail against fat paychecks and generous benefits for teachers, transit workers and other public employees, cops and firefighters have in the past been largely spared such anger.

For example, in Wisconsin, where most public workers were stripped of their collective bargaining rights and made to pay more to fund their pensions, firefighters, cops and other public safety workers were given an exemption.

Still, Jim Carver, president of the Nassau County Police Benevolent Association, says politicians have started to target cops and firefighters. The state seized control of Nassau County's finances after the county failed to balance its budget and had its credit rating cut last year.

Carver bristles at the notion that police and firefighters don't deserve what they earn.

"After 9/11, you couldn't find a politician that wasn't rushing to put his arms around a cop or a firefighter," he said. "Ten, 12 years later, we are to blame for everything. Politicians have made us the enemy. We didn't put a gun to anybody's head. These were fairly negotiated contracts."

"EVERYBODY'S COMPLICIT"

To be sure, it took decades of bad decisions and poor management by local authorities to put many communities in fiscal dire straits. In countless cases, cities, counties and states over-promised benefits to retirees but neglected to set aside sufficient reserves to cover their liabilities.

When the economy and stock market were booming, cities often sweetened pension benefits, confident the money would be there in the end. After 9/11, the cops and firefighters' heroic status with the public meant that they were in a particularly strong bargaining position.

But the 2007-2008 recession and the impact of the housing bust on real estate taxes hammered municipal revenues and badly hurt pension funds' investment returns.

The Pew Center on the States said the gap between states' pension promises and liabilities was $757 billion in 2010.

"Everybody's complicit in this,'' said Lawrence Levy, executive dean of the National Center on Suburban Studies at Hofstra University.

Noel DiGerolamo, head of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association in Suffolk County, has harsh words for the public officials, saying they should be bearing the blame for fiscal woes.

"Rather than being responsible leaders of government and saying, ?We have these pension obligations that we're going to have to pay,' and saving towards those obligations, they are being politicians," DiGerolamo said. "And when the bill comes due, blaming employees who have worked towards and earned these pensions for 20 or 25 years."

BROKE IN CALIFORNIA

Of course, scores of municipalities are managing to balance their budgets even as costs rise. Only a few of the 90,000 issuers in the municipal debt market are in true distress.

Even many with escalating pension costs can meet their current obligations. It's keeping up with promises to aging citizens who are living longer that keeps officials up at night.

In some cases, contracts that may once have seemed fair are helping to bankrupt cities and leading to severe cuts in services, including fire station closures and reductions in police forces. Eight municipalities have sought protection from their creditors so far this year, following 13 that filed in 2011, and many others are having to slash their budgets.

San Bernardino, a city of 210,000 some 65 miles east of Los Angeles that has been hit hard by the collapse of the housing market, says public safety spending eats up 73 percent of its general fund budget, with overtime for firefighters especially onerous. Pension costs are expected to reach $25 million this year, double the 2006 level.

The city imposed a temporary 10 percent pay cut, but the firefighters' union successfully challenged it in court and is entitled to back pay. The city council voted last week to suspend debt payments and quit paying into a retiree health fund.

Some 350 miles to the north, Stockton, the biggest U.S. city ever to file for bankruptcy, allows police officers to retire at 50 with pensions based on 3 percent of final pay for each year in service.

When he signed the bankruptcy filing in June, Stockton city manager Bob Deis said a 1996 decision to provide firefighters with free health care in retirement, later expanded to all city employees, was a "Ponzi scheme" that saddled the city with a $417 million liability.

Because their jobs are dangerous and physically taxing, cops and firefighters typically retire after 20 or 30 years on the job, and that's as it should be, said Michael Coleman, a policy adviser for the League of California Cities, an association of municipal officials from the state.

But that's why it's important to keep pensions reasonable.

"I don't think anyone disagrees that these are dangerous jobs. But how much is enough? Unfortunately, I think it's gone too far," Coleman said.

The contrast between benefits in the public and private sectors is stark.

Only 26 percent of U.S. companies offer retiree healthcare benefits, compared with 66 percent that did so in 1988, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Most private sector employees bear the brunt of providing for their retirement by saving money in funds known as 401(k) plans, with companies typically also making contributions. After the 2007 recession, some firms stopped making contributions altogether.

It can all add to tensions as some taxpayers question why their services are being cut or property taxes raised so a city or county can find the money for generous retirement benefits.

