'us'에 해당되는 글 47건

  1. 2008.10.12 US to buy stake in banks; first since Depression by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.10.10 America's 200 Best Small Companies by CEOinIRVINE
  3. 2008.10.07 America's Most Expensive Zip Codes by CEOinIRVINE
  4. 2008.10.03 Study: Number of New Illegal Immigrants Has Fallen Sharply by CEOinIRVINE
  5. 2008.09.26 Talks Falter on Bailout Deal by CEOinIRVINE
  6. 2008.09.17 US Embassy was attacked!!! by CEOinIRVINE
  7. 2008.09.17 Bright Ideas [Obama] by CEOinIRVINE
WASHINGTON -

The government will buy an ownership stake in a broad array of American banks for the first time since the Great Depression, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said late Friday, announcing the historic step after stock markets jolted still lower around the world despite all efforts to slow the selling stampede.

Separately, the U.S. and the globe's other industrial powers pledged to take "decisive action and use all available tools" to prevent a worldwide economic catastrophe.

"This is a period like none of us has ever seen before," declared Paulson at a rare Friday night news conference. He said the government program to purchase stock in private U.S. financial firms will be open to a broad array of institutions, including banks, in an effort to help them raise desperately needed money.

The administration received the authority to take such direct action in the $700 billion economic rescue bill that Congress passed and President Bush signed last week.

Earlier Friday, stock prices hurtled downward in the United States, Europe and Asia, even as President Bush tried to reassure Americans and the world that the U.S. and other governments were aggressively addressing what has become a near panic.

A sign of how bad things have gotten: A drop of 128 points in the Dow Jones industrials was greeted with sighs of relief after the index had plummeted much further on previous days. The week ended as the Dow's worst ever, with the index down an incredible 40.3 percent since its record close almost exactly one year earlier, on Oct. 9. 2007.

Investors suffered a paper loss of $2.4 trillion for the week, as measured by the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 index, and for the past year the losses have totaled $8.4 trillion.

It was even worse overseas on Friday. Britain's FTSE index ended below the 4,000 level for the first time in five years; Germany's DAX fell 7 percent and France's CAC-40 finished down 7.7 percent. Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 index fell 9.6 percent, also hitting a five-year low. For the week, the Nikkei lost nearly a quarter of its value. Russia's market never even opened.

Paulson announced the administration's new effort to prop up banks at the conclusion of discussions among finance officials of the Group of Seven major industrialized countries. That group endorsed the outlines of a sweeping program to combat the worst global credit crisis in decades.

Earlier this week, Britain had moved to pour cash into its troubled banks in exchange for stakes in them - a partial nationalization.

Paulson said the U.S. program would be designed to complement banks' own efforts to raise fresh capital from private sources. The government's stock purchases will be of nonvoting shares so it will not have power to run the companies.

The purchase of stakes in companies would be in addition to the main thrust of the $700 billion rescue effort, which is to buy bad mortgages and other distressed assets from financial institutions. The aim is to unthaw frozen credit, get banks to resume more normal lending operations and stave off severe problems for businesses and everyday Americans alike.

It would mark the first time the government has taken equity ownership in banks in this manner since a similar program was employed during the Depression.

In 1989, the government created the Resolution Trust Corp. to deal with the aftermath of the savings and loan crisis. It disposed of the assets of failed savings and loans.

Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke met with their counterparts from the world's six other richest countries late in the day as the rout of financial markets sped ahead despite earlier dramatic rescue efforts in the U.S. and abroad.

In a statement at the end of that meeting, the G7 officials vowed to protect major banks and to prevent their failure. They also committed to working to get credit flowing more freely again, to support the efforts of banks to raise money from both public and private sources, to bolster deposit insurance and to revive the battered mortgage financing market.

They did not provide specifics beyond that five-point framework.

At the White House earlier in the day, Bush said, "We're in this together and we'll come through this together." He added, "Anxiety can feed anxiety, and that can make it hard to see all that's being done to solve the problem."

He made it clear the United States must work with other countries to battle the worst financial crisis that has jolted the world economy in more than a half-century.

