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Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

UPDATE: UK BOE Bailey: Living Wills To Question Bank Structures

UPDATE: UK BOE Bailey: Living Wills To Question Bank Structures

(Adds details, background.)

By Adam Bradbery

Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

The preparation of "living wills" to enable banks to be wound down when they run into financial difficulties will result in hard questioning about their business models and organizational structures, a senior Bank of England official said Tuesday.

"They will be a tool for the authorities rigorously to ask the question, 'with this structure and business model, could I achieve a resolution at an acceptable cost'," said Andrew Bailey, executive director for banking services at the BOE at a banking conference in Spain.

The U.K. regulator, the Financial Services Authority, is working with the biggest financial institutions in the country to help them develop living wills which are designed to act as blueprints for supervisory authorities to wind them down and manage their exposures quickly at times of financial trauma.

Bailey said the BOE and the FSA, which are part of the tripartite authority of financial oversight, will jointly assess whether these living wills are workable and whether they show that a company's business model or organizational structure need to be changed.

"Resolution plans need to be there to be used, and I can assure you that the Bank of England, in its role as a resolution authority, will be placing great emphasis on the existence of credible and useable resolution plans," said Bailey.

The BOE official said this questioning will take place for both domestic and cross-border banks but that a large amount of work will need to be done in making sure resolution regimes in different countries adequately cover international firms.

The FSA published a discussion paper last month on how to deal with banks that are deemed "too big to fail" in which it suggested that, if a firm's living will indicated it would be difficult to wind down, the bank might need to be restructured and, potentially, have its retail and trading arms separated.

Paul Myners, the U.K. Treasury's financial services secretary, said earlier this month he believes the use of these resolution plans would force more banks to structure themselves as subsidiaries, which operate as standalone units, rather than branches, which rely on their parents in other countries for capital and liquidity.

-By Adam Bradbery, Dow Jones Newswires; 44 20 7842 9305; adam.bradbery@dowjones.com

Click here to go to Dow Jones NewsPlus, a web front page of today's most important business and market news, analysis and commentary: http://www.djnewsplus.com/access/al?rnd=a%2B9%2B7AGMLKtlUOD8sI0Q6w%3D%3D. You can use this link on the day this article is published and the following day.

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

Gold Rally To Keep Going To $1,200/Oz By Year End - Analysts

LONDON (Dow Jones)--Spot gold hit yet another record high Monday and market participants struggled to be bearish saying while the rise in gold has been driven largely by momentum buying, there is little to stop gold from rising to $1,200 a troy ounce before the end of the year.

"We think this rally is sustainable based on dollar weakness, central bank buying and inflation volatility," said Deutsche Bank analyst Michael Lewis. "The target is now $1,200/oz."

At 0856 GMT, spot gold was trading at $1,105.15/oz, having hit a record high of $1,108.30/oz earlier in the day.

Commodities across the board were up spurred by U.S. dollar weakness against the euro and European equities were higher.

Finance ministers from the Group of 20 leading economies pledged to maintain their fiscal stimulus measures at their meeting over the weekend and that weighed on the dollar.

"It looks as if we will have another period where we may see the euro/dollar make new highs for the year," said Mitsubishi analyst Tom Kendall.

On top of the supportive backdrop of a weakening dollar, central banks are set to be net buyers of the precious metal this year after 20 years of being net sellers, said Deutsche's Lewis.

Last week, India's central bank bought 200 metric tons out of a total of 403.3 tons of International Monetary Fund gold earmarked for sale and Sri Lanka's central bank said it has been buying gold to diversify its reserves amid volatile currency markets.

Colombia's IGBC Stock Index Falls 2.1%, Following DJIA

Colombia's IGBC Stock Index Falls 2.1%, Following DJIA

BOGOTA (Dow Jones)--The Colombian stock index fell Friday, dragged down by stocks in the U.S.

The benchmark IGBC stock index ended 2.1% lower at 10,921.26 points.

U.S. stocks also tumbled Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average falling more than 240 points as investors are concerned whether the DJIA's 48% increase since March is justified after seeing mixed economic data over the past couple of days.

"The market here is concerned about what may happen in the U.S.," said Monica Agudelo, a market analyst with local brokerage Asesores en Valores. "The good GDP growth on Thursday in the U.S. made people worry on Friday as it seems the growth was boosted by government spending," she said.