In New York, a 2010 investigation by then-attorney general Andrew Cuomo, now governor, found widespread incidence of "pension padding" - public employees working extra overtime in their last year on the job to boost pay and retirement income.

That's especially costly when it comes to well-paid public safety workers. The Manhattan Institute estimates nearly 10 percent of New York State cops and firefighters who retired in 2011 will receive six-figure pensions, from 2 percent in 2001.

NO QUICK FIXES

Quick fixes, however, are unlikely.

Efforts to revamp public pension plans face stiff legal challenges. Each state has its own constitution, courts and case law that affect how it can go about changing retirement systems.

Firefighters in San Bernardino have filed seven legal actions against attempts to scale back pay and benefits since 2007.

In many municipalities, public salaries and pensions are pegged to those offered in comparably sized regional cities. In New York, pensions, once set by the state, cannot be negotiated through collective bargaining.

At the same time, alternative ways to tackle deficits, such as raising taxes, are politically unpopular.

In the small Southern California city of Stanton, voters recently rejected a proposed utility tax hike that would have raised $1.1 million. The city instead cut back on active police and fire staff, which account for 77 percent of its spending.

"Will there be some impact on response time? There could be," said city manager Carol Jacobs. "But this city is not going to go bankrupt."

In some cases, unions have preferred layoffs to reduced retirement benefits. Two troubled cities in New Jersey are cases in point. Camden, one of the state's poorest and most crime-plagued cities, recently cut its police force by about half, and Newark cut its force by a third after unions declined concessions demanded by their city governments.

In New York, former Nassau County Executive Thomas Suozzi, a Long Island Democrat who has clashed with police unions, gave a stark assessment. "We're facing a problem that will be faced by every town in America.

"You can't raise property taxes anymore - people won't go for it. There's no more money. So, do you cut services, which will result in the death of the suburbs, I think, or do you make these salaries and pensions more rational than they've been?"

(Additional reporting by Hilary Russ in New York, Ronald Grover and Tori Richards in Los Angeles, and Jim Christie in San Francisco; Editing by Martin Howell and Leslie Adler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-loves-cops-firefighters-not-pensions-050706382.html

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Sunday, July 29, 2012

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Saturday, July 28, 2012

Analysis: Buffett's ResCap bid gives him bond upside too

(Reuters) - Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway is bidding on a bankrupt mortgage lender that it may not want, in what some investors and observers view as an effort to make more money on Berkshire's stake in the company's bonds.

Berkshire has made two bids for Residential Capital, the bankrupt unit of Ally Financial that makes loans and collects payments on them. Both bids were topped by Nationstar Mortgage Holdings , which also makes and services loans. An auction for the unit is due to start this fall.

ResCap's parent, Ally Financial, was previously known as General Motors Acceptance Corp and was once the auto lending arm of what is now General Motors Co. .

ResCap was a major subprime lender that became an albatross for GMAC when losses ballooned during the financial crisis. Ally wants to shed ResCap's mortgage liabilities as it seeks to repay government bailouts.

Many believe Buffett will buy ResCap if it has to, but would rather drive the price higher for Nationstar. For one thing, Berkshire Hathaway lacks the licenses needed to make mortgage loans. For another, Buffett often shies away from acquiring financial companies outside of the insurance business.

But Berkshire Hathaway has much to gain from pushing Nationstar to bid more. Berkshire owned more than $900 million of ResCap junior secured debt as of June, representing more than 40 percent of the total outstanding for that class.

Going into the bankruptcy, when Nationstar was bidding $2.4 billion, media reports suggested the secured holders could get 93 cents on the dollar. But the more Nationstar pays, the more money Berkshire Hathaway gets.

In fact, with the higher offer from Nationstar, secured bondholders are expected to be paid back in full, according to one person involved in the restructuring. Even unsecured creditors are likely to make some recovery, the person said.

Berkshire has repeatedly declined comment on its intentions for ResCap, and Buffett's assistant did not return messages for comment on Thursday and Friday.

To outsiders, Buffett's strategy makes perfect sense.

"The worst-case scenario is he owns it and he'll just hold onto it," said Michael Yoshikami, chief executive of Destination Wealth Management, an asset manager in California that has more than $12 million in Berkshire Hathaway stock.

"The best-case scenario is he extracts a higher bid and that helps him on the debt side," Yoshikami said. "I think it's one of his brighter moves."

LICENSING HURDLE

Buffett still likes a good deal, and he invested in financial companies like Bank of America Corp and Goldman Sachs Group when there was money to be made. He is also separately bidding on a loan portfolio that ResCap is selling and is the lead bidder for that asset.

