Archive for the ‘Finance’ Category

North Dakota Leads the Way?

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Bank of North Dakota (BND), the only 100 percent state-run bank in the U.S., plows about half of its profits into the state budget and takes cues from the governor, who acts as chairman. The bank spins tax revenues into loans for in-state farmers, students and small-business owners. During the recession, BND has propped up more than 100 privately held community banks and has kept credit flowing to small, local businesses. Washington State has recently proposed its own version, and Hawaii has commissioned a report on doing the same. (Newsweek, 5/3/10)

North Dakota has the lowest unemployment rate in the country and one of the largest budget surpluses. In this economic and political environment, could this state-run bank model spread? Will this unique creation be seen as too “socialist” for the mainstream? What would be the impact on national, regional and community banks?

Eric Zavolinsky

Allegations Everywhere

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Last Wednesday, Russian officials raided Hewlett-Packard’s (HP) Moscow office, as part of charges that HP paid a bribe of about $10.9 million to the Russian office of the prosecutor general to ensure a $47.8 million contract. Last Friday, U.S. Federal prosecutors indicted the former president of U.S. private security firm Blackwater (now called Xe) and four other employees, charging them with bribing Jordanian officials to win a lucrative contract there. Also on Friday, the SEC presented civil fraud charges against U.S. bank Goldman Sachs, accusing the firm of defrauding investors. (Fast Company, 4/15/10; BBC, 4/16/10)

The instances are unrelated, but three allegations in one week suggest that both national and international authorities are cracking down on what they believe to be illegal corporate activity and fraud. Why now, and who’s next?

Eric Zavolinsky

Micro-lending in the USA

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Since 1976 Grameen Bank has provided micro-loans to low-income individuals – mostly women – in its home country of Bangladesh, and the repayment rate for those loans has been substantially higher than traditional loans in that country. Grameen Bank and its founder, Muhammad Yunus, split the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize. Now the institution is offering such loans in the United States, with two branches in New York, one in Omaha and others planned for Washington, D.C. and San Francisco. (US Banker, 4/10)

Grameen America focuses only on borrowers who are below the poverty line, and commercial banks that provide funds to the microlender are granted credits under the Community Reinvestment Act. How curious that a Third World financial institution is finding an attractive market in the U.S.

Ken Hey