The most-traded shares were those of Colombia's largest holding firm, Grupo de Inversiones Suramericana SA (GRUPOSURA.BO), which fell 4% to 22,500 Colombian pesos ($11.28), while the preferred shares of the country's largest bank, Bancolombia SA (CIB), fell 3.5% to COP19,700.

The Colombian peso weakened to COP1,994.1 to the dollar from COP1,975.05 Thursday, while the yield on the 2020 benchmark peso-denominated government ended at 8.400%, from 8.395% Thursday.

Dollar Down from Record High on Chinese Economic Concerns

The U.S. dollar rose after extending once again its record high for 2009 after China missed slightly its quarterly growth forecasts, and economic stimulus in the country will continue for a certain amount of time, suggesting the country is not so recovered as previous expected.

The euro fell below $1.50 against the dollar after touching the highest rates in 14 months in a movement that can be interpreted as corrective, since stocks fell globally, helping the dollar to gain the most versus commodity linked currencies like its Australian counterpart, and also emergent market options in Asia like the South Korean won, and in Latin America like the Brazilian real. The dollar also gained against the Swedish krona, after the Riksbank, Sweden’s central financial institution maintained interested rates at an all time record low, showing that the Nordic nation still needs the support from the government to expand its faltering economy.

Analysts suggest that today’s movement was mainly fueled by a risk averse day in stocks, as the dollar declined several days in a row, today corrections are profit taking are being made by some investors, leaving a breather for the greenback. It is unlikely that the dollar will revert its losing trend on the mid-term, as the Federal Reserve has expressed no concerns regarding a weaker currency.

EUR/USD traded at 1.4989 as of 11:59 GMT after touching 1.5046 yesterday. AUD/USD traded at 0.9229 from 0.9328.

If you want to comment on the U.S. dollar’s recent action or have any questions regarding this currency, please, feel free to reply below.

USD Slumps on Blockbuster JPM Earnings

The beleaguered dollar found no reprieve in the Wednesday session, extending its losses to fresh 14-month lows against the euro and Australian dollar to 1.4934 and 0.9156, respectively. A shift to riskier assets was triggered by a stronger than expected earnings report from JP Morgan Chase, prompting advances in the US equity bourses with the Dow Jones, Nasdaq and S&P 500 all gaining by more than 1.2% by afternoon trading. The Dow Jones edged higher toward the psychologically key 10,000-level, briefly breaching above it on an intra-day basis for the first time in a year.

The economic data released earlier in the session were largely mixed, consisting of retail sales, import prices, export prices and business inventories. The headline retail sales figure was better than estimated, albeit still declining by 1.5% for September versus a 2.7% from August. The excluding automobiles retail sales figure beat consensus estimates also, posting an increase of 0.5%, better than calls for a 0.2% increase from 1.1% a month earlier. The August business inventories figure revealed a 1.5% drop from a 1.0% decline in July.

The minutes of the FOMC’s September meeting revealed that some policymakers felt increasing the scale of Fed’s asset purchases would improve the recovery, stressing the importance of ability to increase asset purchases if the economic outlook worsened. The Fed minutes said that policymakers judged costs of growth being weaker than anticipated could be relatively high while expecting inflation to remain subdued for some time amid substantial resource slack. The Fed also raised its economic projections for the second half of 2009 and subsequent years.

Greenback Slumps on Shift to Riskier Assets

The dollar’s respite proved short-lived as traders resumed selling the currency in the Thursday session, pushing it to a fresh one-year low against the Australian dollar at 0.9088 and two-week low against the euro at 1.4816. The equity, commodity and energy markets were in lockstep as spot gold touch record high for its third consecutive session past the $1,055 per ounce level and crude oil edging back above the $70 per barrel level near $72. The major US equity bourses also climbed higher, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq advancing by nearly 1% in the afternoon session.

The economic data released earlier in the session saw weekly jobless claims improve to 521k from 551k a week prior and the August wholesale inventories slip by 1.3% from a 1.4% decline in the previous month. Speaking earlier today was Richmond Fed President Lacker reiterated that the economic outlook remains unchanged from the previous FOMC meeting, adding that the risk of sliding into a recession again in 2010 has diminished substantially. He also quelled speculation of impending rate hikes advising that the Fed should not tighten policy today.