But the licensing hurdle is big. In a court filing in June, a banker advising ResCap said one of the advantages of the Nationstar offer was its support from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac , the government-controlled housing finance providers that own the majority of the loans serviced by ResCap, and that it holds the state licenses needed to run the new assets.

Berkshire executive Ted Weschler, in a June court hearing, conceded the company did not have the housing agency support or state licenses lined up, but said, "We'll do our absolute best to get those approvals."

Many of the court filings have been made by Weschler, an investment manager who joined Berkshire this year to help Buffett run its portfolio.

Both Nationstar and ResCap declined to comment.

ResCap is now selling the loan portfolio and the servicing business as separate entities, though the sale processes are running at the same time.

Bids for both the loans and the servicing platform are due on October 19, and an auction is set for October 23. A bankruptcy court hearing at which the judge would then rule on the sales is set for November 5.

Berkshire is the designated initial bidder for the loan unit with an offer of $1.44 billion. The investment fund Lone Star said in June it was also interested in that unit.

ResCap filed for bankruptcy in May, with more than $5 billion of liabilities and $15 billion of assets.

The case is In re: Residential Capital, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-12020.

(Additional reporting by Rick Rothacker in Charlotte, North Carolina; Editing by Edward Tobin and Leslie Adler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-buffetts-rescap-bid-gives-him-bond-upside-173035486--sector.html

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Developing countries lead the way in deploying mobile technology

Some three-quarters of the world now has access to mobile networks. What does this mean for those in the developing world?

By Whitney Eulich,?Staff writer / July 28, 2012

A ragpicker holds her mobile phone to show a picture she took at a dump yard on World Environment Day in New Delhi June 5.

Adnan Abidi/Reuters

Enlarge

From remote farms to rural health centers, one thing is transforming how even the world's poorest people live: the mobile phone.

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Cell phone use in the developing world has climbed to nearly 5 billion mobile subscriptions, and three-quarters of the world now has access to mobile networks. This technology is reshaping the way individuals and communities manage their finances, monitor weather, engage with government, and earn a living, according to the recent World Bank Maximizing Mobile report.

?People are going from zero to 60. It is huge to go from no phone at all to a cellphone,? says Anne Nelson, international media development specialist and adjunct professor at Columbia University. ?The rapid penetration of cellphones in developing countries is changing lives dramatically.?

Mobile devices in regions like Africa are largely limited to voice and Short Message Service texting, but even the most basic mobile communications can increase school attendance, facilitate banking or cash transfers, create jobs, measure health indicators, accelerate disaster response, and fuel citizen engagement in governance and democracy.

For example, in Niger, access to cellphones has allowed grain traders to compare market prices across the country, cutting the cost of traveling to different markets and resulting in profit improvements of nearly 30 percent for traders. In Kenya, a program sent text messages to rural AIDS patients, reminding them to take their antiretroviral drugs.? It was found that sending these messages was not only more affordable than in-person reminders, but those receiving SMS messages showed higher rates of taking their meds than those who did not receive them.?

Mobile technology has also been lauded in the recent democratic uprisings in the Middle East. In Egypt, only about 10 percent of the population had landlines a decade ago, leaving much of the population without any phone access at all. Today, there are 82 million mobile phones in circulation, and the numbers are constantly growing.

The phones were ?game changers? during the Arab uprisings, not necessarily because of Twitter or Facebook ? many cellphones in Egypt, as in many rural parts of the developing world, don't have broadband access. Instead, ?for the first time, people were able to call or text each other and say ?Hey, let?s meet and go down to the square.? That wasn?t possible before,? says Ms. Nelson.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/26LcU3TMtKU/Developing-countries-lead-the-way-in-deploying-mobile-technology

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The Big Lesson From Regnerus's Bad Gay-Parenting Study ...

By this point in time it seems clear that something went really, really wrong with Mark Regnerus?s study arguing that gay and lesbian parents are bad parents. Regnerus claimed that gay and especially lesbian parents had too much ?household instability? to make them a family form worth investing in (by which I assume Regnerus meant that such families deserve no state benefits or privileges). Immediately there were questions about the study and Social Science Research, the journal that published it.

For one, there were rumors that the article had been pushed through too quickly, that the outside reviewers were closely connected to Regnerus as well as strong public opposition to gay marriage and should have recused themselves. Then there was, by Regnerus?s own admission, the fact that he labeled parents ?gay and lesbian? when in fact all he really had was data on children of divorced parents who had ever had a single same-sex relationship. Finally, there were the incredibly conservative funding sources of the study itself.