"We've seen that problems in the financial system are not isolated to the United States," he said. "So we're working closely with partners around the world to ensure that our actions are coordinated and effective."

The Dow dropped a little over 100 points while he was speaking.

Fear has tightened its grip on investors worldwide even as the United States and other countries have taken a series of radical actions including an unprecedented, coordinated interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve and other major central banks.

Besides the United States, the other members of the G7 meeting in Washington are Japan, Germany, Britain, France, Italy and Canada. Finance officials also planned to meet with Bush Saturday at the White House.

"We are in a development where the downward spiral is picking up speed," said Germany's Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck, who wanted to see an orchestrated response among the G7.

So did French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, who said a "coordinated, synchronized and rightly timed approach" was needed.

An even larger group of nations - called the G20 - will meet with Paulson on Saturday evening. How the world's finance officials and central bank presidents can better contain the spreading financial crisis also will dominate discussions at the weekend meetings of the 185-nation International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in Washington.

The British, who recently announced a plan to guarantee billions of dollar worth of debt held by major banks, have been pitching that idea to the rest of the G7 members.

The idea behind all these ideas - as well as bold steps previously announced in recent weeks - is to get credit flowing more freely again.

In the United States, hard-pressed banks and investment firms are drawing emergency loans from the Federal Reserve because they can't get money elsewhere. Skittish investors have cut them off, moving their money into safer Treasury securities. Financial institutions are hoarding whatever cash they have, rather than lending it to each other or customers.

The lending lockup - which is making it harder and more expensive for businesses and ordinary people to borrow money - is threatening to push the United States and the world economy as a whole into a deep and painful recession.

In Europe, governments have moved to protect nervous bank depositors. Germany pledged to guarantee all private bank savings and CDs in the country, and Iceland and Denmark followed suit. Ireland went even further by also guaranteeing Irish banks' debts. The United States will temporarily boost deposit insurance from $100,000 to $250,000 in cases where its banks or savings and loans fail.

The Fed, meanwhile, has repeatedly tapped its Depression-era authority to be a lender of last resort, not only to financial institutions but also to other types of companies. Earlier this week, the Fed said it would buy massive amounts of companies' debts, in another unprecedented effort to break through the credit clog.

Associated Press writers Harry Dunphy, Desmond Butler, Martin Crutsinger and Deb Reichmann contributed to this report.

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

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Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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Conventional wisdom would have investors flee small-cap stocks when the economy takes a tumble. Big companies are safer bets, the thinking goes.

Maybe not right now. With meltdowns at AIG (nyse: AIG - news - people ), Lehman Brothers (nyse: LEH - news - people ) and Wachovia (nyse: WB - news - people ), the S&P 500 dropped 28% over the past 12 months while gross domestic product growth slowed to a crawl. The Russell 2000, made up of smaller fish, is down 18% over the same period.

With that in mind, we identified the strongest small public outfits in a very tough time for our list of the 200 Best Small Companies in America. To qualify, companies must have sales between $5 million and $750 million and a stock price of $5 as of Sept. 29. The ranking is based on return on equity, sales growth and profit growth over the past 12 months and also over five years. We also compare a company's stock performance with that of its industry peers. The shares of the companies on our 2007 list fell 15% on average over the past year, slightly outperforming the Russell 2000.

We axed companies with fishy accounting or serious legal entanglements. One of those is ArthroCare (nasdaq: ARTC - news - people ), a company in Austin, Texas, that makes minimally invasive surgical products. The company announced it was restating results from 2006, 2007 and the first quarter of this year. There's a shareholder lawsuit over that and the timing of $12 million in stock sales by ArthroCare insiders.

Eighty-three of last year's members didn't make the cut this year. Nineteen of those companies grew too large, among them Hansen Natural (nasdaq: HANS - news - people ), the maker of Monster Energy drinks (sales in the last 12 months: $988 million). Hansen was our top-ranked company in 2007.

Eight more of last year's companies fell off the list after being acquired, including software maker Ansoft (nasdaq: ANST - news - people ) and work-site child-care provider Bright Horizons Family Solutions (nasdaq: BFAM - news - people ).