Triodos to raise €90m for ethical lending

Triodos Bank has announced plans to issue €90 million of new shares.

Money raised from the shares will be used to provide loans to sustainable projects.

Set up in 1980, Netherlands-based Triodos provides loans to environmentally-friendly projects such as wind farms and organic agriculture.

Since the credit crunch, the company has seen an upsurge in interest in its sustainable approach to banking.

Customer numbers at the bank have increased by almost a fifth (18%) since January this year.

“If nothing else, the financial crisis has taught us that it pays to choose sustainable”, said chief executive Peter Blom.

Blom added that the money raised from the share issue will allow the bank to increase its lending.

“New capital will enable us to lend to even more to sustainable projects and companies”, he said.

“Our growth is faster than foreseen; we continue to thrive despite the financial crisis, and have no shortfall of capital.

“This year we have grown faster than ever before, with more than an 18% increase in our customer numbers since January 2009.”

Triodos has 12,000 shareholders, around half of whom are individual investors.

Triodos to raise €90m for ethical lending

Triodos Bank has announced plans to issue €90 million of new shares.

Money raised from the shares will be used to provide loans to sustainable projects.

Set up in 1980, Netherlands-based Triodos provides loans to environmentally-friendly projects such as wind farms and organic agriculture.

Since the credit crunch, the company has seen an upsurge in interest in its sustainable approach to banking.

Customer numbers at the bank have increased by almost a fifth (18%) since January this year.

“If nothing else, the financial crisis has taught us that it pays to choose sustainable”, said chief executive Peter Blom.

Blom added that the money raised from the share issue will allow the bank to increase its lending.

“New capital will enable us to lend to even more to sustainable projects and companies”, he said.

“Our growth is faster than foreseen; we continue to thrive despite the financial crisis, and have no shortfall of capital.

“This year we have grown faster than ever before, with more than an 18% increase in our customer numbers since January 2009.”

Triodos has 12,000 shareholders, around half of whom are individual investors.

Fox News Attacks US Loans to Fisker and Tesla

to Fox News, the US Department of Energy threw away nearly $1 billion in loans to Fisker Automotive and Tesla Motors—two Calif.-based auto startups trying to produce the next generation of American-made energy-efficient cars. On several of its shows, including America's Newsroom and Your World, Fox News criticized the loans because Fisker and Tesla currently produce expensive cars that are made in Europe.

Moreover, Fox insinuated that Fisker received the DOE loan because of its connection with former vice-president and global warming activist Al Gore. America's Newsroom co-host Martha MacCallum said: "Listen to this. The US government is making a $529 million loan to a small car company that happens to be backed by former Vice President Al Gore. Get this. It's called the Karma. It's a hybrid. It's built by Fisker Automotive. The price tag for this greenmobile is about $89,000."

During the segment, on-screen text read, "Americans Fund Car Co That Will Create Jobs...In Finland.”

Fox News contributor Stephen Moore stated, "I think most of the people watching this show, I think, would question the wisdom of the Department of Energy giving out these grants in the first place. But I think the vast, vast majority of Americans would say, at least if we do it, find an American company that's going to employ American workers to do this."

While the all-electric Tesla Roadster is currently being built in England, and components of the Fisker Karma plug-in hybrid are made in Finland, Fox neglected to fully explain that the loans will be used to establish US manufacturing facilities for more affordable future models.

The DOE loan will support Fisker engineering work to be conducted at the company's Pontiac, Mich. office, with support from its Irvine, Calif. headquarters. Fisker estimates that it will produce 75,000 to 100,000 of a more affordable plug-in hybrid—about $45,000—every year beginning in late 2012. DOE officials said they spent months working with Fisker on its application, touring its Irvine and Pontiac facilities and test-driving prototypes.

Tesla received a $465 million government loan to support production of its Model S—expected to sell for around $55,000. Production is scheduled to begin in 2011 and ramp up to 20,000 vehicles per year by the end of 2013. The new manufacturing facility is expected to create 1,000 jobs in Southern California. The rest of the loan will support a new facility to manufacture battery packs and electric drivetrains, employing about 650 people in Northern California."

Your World host Neil Cavuto acknowledged, “Some of that cash will go toward building cars here, but that is years down the road."