This week, Social Science Research gave a draft to The Chronicle of the results of its audit. Although the audit did not fault the journal?s editor, James D. Wright, nor the review process, it did fault the reviewers and cite serious flaws in the paper, particularly in its misidentification of parents as ?lesbian? and ?gay? when in fact only two of the people in that category were in long-term, same-sex relationships. As the journal?s auditor, Darren Sherkat, wrote: This misidentification should have ?disqualified it immediately? but did not because of ?ideology and inattention.?

On the same day that the internal audit was released, Scott Rose, an investigative journalist and a ?minorities anti-defamation professional,? released the evidence he will present to the University of Texas?s Inquiry Panel on August 3. According to Mr. Rose, in addition to Regnerus?s seriously flawed research design, there was in fact purposeful falsification of data and some seriously anti-gay funding. In fact, the Witherspoon Institute and the Bradley Foundation both seem to be connected to the National Organization of Marriage (NOM). According to Rose,

  1. Witherspoon Institute President Luis Tellez has been a NOM board member since NOM?s founding by;
  2. ?Witherspoon Senior Fellow Robert George, who also is a Board member of;
  3. The Bradley Foundation

NOM is a rabidly anti-gay marriage group that produced a series of ads that were so ridiculous that they seemed more like an Onion parody than right-wing propaganda. ?In March, the Human Rights Campaign Fund was given access to DOM documents that revealed a strategy

to drive a wedge between gays and blacks ? two key Democratic constituencies. Find, equip, energize and connect African-American spokespeople for marriage; develop a media campaign around their objections to gay marriage as a civil right; provoke the gay marriage base into responding by denouncing these spokesmen and women as bigots.

Whatever the outcome for a particular journal or a particular scholar, this entire episode has revealed the 500-pound gorilla in the room: big conservative money is increasingly shaping social-science research. As universities scramble for alternative funding sources (as those same conservative forces cut funding to higher ed), they find themselves making pacts with highly ideological organizations that offer money for research that supports their world view.

The real lesson from Regnerus?s bad gay-parenting study is that we need a public debate about the importance of public funds for universities and research. Without such funding, it is like only having for-profit and conservative Christian book stores rather than libraries.

Source: http://chronicle.com/blogs/brainstorm/the-big-lesson-from-regneruss-bad-gay-parenting-study/50419

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Friday, July 27, 2012

Today on New Scientist: 26 July 2012

Gaze-tracking illusion lets you draw with your eyes

People with locked-in syndrome could use their eyes to mimic handwriting or drawing thanks to an optical illusion

Ben Miller: Why science needs a sense of humour

Comedian Ben Miller explains what science and comedy have in common

Fungus-powered superplants may beat the heat

As US crops wither in drought, researchers are turning to symbiotic fungi to help crops survive extreme conditions without resorting to genetic engineering

Human error blamed for Fukushima meltdown

The main cause of Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster was not last year's earthquake but a failure to prepare for large-scale emergencies

Stress may cause women's brains to age prematurely

Genes responsible for ageing the brain appear to affect women more than men, possibly as a result of a stressful life

AI predicts when you're about to get sick

An AI system that trawls through Twitter data can tell when you're about to get flu eight days before you get any symptoms

Berenice Abbott: Monochrome purity in photography

A new exhibition at MIT reveals how Berenice Abbott used photography to bring science to the US public in the 1960s

Flickering lights help smartphones keep time

Devices could regulate their internal clocks by synchronising to the frequency of mains electricity, revealed in the flicker of fluorescent lights

The true faces of emotion

Bushmen or businessman, everyone makes the same expressions to signal emotions - or so we thought. Now it looks like human nature isn't so universal after all

Liposuction used to create blood vessels for bypass

Stem cells taken from fat tissue have been coaxed into forming blood vessels that could replace those damaged by cardiovascular disease

Ruling frees FDA to crack down on stem cell clinics

A controversial stem cell therapy should be regulated as a drug, US court rules

Subscribe to New Scientist Magazine

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Hiker dies after plunging off cliff into Alaska river

By Reuters

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- A hiker has died after falling into a river in a remote part of northern Alaska, ?the U.S. Coast Guard said Thursday. His companion was rescued by helicopter.