The spike in energy prices has added more than a few oil and gas companies to the list, including this year's top company, GeoResources (nasdaq: GEOI - news - people ). Headquartered in Houston, Texas, it merged last year with Southern Oil & Gas and bought a subsidiary of Chandler Energy that boosted oil reserves sixfold and natural gas reserves sevenfold. Analysts expect sales to hit $100 million in 2008, up from $40 million last year.

We welcomed a total of 37 companies this year that have never appeared on previous lists of our best small companies. Among the newcomers is Omega Protein (nyse: OME - news - people ), ranked No. 154. The company has been around for more than 100 years, mostly selling fish meal that finds it way into animal feed. More recently the company has caught fire thanks to the supposedly magical health benefits of Omega-3 fish oil--of which Omega Protein is the country's largest producer. Sales were up 27% in the second quarter and are expected to hit $190 million this year. (For more newcomers, click here).

Our list includes many traditional small technology companies, like Pros Holdings (nyse: PRO - news - people ), ranked No. 30, which develops pricing analytics software. Yet there are also many other companies utilizing technology affecting our everyday lives. Take Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (nasdaq: GMCR - news - people ). Its Keurig Single-Cup Brewer has revolutionized coffee making for those not interested in making a whole pot. The single-cup market rose 59% last year to $176 million, according to research firm NPD. Single-cup penetration is still only 5% of U.S. households, leaving lots of room for growth. (For more, see "Everyday Tech Stars.")


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Most Expensive Zip Codes

It's been a troubling year for Florida's homeowners. Many have seen their property values plummet--and there is no bottom in sight.

Prices dropped by 20% in Miami, 18% in Tampa and 17% in Orlando over the past year, according to the National Association of Realtors, and the Sunshine State ranks at the top of the national foreclosure heap, along with Michigan and California. The troubling news on the horizon: a new round of Option ARM loans next year will reset.

But for residents of Fisher Island, Fla.,--a small community (pop. 475) of ritzy condos and sprawling homes and famous for its Vanderbilt mansion as well as its golf, tennis and yachting clubs--it's been a pretty good year. Prices on the island, which sits in the Miami Beach archipelago, rose by $525,000 over the last year, making 33109 the most expensive ZIP code in America with a median home sale of $3.85 million.


It edges out even smaller Alpine, N.J., (07620), which tied for the top spot in last year's list. Prices in Alpine increased by $340,000 last year.


They're not alone. Most of the ZIP codes on our list saw strong price appreciation. Location is behind some climbs. There just aren't that many beach-front lots in Santa Monica, Calif., (90402) or Nantucket, Mass., (02554), and as long as there's money in tech, the Los Altos (94024) and Los Gatos (95030) hills above Silicon Valley are going to command top dollar. In a year when most conventional wisdom about real estate has been proved wrong, the well-worn notion that the luxury sector is resistant to national slowing has held.



It's been a troubling year for Florida's homeowners. Many have seen their property values plummet--and there is no bottom in sight.

Prices dropped by 20% in Miami, 18% in Tampa and 17% in Orlando over the past year, according to the National Association of Realtors, and the Sunshine State ranks at the top of the national foreclosure heap, along with Michigan and California. The troubling news on the horizon: a new round of Option ARM loans next year will reset.

But for residents of Fisher Island, Fla.,--a small community (pop. 475) of ritzy condos and sprawling homes and famous for its Vanderbilt mansion as well as its golf, tennis and yachting clubs--it's been a pretty good year. Prices on the island, which sits in the Miami Beach archipelago, rose by $525,000 over the last year, making 33109 the most expensive ZIP code in America with a median home sale of $3.85 million.

In Depth: America's 100 Most Expensive ZIP Codes

It edges out even smaller Alpine, N.J., (07620), which tied for the top spot in last year's list. Prices in Alpine increased by $340,000 last year.

Related Stories

America's Most Expensive Homes

Inside The World's First Billion-Dollar Home

They're not alone. Most of the ZIP codes on our list saw strong price appreciation. Location is behind some climbs. There just aren't that many beach-front lots in Santa Monica, Calif., (90402) or Nantucket, Mass., (02554), and as long as there's money in tech, the Los Altos (94024) and Los Gatos (95030) hills above Silicon Valley are going to command top dollar. In a year when most conventional wisdom about real estate has been proved wrong, the well-worn notion that the luxury sector is resistant to national slowing has held.