Fisker's top investors include Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, a veteran Silicon Valley venture-capital firm of which Gore is a partner. Employees of KPCB have donated more than $2.2 million to political campaigns, mostly for Democrats, including President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Congress established the $25 billion alternative vehicle loan program during former President George Bush’s administration in 2007 to provide incentives for automakers to invest in green technology. The DOE has awarded $8 billion to Ford and Nissan. The low-cost loans will carry a discounted interest rate of about 5 percent. Automakers have up to 25 years to repay the money.

Gore-Backed Car Firm Gets Large U.S. Loan

WASHINGTON -- A tiny car company backed by former Vice President Al Gore has just gotten a $529 million U.S. government loan to help build a hybrid sports car in Finland that will sell for about $89,000.

The award this week to California startup Fisker Automotive Inc. follows a $465 million government loan to Tesla Motors Inc., purveyors of a $109,000 British-built electric Roadster. Tesla, like Fisker, is a California startup focusing on high-end hybrids, with a number of celebrity endorsements that is backed by investors that have contributed to Democratic campaigns.

The awards to Fisker and Tesla have prompted concern from companies that have had their bids for loans rejected, and criticism from groups that question why vehicles aimed at the wealthiest customers are getting loans subsidized by taxpayers.

"This is not for average Americans," said Leslie Paige, a spokeswoman for Citizens Against Government Waste, an anti-tax group in Washington. "This is for people to put something in their driveway that is a conversation piece. It's status symbol thing."

DOE officials spent months working with Fisker on its application, touring its Irvine, Calif., and Pontiac, Mich., facilities and test-driving prototypes.

Matt Rogers, who oversees the department's loan programs as a senior adviser to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, said Fisker was awarded the loan after a "detailed technical review" that concluded the company could eventually deliver a highly fuel-efficient hybrid car to a mass audience. Fisker said most of its DOE loan will be used to finance U.S. production of a $40,000 family sedan that has yet to be designed.

"It's the ability to drive significant change in fuel economy across a large market segment" that swayed the department to approve the Fisker loan, Mr. Rogers said. "We got quite excited."

Henrik Fisker, who designed cars for BMW, Aston Martin and Tesla before starting his Fisker Automotive in 2007, said his goal is to build the first plug-in electric hybrids that won't sacrifice the luxury, performance and looks of traditional gas-powered luxury cars.

The Karma will target an exclusive audience -- Gore was one of the first to sign up for one. Mr. Fisker says all new technology starts out being expensive. He pointed to flat-screen televisions that once started at $25,000 but are now affordable to the mass market.

The four-door Karma, powered by a lithium-ion battery, will be able to run solely on electric power for 50 miles, and will achieve an average fuel economy of 100 mpg over the span of a year, the company says. Production is scheduled to start in December, with about 15,000 vehicles a year expected to hit the U.S. market starting next June.

Many of the 1,500 people who have made deposits on the Karma are former BMW and Mercedes owners who want an environmentally friendly car without sacrificing luxury, Mr. Fisker said.

He said he pitched the Karma to Mr. Gore at an event hosted by KPCB last year, and that the former vice president almost immediately submitted a down payment for the car.

Kalee Kreider, a spokeswoman for Mr. Gore, confirmed that the former vice president backs Fisker and purchased a Karma. "He believes that a global shift of the automobile fleet toward electric vehicles, accompanying a shift toward renewable-energy generation, represents an important part of a sensible strategy for solving the climate crisis," she said in a statement.

Fisker's top investors include Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, a veteran Silicon Valley venture-capital firm of which Gore is a partner. Employees of KPCB have donated more than $2.2 million to political campaigns, mostly for Democrats, including President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan group that tracks campaign contributions.

Officials at Kleiner Perkins didn't return requests for comment.

Asked whether Mr. Gore had any influence on Fisker's application, the DOE's Rogers said, "None at all."

"This is a very attractive, very across-party-lines kind of vehicle," Mr. Rogers said. "All of the detailed due diligence [was] done by independent review teams."

Other Fisker investors include Eco-Drive (Capital) Partners LLC, an investment consortium, and Qatar Investment Authority, a state-run investor based in Qatar.