The Coast Guard did not release the identity or nationality of the victim, who slipped off a cliff in the Brooks Range on Wednesday night. The companion, Olaf Schooll of Norway, was rescued, the Coast Guard said in a statement.


The two men had been trying to hike across the northern part of Alaska, from the Canadian border to the Bering Sea, the statement said.

The accident occurred at Atigun Gorge, a spot about 240 miles southeast of Barrow, it said.

Schooll used a satellite telephone to call for help, the statement said. A Coast Guard air crew found him, hoisted him into a helicopter and flew him to Barrow.

More Alaska coverage from NBC?station KTUU in Anchorage

Crew members found his dead companion about a mile downstream in the Atigun River, but terrain and water conditions prevented the recovery of the man's body at that time, the Coast Guard said. Searchers were attempting on Thursday to recover the body.

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/07/27/12983963-hiker-dies-after-plunging-off-cliff-into-alaska-river?lite

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Thursday, July 26, 2012

eHealth: Latest News: Could A Single Pill Treat Three Of The Most ...

A single pill has the potential to treat multiple brain conditions including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and multiple sclerosis, it has been revealed.

Scientists have developed a new class of drug which can be taken orally and prevents the damaging effects of inflammation in the brain.

Early results from animal studies suggest it could be effective against a plethora of devastating brain conditions.

single pill brain conditions

Scientists claim a single pill could potentially treat multiple brain conditions

They include Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis (MS), motor neurone disease, frontotemporal dementia, and complications from traumatic brain injury.

Two of the drugs, known as MW151 and MW189, have been patented by US scientists at Northwestern University in Chicago.

They work by blocking excess production of damaging immune system signalling molecules called pro-inflammatory cytokines.

New research published in the Journal of Neuroscience showed how early treatment with MW151 prevented the development of full-blown Alzheimer's in laboratory mice.

Scientists say the drugs offer a completely different approach to treating the disease to others currently being tested.

These target the accumulation of beta amyloid protein deposits in the brain which are a key feature of Alzheimer's.

In contrast the new drugs are designed to stop inflammation disrupting wiring in the brain and killing neurons.

Pro-inflammatory cytokines cause the synapses, the connections between brain cells, to misfire. Eventually the whole organisation of the brain falls into disarray, like a failing computer, and neurons die.

Groundbreaking Brain Injection For Parkinson's (WATCH)

"In Alzheimer's disease, many people now view the progression from mild cognitive impairment to full-blown Alzheimer's as an indication of malfunctioning synapses, the pathways that allow neurons to talk to each other," said Professor Martin Watterson, one of the study leaders at Northwestern University's Feinberg School.

"High levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines can contribute to synaptic malfunction."

Mice genetically engineered to develop Alzheimer's were given MW151 three times a week starting at six months of age. A comparable stage in humans would be when a patient begins to experience mild mental decline.

At 11 months, by which time the mice should have developed full-blown Alzheimer's, cytokine levels in the brains of the animals were found to be back to normal. Their synapses were also working normally.

Untreated mice had abnormally high brain levels of cytokines and their synapses were misfiring.

Co-author Dr Linda Van Eldik, director of the Sanders-Brown Centre on Aging at the University of Kentucky, said: "The drug protected against the damage associated with learning and memory impairment. Giving this drug before Alzheimer's memory changes are at a late stage may be a promising future approach to therapy."

Harmful inflammation also plays a role in a wide range of other neurodegenerative disorders, raising the prospect of using the drug to treat many different conditions.

SEE ALSO:

Earlier tests on mice showed that MW151 reduced the severity of a disease similar to MS in humans that strips nerve fibres of their insulating myelin covering.

In other mouse experiments, the drug prevented a surge of pro-inflammatory cytokines after traumatic brain injury.

"If you took a drug like this early on after traumatic brain injury or even a stroke, you could possibly prevent the long-term complications of that injury including the risk of seizures, cognitive impairment, and, perhaps, mental health issues," said Professor Mark Wainright, also from Northwestern's Feinberg School.

Parkinson's, non-Alzheimer's dementia and motor neurone disease were other conditions that could potentially be tackled using the new approach.

A key advantage of the drug is that it can be swallowed as a pill, rather than being injected. It easily crosses the "blood brain barrier", a physical and molecular fortress wall that stops toxic molecules entering the brain.

Results are yet to be released from the first Phase I trial assessing the drug's safety in human patients.

This is the first step in winning clinical approval for a new treatment.