Behind the Numbers
California owns our list, posting half of the top 500 ZIPs. There are the perennial listings like Ross, Calif., (94957) and Atherton, Calif., (94027) and the famous Beverly Hills neighborhoods of 90210, 90212 and 90211 and some cities that have been hammered by home price declines. In Rancho Santa Fe (92067), a well-heeled suburb of San Diego, home prices fell by $225,000 last year, a loss that's bigger than the average home value in America. In sum, 40% of the California ZIP codes on our list saw price declines, compared to 30% for the non-California ZIPs.

How a prolonged decline in the finance sector will affect next year's list is unknown, but there's already been slowing in prime areas around New York that depend on Wall Street cash. Amagansett (11930), on Long Island, home to mansions, sailboats and big cars, fell $375,000 this year to $1.675 million. Great Neck, N.Y., (11024)--the model for F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby--on the landed North Shore, dropped $310,000 last year to $1.03 million.

ZIP Codes By Rank

100-76
75-51
50-26
25-1

The Midwest's characteristic steadiness kept many of its prime neighborhoods from fading. Lake Forest Ill., (60045) appreciated by $88,750, while Hinsdale, Ill., jumped $188,500. Of course, the cities have fairly small populations at 20,000 and 17,000, respectively, something that helped performance on this year's list as bigger ZIP codes and cities were prone to more variation.

Size plays an important role. The ZIPs on our list are not pegged to neighborhoods or populations like Congressional districts, but to a series of logistical decisions on how to distribute mail. They are the descendants of the 1943 Postal Service's Zone Improvement Plan to deliver mail more efficiently. As a result, dense cities under-perform on our list.

While New Yorkers wouldn't conflate the Upper East Side with Yorkville or parts of SoHo with TriBeCa, the Postal Service makes no distinction in either case. Consider New York Giants' owner Jonathan Tisch, who paid a record $48 million for an East 67th Street co-op in the 10065 ZIP. It's impossible to find anything in that neighborhood, near Central Park, for less than a few million dollars, yet the Upper East Side doesn't figure very well on our list.

How are prices holding up in your area? Weigh in. Post your thoughts in the Reader Comment section below.

That's because there are also plenty of studio apartments near the 59th Street Bridge or on Second Avenue that sell for $350,000 or $450,000 in 10065. Since these areas are measured on median price, a large number of cheap sales drive down the ZIP code's ranking.

Unlike those Manhattan neighborhoods, which posted price gains for the year, many pricey neighborhoods didn't stay above the national fray. Rich areas like La Jolla, Calif., (92037) seem to have everything going for them: beaches, sunshine, beautiful homes and high-end shops, but there are scads of foreclosures lurking, as some homeowners took on more debt than they could handle.

With 158 foreclosures in La Jolla and 64 in Malibu, not to mention 57 in the prime New York City suburb of Scarsdale, you might have the opportunity to join our rich property fraternity quite soon.

And at a significant discount.


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Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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The number of illegal immigrants entering the United States each year has dropped substantially since the first half of this decade, according to a study released today by the Pew Hispanic Center. A sluggish economy and stepped up enforcement of immigration laws could be behind the decline.

The study found that the number of illegal immigrants entering the United States each year has dropped from an average of 800,000 per year between 2000 and 2004 to 500,000 per year between 2005 and 2008.

By contrast, the inflow of immigrants who are legal permanent residents has remained relatively steady at about 650,000 per year, exceeding the number of illegal immigrant arrivals for the first time in a decade.

Despite the slowing growth rate of the illegal immigrant population, the study's authors estimated that its size has increased by 40 percent over the past decade, from an estimated 8.4 million in 2000 to an 11.9 million in March. Illegal immigrants now make up about 4 percent of the U.S. population and about 30 percent of the nation's foreign-born population. About four out of five illegal immigrants come from Latin American countries, mainly Mexico, and more than four out of 10, or 5.3 million, arrived since the start of the decade.