Fisker's government loans will come from a $25 billion program established by Congress in 2007 to help auto makers invest in the technology to meet a new congressional mandate to improve fuel efficiency. In June, the DOE awarded the first $8 billion from the program to Ford Motor Co., Nissan Motor Co., and Tesla, which are all developing electric cars.

Some companies that have been turned down for loans from DOE say they did not get much feedback from the department about their applications. O. John Coletti, president of EcoMotors International of Troy, Mich., said his company applied for a $20 million loan from the agency last December, and last month got a one-page rejection letter from the loan program's director, Lachlan Seward. EcoMotors' lead investor is Vinod Khosla, himself a former Kleiner Perkins partner and a longtime campaign contributor to Republicans and Democrats alike.

"I don't have an issue with the winners … it's possible somebody has better ideas than us," Mr. Coletti said. At the same time, he said, "More feedback from DOE on a timely basis would be wonderful. When you're running a business you'd like to know whether you're going to be able to take advantage of this opportunity."

Mr. Coletti's company -- which makes diesel engines and is still waiting to hear from the Department on a separate loan application to help it build a manufacturing facility -- isn't without politically well-connected patrons, either. Its major investor is Vinod Khosla, himself a former Kleiner Perkins partner who has donated to campaigns.

Scott Redmond, CEO of XP Vehicles Inc., said he met with DOE officials twice in Washington after applying for a $40 million loan to develop a $15,000 to $25,000 hybrid, and that both times he was told his application looked good. Since receiving a rejection letter from DOE in August, Redmond said, he has been unable to get a full explanation as to why his request was turned down.

Mr. Rogers said he was not at liberty to discuss individual applications that had been turned down, but said the process has been handled fairly and objectively.

Consumers see few benefits from low base rate

Consumers have seen very little benefit from the Bank of England holding its base rate at a record low of 0.5% for six months, a consumer advice site pointed out this week.

Interest rates on savings accounts have dropped, while rates on mortgages, credit cards, and personal loans have continued to rise, said Moneyfacts.co.uk.

Research by the site found interest rates on easy access savers have dropped to an average of 0.77%, compared to 0.98% six months ago.

Cash ISA rates have followed a similar path, dropping from a 1.76% average to 1.46% in six months.

Meanwhile, the average rate on a two year fixed-rate mortgage has risen from 4.84% to 5.15%, on personal loans has risen from 11.9% to 12.1%, and on credit cards has increased from 17.7% to 18.1%.

“Base rate has been at an all time low for six months now, but it appears that only providers are feeling any real benefit,” said Moneyfacts financial expert Michelle Slade.

“Borrowers looking for a new mortgage deal have been hardest hit, as lenders continue to look to repair their balance sheets through increased margins.”

However, she added that HSBC’s recent launch of a 1.99% fixed rate mortgage shows that things could be improving.

“The launch of the sub-2% HSBC deal will hopefully spur other lenders on to reduce rates and bring much needed competition back to the market,” she said.

“Consumers will be hoping that as more time passes competition will become an increasing factor and that they will be offered more attractive deals across all finance areas.”

The problem with student loans

When Cedric Larson started his undergraduate program five years ago, he figured he would be able to cover the costs with scholarships, grants and part-time employment and avoid incurring any student debt. But, by the time he graduated this past spring with a degree in English and international studies, his undergraduate tuition at the UW-Madison had skyrocketed by 69%. He had to start borrowing. His current debt load: about $10,000.

"I learned to cut corners," he says. "I bought used books at book swaps, and I tried not to borrow any more than was necessary.

Larson, a Milwaukee native from a family without a lot of money, was active in United Council of Student Governments while he was a student. Now he is a paid United Council employee who continues to battle legislative budget cuts and rising tuition. He feels lucky to have the job because United Council gives him a tuition-remission benefit of $140 a month to help him pay back his loans.

As tuition rises at a rate several times higher than inflation, students are borrowing record amounts — by some accounts more than $20 billion a year. Student loans are the second-largest profit center for lenders, second only to credit card interest.

Lenders take very little risk on those loans. If a student defaults on a guaranteed student loan, the federal government makes the payments. If she defaults on a private loan, the lender imposes higher interest rates and penalties and garnishees wages. Even if a strapped former student declares bankruptcy, student loans won't be forgiven like other debts.