Dr Simon Ridley, head of research at the charity Alzheimer's Research UK, said: "This research takes an interesting approach to tackling Alzheimer's. Most current therapies in development target amyloid, whereas this drug appears to act by reducing the damage caused by activation of the immune system.

"We know that the immune system and inflammation are important players in Alzheimer's disease and so it's promising to see that this approach could hold benefits.

"These are early findings in mice and the drugs would need to be tested in humans before we could judge their true potential as a new treatment. With over half a million people in the UK living with Alzheimer's, effective new therapies are vital.

"Research is key to reaching this goal and we must keep investing in fresh ideas and new strategies if we are to tackle this devastating disease head-on."

Source: http://ehealthy.blogspot.com/2012/07/latest-news-could-single-pill-treat.html

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What Next, #Intranet Manager? | Business 2 Community

More money? New colleagues? Change of scene? Change of manager? Whatever your reason for wanting a new role, you can be certain that your skills will be in demand. But with so many options open to you, what will your next career move be? In this post, we?ll look at the career paths open to intranet managers and ask you where you think you?ll head next.

New Geographies

You?re doing a fine job managing the intranet for the company in France, it?s time to spread your wings and stretch your linguistic abilities and manage the intranet in Germany too. This is a remarkably common next step for intranet managers: develop the job by adding new territories. Same role, broadly similar skills just over more employees.

New Internal Digital Technologies

As an expert in intranets, you?re perfectly placed to aggregate some new internal digital technologies to your job role. Smart, connected organisations will ensure that these other techs ? such as digital signage ? will be connected to your intranet, so much of the content will likely be familiar to you. Consider these other internal digital technologies. Could these come your way?

Go Large ? Move to a bigger company

You?re a big fish in a small pond, so it?s time to change the size of the pond. Moving to a larger company, with larger budgets, bigger, more complex audiences is a very natural next step. However, it may not be all it?s cracked up to be. There are several thought-leaders who consider smaller intranets to be more innovative (maybe fewer people to say no to crackpot ideas?) so you may just find the bureaucracy stifling.

Add (or switch to) external digital

So you?re clearly an expert on internal digital communication, maybe now?s the time to diversify and add external digital communication to your job role. Whilst the audiences are vastly different in size and needs, the digital skills you?ve learnt in managing your intranet will be invaluable when it comes to managing your company?s customer-facing dot com or social media channels.

Specialise Still Further

Great intranet managers will have significant, valuable skills and experiences at their disposal. One career path opportunity is to specialise still further and look for opportunities in information architecture, user experience management or the specific content management system you?re using.

With the rise enterprise social networks, intranet managers may wish to specialise in internal and external social media, social communication and community management.

Drop the Digital

You can do internal digital communications, so maybe it?s the right time to switch to more an internal communication role that covers both on- and offline. Your skills could be particularly sought-after by firms which want to move more of their communications online; they?ll need someone who has a strong understanding of traditional offline channels, but at the same time can be a strong advocate for digital and can help to shape online channels and processes.

Transfer the skills

It?s time for a big change. You?ve explored all the intranet, internal digital, external digital and specialist digital career paths available to you inside the company and out and you feel it?s time for a change. So what career paths are open to you now?

  • Business Transformation ? Given the communication, collaboration and transactional nature of intranets, you probably have a very sharp understanding of how technology can make a difference to an employee?s efficiency. It?s also very probable that you understand people?s roles and the machinations of your business. I expect you could jot down five ways to improve the business right now?
  • Change Management ? There?s no chance you?ve lead your intranet without having an appreciation of change management. Whether your organisation is in the ?intranet as a project? cycle, or more about continuous improvement, recognising the impact of your changes and working to smooth the transition are an important part of your current role ? but could it be your future career?
  • Project Management ? A former manager of mine likened intranet projects to plate spinning. The real trick is to keep all the plates up and if one really must fall, make sure it?s the cheap plate from IKEA that no one will notice. In the course of your current role, you?ve managed complex cross-functional legacy projects. Fancy more of the same?
  • Consultancy ? Allow other organisations to leverage your learnt skills and experiences. We?ll spare blushes and not mention names, but there are countless intranet practitioners who are now consulting others
  • Outsource ? How about managing other intranets on behalf of other companies?
  • IT ? yea, slip over to the darkside! You?ll be able to able to provide important business insight!

Summary

The experience you?ve gained managing your company?s intranet will stand you in good stead as you embark on the next phase of your career. We hope some of the suggestions above provide food for thought. Let us know ? what?s your next step?