The U.S. Census Bureau does not ask people their immigration status. So the authors of the Pew report estimated the number of illegal immigrants by finding the difference between the number of foreigners who can be accounted for through such records as visas, permanent residency permits and naturalizations and the total number tallied by the census.

The study's authors cautioned that their estimates could not explain the drop in the number of illegal immigrants entering the country. However, they pointed to a number of possible causes. For instance, a slowdown in U.S. economic growth has had a disproportionate impact on foreign-born Latinos workers at the same time that economic growth in Mexico and other Latin American nations has been stable. The heightened focus on enforcement of immigration law has also generated concern among many Hispanics, according to another recent study by the Pew Hispanic Center, a nonpartisan research organization based in Washington.


Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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In the Cabinet Room, President Bush meets to discuss the bailout with, from left, Sen. John McCain, Rep. John Boehner, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, Sen. Harry Reid, Sen. Mitch McConnell and Sen. Barack Obama.
In the Cabinet Room, President Bush meets to discuss the bailout with, from left, Sen. John McCain, Rep. John Boehner, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, Sen. Harry Reid, Sen. Mitch McConnell and Sen. Barack Obama.

  Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, September 26, 2008; Page A01

A renegade bloc of Republicans moved to reshape a massive bailout of the U.S. financial system yesterday, surprising and angering Bush administration and congressional leaders who hours earlier announced agreement on the "fundamentals" of a deal.


At a meeting at the White House that included President Bush, top lawmakers and both presidential candidates, House Minority Leader John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) floated a new plan for addressing the crisis that has hobbled global markets.

Democrats accused Boehner of acting on behalf of GOP presidential candidate Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) in trying to disrupt a developing consensus. The new proposal also displeased White House officials, including Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr., who chased after Democrats leaving the meeting and -- half-jokingly -- dropped to one knee and pleaded with them not to "blow up" the $700 billion deal, according to people present at the meeting.

Before the meeting broke up, President Bush had issued a stark warning about the impact on the nation's economy if the measure did not pass. "If money isn't loosened up, this sucker could go down," Bush said, according to one person in the room.

Under the alternative Republican plan, the government would set up an expanded insurance system, financed by the banks, that would rescue individual home mortgages. The government would not have to buy up the toxic mortgage-backed assets that are weighing down financial institutions.

Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke had already considered and discarded a similar idea, White House spokesman Tony Fratto said. "I'm not convinced it does what needs to be done for the banking system, and neither is Secretary Paulson or Fed Chairman Bernanke," he said.



Last night, after the White House meeting, Paulson shuttled back to the Capitol for a nearly two-hour meeting with Democrats and Senate Republicans, and the sides began drafting legislation based on the general agreement struck earlier in the day. That effort will continue this morning.

Democrats say they would not approve the legislation without a significant number of Republican votes to share in any political fallout from the controversial proposal, which comes just weeks before the November election. "We are working to try to get this bill ready, but if House Republicans continue to reject the president's approach, then there's no bill," said Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), an architect of the bailout legislation. "We told Paulson the whole thing is at risk if the president can't get his own party to participate."

"We've not seen any way to getting majority [Republican] support," said Rep. Eric Cantor (Va.), a leading Republican vote counter and co-author of the alternative House GOP plan, which would also cut taxes on dividends and capital gains.

The apparent breakdown yesterday followed a lunchtime declaration by Republicans and Democrats in the Senate banking and the House Financial Services committees that they had come to a general accord on many outstanding issues. During a nearly three-hour meeting, lawmakers reached an "agreement on principles."

Under that agreement, the package would be broken into three parts. Paulson would receive $250 billion immediately and $100 billion more upon certification that the funds are necessary. The final $350 billion could be dispersed without additional congressional approval, but Congress would be given 30 days to object.

The agreement calls for strong oversight of the bailout program, including an independent inspector general and regular audits by the Government Accountability Office. It also would require the Treasury to set standards to ban "inappropriate or excessive" compensation for executives at participating firms and establish stronger protections for taxpayers, including a requirement that they receive equity in all participating companies. The latter provision ensures that the Treasury could recover the cash it invests in bad assets if the firms return to financial health.




Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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The entrance to the U.S. Embassy compound in San'a Yemen can be seen in this image from APTN television file footage taken April 3, 2002. Explosions and heavy gunfire were heard Wednesday morning Sept. 17, 2008 near the U.S. Embassy in the Yemeni capital and police swiftly cordoned off the area, according to a government security official. U.S. Embassy spokesman Ryan Gliha tells The Associated Press by telephone that there was a second explosion Wednesday that followed the initial one. He did not have figures for casualties or know their nationalities. (AP Photo/APTN)
The entrance to the U.S. Embassy compound in San'a Yemen can be seen in this image from APTN television file footage taken April 3, 2002. Explosions and heavy gunfire were heard Wednesday morning Sept. 17, 2008 near the U.S. Embassy in the Yemeni capital and police swiftly cordoned off the area, according to a government security official. U.S. Embassy spokesman Ryan Gliha tells The Associated Press by telephone that there was a second explosion Wednesday that followed the initial one. He did not have figures for casualties or know their nationalities. (AP Photo/APTN) (AP)

SANA, Yemen, Sept. 17 -- Attackers exploded a vehicle bomb outside the main gate of the U.S. Embassy in Yemen on Wednesday in what appeared to be a well-coordinated assault that triggered more explosions and heavy gunfire around the compound.

Yemen's official Saba news agency said 16 people died in the incident, including six Yemeni soldiers, four civilians and six attackers. One of the civilians was an Indian woman at the embassy on business.

There were no immediate reports of American casualties. The embassy is located in the center of Sana, Yemen's capital, but the building is set far back from an outer security wall.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

Yemen is the ancestral home of Osama bin Laden. Al Qaeda has maintained a steady presence here, especially as fighters from the militant group return from Iraq.

The first explosion, at 9:15 a.m., resounded for miles and sent a plume of black smoke over the city.

"It shook everything in my home," said Saddam Hussein, a Yemen man living about 200 yards from the embassy. "One big explosion, then smaller explosions, and gunfire."

The vehicle bomb exploded at the main gate, said embassy spokesman Ryan Gliha. There did not appear to be any major damage to the embassy building, Gliha said.

U.S. officials still were trying to determine the nature of several explosions that followed the vehicle bomb, Gliha said. Hussein and other nearby residents said the secondary blasts sounded much smaller, like grenades.

The intermittent explosions and heavy gunfire continued for about 10 minutes after the first blast, as scores of Yemeni forces rushed to the scene.

A half-hour after the blast, intermittent gunfire still crackled. Helicopters circled the embassy. Ambulances painted in green camouflage carried injured to the city's military hospital.

The Yemen embassy has been the target of numerous attacks since 2002. In the most recent assault, three mortar rounds hit a nearby school for girls in March, killing a security guard and injuring about 20 girls and others. Other attacks include one in 2006, when a man armed with an automatic weapon opened fire outside the embassy, saying he wanted to kill Americans. Security forces shot him and captured him, without other injuries.

Yemen was also the scene in 2000 of the deadly suicide attack against the USS Cole.

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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Bright Ideas [Obama]

Politics 2008. 9. 17. 00:23

John McCain and Barack Obama
Both McCain and Obama addressed the burgeoning economic crisis on the Trail yesterday. They'll be returning to that theme for the next 50 days. (Getty Images)

The crisis that has seized Wall Street over the last few days caught the campaigns of both Barack Obama and John McCain flat-footed.

Neither man, as we wrote yesterday, has a demonstrated expertise on the issue and national polling shows that voters aren't sure whether Obama or McCain would do a better job in managing the economy as president.

So, with both campaigns scrambling to win the issue over the next few days, The Fix solicited the opinions of a handful of Republican and Democratic strategists, asking them what specifically they would advise their party's candidate to do in the short term to stake their claim to this critical issue.

We collected and sorted the suggestions -- which ranged from the zany to the downright ingenious. We picked the best five for each candidate and listed them below; some contradict one another but all seem to have solid strategic thinking behind them. The names behind the suggestions have been withheld in order to let the operatives speak their minds without being seen as telling their party's candidates (and his inner circle) what to do or not do.

