S&P 500 Support
Stocks are holding their ground through Tuesday trading as financial and homebuilder stocks stayed firm following a positive housing starts report.
At 1:49 pm ET, the Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) is up 9.37, or 2.43%, at 395.73, while the Dow is up 1.29% at 7,309.76, and the S&P 500 is up 1.83% at 767.68.
This morning the Commerce Department reported that construction of new homes and apartments jumped 22.2% from January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 583,000 units. Economists were expecting construction to drop to a pace of around 450,000 units.
Small cap on the move today include Star Bulk (Nasdaq:SBLK), up 20% as the company’s Q4 net soars on bigger fleet. SkillSoft Public Limited Company (Nasdaq:SKIL) is also 24% higher today following a Q4 earnings boost.
Universally Reviled
I have never seen a company more determined to make itself universally reviled than AIG. It truly boggles the mind that anyone at AIG, especially those in the financial products division that lost $62 billion on credit default swaps in the fourth quarter alone, could think they should receive a bonus.
I don’t care what the contract says — if you’re party to losing $62 billion in a three-month span, you get no reward. Sorry. And if you even have to ask if bonuses can be paid with bailout money that’s keeping your business going, your moral compass is seriously out of whack.
And it doesn’t end with the bonuses. Of the $170 billion American taxpayers have dumped into the bottomless pit that is AIG, $106 billion was paid out in settlement for the credit default swaps that AIG guaranteed.
$11.92 billion to France’s SocGen, $11.8 billion to Deustche bank and $12 billion to Paulson’s own Goldman Sachs. Well, isn’t that nice. We’ve paid off foreign banks, and our former Treasury Secretary made sure his alma mater got its payoff, too.
This is dirty business. And if Paulson knew the extent of Goldman’s exposure to AIG, and it’s impossible to think he didn’t, he needs to be called to . . .
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