Source: http://www.business2community.com/online-communities/what-next-intranet-manager-0223911

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Lower vitamin D could increase risk of dying, especially for frail, older adults

Lower vitamin D could increase risk of dying, especially for frail, older adults [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Jul-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Ellen Smit
Ellen.Smit@oregonstate.edu
541-737-3833
Oregon State University

CORVALLIS, Ore. A new study concludes that among older adults especially those who are frail low levels of vitamin D can mean a much greater risk of death.

The randomized, nationally representative study found that older adults with low vitamin D levels had a 30 percent greater risk of death than people who had higher levels.

Overall, people who were frail had more than double the risk of death than those who were not frail. Frail adults with low levels of vitamin D tripled their risk of death over people who were not frail and who had higher levels of vitamin D.

"What this really means is that it is important to assess vitamin D levels in older adults, and especially among people who are frail," said lead author Ellen Smit of Oregon State University.

Smit said past studies have separately associated frailty and low vitamin D with a greater mortality risk, but this is the first to look at the combined effect. This study, published online in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, examined more than 4,300 adults older than 60 using data from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

"Older adults need to be screened for vitamin D," said Smit, who is a nutritional epidemiologist at OSU's College of Public Health and Human Sciences. Her research is focused on diet, metabolism, and physical activity in relation to both chronic disease and HIV infection.

"As you age, there is an increased risk of melanoma, but older adults should try and get more activity in the sunshine," she said. "Our study suggests that there is an opportunity for intervention with those who are in the pre-frail group, but could live longer, more independent lives if they get proper nutrition and exercise."

Frailty is when a person experiences a decrease in physical functioning characterized by at least three of the following five criteria: muscle weakness, slow walking, exhaustion, low physical activity, and unintentional weight loss. People are considered "pre-frail" when they have one or two of the five criteria.

Because of the cross-sectional nature of the survey, researchers could not determine if low vitamin D contributed to frailty, or whether frail people became vitamin D deficient because of health problems. However, Smit said the longitudinal analysis on death showed it may not matter which came first.

"If you have both, it may not really matter which came first because you are worse off and at greater risk of dying than other older people who are frail and who don't have low vitamin D," she said. "This is an important finding because we already know there is a biological basis for this. Vitamin D impacts muscle function and bones, so it makes sense that it plays a big role in frailty."

The study divided people into four groups. The low group had levels less than 50 nanograms per milliliter; the highest group had vitamin D of 84 or higher. In general, those who had lower vitamin D levels were more likely to be frail.

About 70 percent of Americans, and up to a billion people worldwide, have insufficient levels of vitamin D. And during the winter months in northern climates, it can be difficult to get enough just from the sun. OSU's Linus Pauling Institute recommends adults take 2,000 IU of supplemental vitamin D daily. The current federal guidelines are 600 IU for most adults, and 800 for those older than 70.

"We want the older population to be able to live as independent for as long as possible, and those who are frail have a number of health problems as they age," Smit said. "A balanced diet including good sources of vitamin D like milk and fish, and being physically active outdoors, will go a long way in helping older adults to stay independent and healthy for longer."

###

Researchers from Portland State University, Drexel University of Philadelphia, University of Puerto Rico and McGill University in Montreal contributed to this study. It was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health and a grant from OSU.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Lower vitamin D could increase risk of dying, especially for frail, older adults [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Jul-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Ellen Smit
Ellen.Smit@oregonstate.edu
541-737-3833
Oregon State University

CORVALLIS, Ore. A new study concludes that among older adults especially those who are frail low levels of vitamin D can mean a much greater risk of death.

The randomized, nationally representative study found that older adults with low vitamin D levels had a 30 percent greater risk of death than people who had higher levels.

Overall, people who were frail had more than double the risk of death than those who were not frail. Frail adults with low levels of vitamin D tripled their risk of death over people who were not frail and who had higher levels of vitamin D.

"What this really means is that it is important to assess vitamin D levels in older adults, and especially among people who are frail," said lead author Ellen Smit of Oregon State University.

Smit said past studies have separately associated frailty and low vitamin D with a greater mortality risk, but this is the first to look at the combined effect. This study, published online in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, examined more than 4,300 adults older than 60 using data from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

"Older adults need to be screened for vitamin D," said Smit, who is a nutritional epidemiologist at OSU's College of Public Health and Human Sciences. Her research is focused on diet, metabolism, and physical activity in relation to both chronic disease and HIV infection.