Loans to students are a cash cow for lenders. And, as an investigation by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo revealed about a year ago, it's a system ripe for abuse. There have been kickbacks, preferential treatment and uncontrolled interest rates as lenders competed for this astonishingly profitable business.

Congress responded to this scandal swiftly, by passing the College Cost Reduction Act. This capped subsidies to lenders and used the savings to make more grants and lower interest rates. Another proposal, the Student Loan Sunshine Act, would put stronger restrictions on lenders' practices.

It's a start, but it's not going to solve the problem, says Wisconsin Rep. Tom Petri (R-Fond du Lac).

"I believe that the College Cost Reduction Act and Student Loan Sunshine Act are important first steps towards reform," says Petri. "But taken alone, [they] are merely Band-Aids on the fundamentally and structurally flawed guaranteed loan program."

What's the fundamental flaw? The student loan system is set up to enrich lenders and their stockholders, not to serve students. And taxpayers are footing the bill.

According to Joe Nocera, business writer for The New York Times, the problems with the nation's student loan system originated when the government decided to lend to students through banks and other financial institutions rather than make the loans directly.

"It didn't have to be done that way," Nocera wrote in a July 29 article. "Congress could have decided that only the government could lend taxpayer dollars. But without a middleman, the loans would be listed as outstanding on the government's books, thus increasing the federal deficit. It was far more politically attractive to use banks to make the loans, and then guarantee them with the taxpayers' money."

The conservative notion that government should operate on a business model further muddied the waters.

"We have a lot of representatives who just assume that anything that comes from a government program is bad, and anything that comes from private enterprise is good," says Petri aide Tom Culligan. This is true "even when we can show that the government program is much more efficient."

This past summer, Petri tried to get Congress to pass a more comprehensive reform, which he believes would further drive down costs to taxpayers and allow more Pell Grants. The House Education and Labor Committee approved his proposal, but the conference committee removed it.

Petri and others argue that making government loans directly to students, without a middleman, would save billions of dollars. The model already exists in the Direct Student Loan program, but students must puzzle their way through a Chinese menu of financial aid options: direct loans, Stafford loans, alternative (private) loans, loans to parents, and that perennial favorite, credit card debt.

"I will continue to fight for comprehensive reform," says Petri, "to ensure that we put an end to these abuses that have plagued the program for decades at great expense to students and taxpayers."

Democratic presidential contender John Edwards has jumped on the student loan reform bandwagon. He's calling for a system that "takes banks — which are just an expensive middleman — out of the process, and focus on making sure young people aren't crushed by debt by the time they leave college."

The Cuomo Report, with its revelations about preferred lender lists and financial rewards offered to colleges and universities that put lenders on their lists, sounded an alarm in Wisconsin. Both the state university and technical college systems investigated practices in their own financial aid offices and reported back to the Assembly education committee in late September.

That hearing revealed that Wisconsin students have been spared some of the more egregious abuses uncovered in New York state, according to Mike Mikalsen, research assistant to Rep. Steve Nass (R-Whitewater). Nass serves on the Assembly Committee on Education and was a leader in bringing the issue to a hearing.

"We are concerned that some campuses use preferred lender lists and that the [UW] Board of Regents policy leaves the decision about whether or not to use such lists up to individual campuses," Mikalsen says. Technical colleges have stopped using preferred lender lists.

UW officials told the committee that some UW financial aid officers received expenses for attending conferences from lenders, but there was no evidence of major financial incentives or rewards for recommending particular lending institutions to students.

"A lot was made of the information that a financial aid officer in Milwaukee sat on the board of one of the lending institutions and that another had some travel expenses paid," says Dave Giroux, spokesman for the UW System.

He sees this as small potatoes.

"These were legitimate business activities, and these people were not benefiting personally," says Giroux. "Our investigation did not find any of the kinds of egregious [activities] that were uncovered in New York."

Giroux says UW System policy now requires that campuses publish a list of criteria for putting lenders on a "preferred" list. For example, they may list only lenders that do not charge a loan-origination fee.

UW-Madison doesn't use a preferred lender list, according to Susan Fischer, the university's director of student financial services. She says her office deals with about 280 individual lenders, although UW Credit Union loans account for 50% to 60% of lending to students at Madison.

"It's not very efficient," she adds. "I can understand why some smaller campuses might try to simplify their operations by limiting the number of lenders they have to deal with."