"As you age, there is an increased risk of melanoma, but older adults should try and get more activity in the sunshine," she said. "Our study suggests that there is an opportunity for intervention with those who are in the pre-frail group, but could live longer, more independent lives if they get proper nutrition and exercise."

Frailty is when a person experiences a decrease in physical functioning characterized by at least three of the following five criteria: muscle weakness, slow walking, exhaustion, low physical activity, and unintentional weight loss. People are considered "pre-frail" when they have one or two of the five criteria.

Because of the cross-sectional nature of the survey, researchers could not determine if low vitamin D contributed to frailty, or whether frail people became vitamin D deficient because of health problems. However, Smit said the longitudinal analysis on death showed it may not matter which came first.

"If you have both, it may not really matter which came first because you are worse off and at greater risk of dying than other older people who are frail and who don't have low vitamin D," she said. "This is an important finding because we already know there is a biological basis for this. Vitamin D impacts muscle function and bones, so it makes sense that it plays a big role in frailty."

The study divided people into four groups. The low group had levels less than 50 nanograms per milliliter; the highest group had vitamin D of 84 or higher. In general, those who had lower vitamin D levels were more likely to be frail.

About 70 percent of Americans, and up to a billion people worldwide, have insufficient levels of vitamin D. And during the winter months in northern climates, it can be difficult to get enough just from the sun. OSU's Linus Pauling Institute recommends adults take 2,000 IU of supplemental vitamin D daily. The current federal guidelines are 600 IU for most adults, and 800 for those older than 70.

"We want the older population to be able to live as independent for as long as possible, and those who are frail have a number of health problems as they age," Smit said. "A balanced diet including good sources of vitamin D like milk and fish, and being physically active outdoors, will go a long way in helping older adults to stay independent and healthy for longer."

###

Researchers from Portland State University, Drexel University of Philadelphia, University of Puerto Rico and McGill University in Montreal contributed to this study. It was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health and a grant from OSU.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-07/osu-lvd072612.php

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How The Identity Theft Deterrence Act Can Really Help Victims Of ...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://cyberweek.umasslegal.org/2012/07/25/how-the-identity-theft-deterrence-act-can-really-help-victims-of-fraud/

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Health and Fitness Facts and Myths Exposed ? Exercise Bike Health

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Discovering that you?ve been doing a particular exercise wrong for years would be frustrating. Think of the person who executes an exercise wrong due to incorrect information and then gets injured. These are very real considerations and they happen to people all the time. For this reason it is so important that you provide you with your details from specialists along with legitimate options.

Your health and soundness of body depends on it because the world is rampant with bad information in so many areas. The concept of physical fitness and health are not any various so the following is a number of reliable data to suit your needs. Would you be surprised to learn that myths exist about treadmill workouts and your knees? This has been declared that treadmill machines are generally significantly less harsh on your knees than running upon pavement, tangible or concrete. Let?s eliminate this specific rumor at the present. Running causes your knees to look at full effect of your bodyweight. It does not matter what the surface may be. Regardless of the tiny bit of give a treadmill will give you your knees are still going t take the impact of your weight.

Your knees will thank you for making the investment into a quality running shoe. We know that will physical exercise will allow you to have more electricity. This benefit of regular exercise is true. People statement feeling energized all day when they do workouts with an exercise bike in the morning. The improved energy is actually in part brought on by greater the circulation of blood. Improved circulation means your cells are receiving more oxygen. In connection with which is your current power along with vigor will certainly enhance along with exercising.

When you have more strength, then naturally you will feel as if you?ve far more energy. You?ll find piles regarding study promoting the fact that a wholesome fitness routine regarding exercise and diet will substantially decrease, slower, or even avoid critical disease problems. It is no magic formula which workout provides wonderful results on cardiovascular wellness. You can also affect a positive influence on other conditions such as high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol, and joint and bone diseases.

Over and above health-related ailments, you?ll be able to sluggish getting older in certain aspects by using a fantastic exercise routine as well as a healthful way of life. Health and fitness advice is never too much absent, a variety of it will be reality plus some if it?s something different. If you aren?t positive about the data you listening to you ought to get some credible information.

Miles Craig is one of the known people in the industry of physical fitness. Her area of expertise is all about biking fitness like the upright exercise bikes and the use of a cycling bike and also implements different methods of doing these exercises.


Source: http://exercisebikehealth.com/health-and-fitness-facts-and-myths-exposed/

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Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Free Legal Question: Criminal Law | Colorado | Is there a not guilty ...

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