Currently, the UW Credit Union has about $160 million in student loans. That's roughly 20% of the its total loan portfolio.

Mike Long, vice president of lending, says the Credit Union does not sell these loans to big lenders like Sally Mae, but services them through the Great Lakes Higher Education Corporation: "We have a strong commitment to service to our members."

The Credit Union has been on "preferred lender lists," at some institutions, according to Long, but "we have never participated in the kind of revenue sharing or other activities that were revealed in New York."

Long says the College Cost Reduction Act will probably affect the Credit Union's bottom line, and the loss of subsidies for loans in default might mean that some of the benefits offered to student borrowers will be reduced. Currently, the Credit Union pays the loan-origination fee for borrowers and offers interest rate reductions to those who make their payments on time every month.

However, the Credit Union has relatively few loans in default. The default rate for UW-Madison students is about 1%; it's 2.5% statewide. That default rate is one of the lowest in the nation.

In 2005-2006, UW-Madison undergraduates with student loans (47% of all graduates) finished college with an average debt of $20,282, Fischer says. Graduate and professional school graduates who took out loans owed much more. Law school graduates who borrowed (228 of 286) owed an average of $64,535. New medical doctors with loans (124 of 134) owed an average of $130,938.

"For most students, the loan repayments will be manageable," Fischer says. But she worries about students who borrow much more than they need to finance a lifestyle that is luxurious by student standards. After they exhaust the funds provided by federal grants and loans, they borrow on the private market, where interest rates can increase dramatically, leaving students with much higher payments than they expected.

"The private, alternative loans are where most of the problems are," she contends.

The College Cost Reduction Act will cut subsidies to lenders by $19 billion, and lower interest rates on new federally backed loans. The intent is to provide more money as outright grants and help students avoid borrowing so much in alternative (non-government-sponsored) loans. The legislation provides for the repayment of some loans to students who go into jobs in "areas of national need," and rewards colleges for lowering costs to students.

These changes will help, but the interest rate reductions are not as dramatic as they appear at first look.

The 3.4% interest rate cap looks like half of the current rate of 6.8%, but the decreases will be phased in over four years. That means the combined interest rate will depend on when the student took out loans and for how much. And the cap expires after the fifth year. Former students now repaying existing loans are not affected.

On the upside, a former student making less than $18,000 does not have to make any payments until his or her income increases, and payments can never be more than 15% of adjusted gross income.

It's still too much, contends Ben Manski, a founder of the Madison-based Liberty Tree Foundation, a progressive nonprofit organization that seeks to promote a "democratic revolution" in all segments of American society.

Manski argues that the high cost of a college education is fundamentally undemocratic. His solution to the student loan mess is a system that provides education at public colleges and universities for free.

"An entire generation of Americans," he says, "are facing debt coming out of college that their parents could not even imagine."

For the 2007-08 school year, in-state tuition at the UW-Madison is $7,010. According to the campus Registrar's Office, other expenses — like books, room and board and transportation — bring the cost for the year to $18,010. (For nonresidents, tuition alone is $21,010.)

Today's student's parents paid a fraction of that. If they attended during the 1972-73 school year, their tuition was $470.

In addition, the Legislature has steadily nibbled away at the percentage of state funding provided to the university system. State support for the cost of undergraduate instruction in the UW System has dropped from 65.5% to 45% over the past 10 years.

Manski, who says his tuition increased by 56% during his three years in the UW Law School, graduated in 2005 with $70,000 in student loan debt. Many young lawyers don't worry too much about making their loan payments. But Manski, who chose to work as a public interest lawyer, only makes about $20 an hour. His loan payments eat up a big chunk of his monthly income.

"Most months, I figure it's between one-fourth and one-sixth of what I earn," he says.

Last summer's loan scandal is a symptom of a deeper crisis in higher education, he contends. The new legislation may help, but millions of former students with big debts won't be affected.

"The underlying problem is the cost of college in the first place," he says. "The high cost of a college education is undemocratic because it shuts out many people entirely."

Manski is thinking a lot these days about how to get out from under his own student debt. Ironically, he's considering taking on even more debt to get an advanced degree in law, to help him land a law school teaching position. He recently got married, he says, and he needs to make more money to pay off his loans.