Agree or disagree? The comments section awaits.

OBAMA

1. Two-Day Ohio Tour: Obama should spend two full days traveling the Buckeye State with stops in cities ranging from the big (Cleveland) to the medium (Dayton) to the small (Zanesville). The suggested theme? "McCain's strong fundamentals" playing off of the Arizona senator's much-disputed statement Monday that the fundamentals of the economy are strong. Ohio was the central battleground of the 2004 election and the economic stresses have hammered the state in the intervening four years. Show Ohioans Obama isn't just a gifted speaker; he understand better than McCain the problems faced by average middle class families.

2. Spend a Night At Home: With home foreclosures still a huge problem and many middle class families worried about being able to make their monthly mortgage payments, Obama should spend a night at home with a family facing potential foreclosure -- either in Nevada or Michigan, two of the battlegroundiest (is that a word) states in the country. This idea is along the lines of the Service Employees International Union's "Walk a Day in their Shoes" campaign during the Democratic primaries but has the potential to produce great television images that ooze "empathy."

3. A Series of Speeches: Obama's greatest strength is his oratorical abilities. Use them. Follow the blueprint used to much success by George W. Bush in 2004 when he gave a series of speeches explaining and contextualizing the war in Iraq and the fight against terrorism. Use that framework and sub in the economy; in one speech tackle the pinch the economic crisis is putting on an average middle class family, in another lay out how small business are being impacted, in a third show -- specifically -- how an Obama Administration would handle the economic problems different than has the current president. "Speeches are his wheelhouse and he needs to get back into his comfort zone," said Phil Singer, a former adviser to Hillary Rodham Clinton's presidential campaign. "He's been trying to be someone else which has been cramping his style on the stump."

4. Town Hall Tryout: Obama has largely avoided the sort of town halls that McCain has made his own during this campaign. Pick a series of white working class neighborhoods and set up a series of economic-themed town halls over multiple days. Do more listening than talking. Obama, as The Fix himself has witnessed during a presidential dialogue sponsored by MTV and MySpace in Iowa, tends to shy away a bit from the "I feel your pain" politics of Bill Clinton. Suck it up and wade into the crowd. Console people who are struggling, hug folks having hard times. Be, at least for a few days, the consoler in chief.

5.Sitdown with Lehman Brothers Staff: Don't meet with the bigwigs and suits of the failed investment bank. Convene a roundtable with some of the support staff (administrative assistants etc.) who are impacted by the company veering into bankruptcy. Almost no one feels bad for the executives when these massive companies go through crises, knowing that these well-paid upper management types will survive without a hitch. But, there are also large numbers of employees at Lehman and other companies who are living paycheck to paycheck and will have their lives fundamentally altered by the bankruptcy. Put faces to these statistics and let them speak their minds about what's wrong and how to fix it.

MCCAIN

1. Seek Out Regional Banks: The big banks of the United States are struggling badly. Highlight the idea that great ideas can come from the states by meeting one on one with a as many successful managers of regional banks as the McCain can find. (A side benefit of this idea: it reminds voters that McCain has a governor not a senator as his running mate.) Frame the meetings as a chance for McCain to hear what's wrong with Washington -- and New York City -- from people out in the country. Embrace the cultural divide many people perceive between Washington/New York and the rest of the country.

2. Listening Tour of Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania: Like her or hate her, it's hard to argue that Clinton's 2000 listening tour throughout Upstate New York was anything less than a brilliant political tactic. It put her in front of hundreds of voters, allowing her to show an empathetic side and debunk the idea that she had horns and a tail. McCain, hamstrung somewhat by his past comments about the economy, could do the same with a multi-day, multi-state listening tour focused on the Rust Belt where the problems with the economy have cut the deepest.

3. Give a Speech, Name a Treasury Secretary: Pick a hotbed of deep economic thinking -- one Republican operative suggested the University of Chicago -- and lay out the argument for how to reform the economy in a way that is consistent with the principles of the free market. In that speech, name the man (or woman) that would be his pick for treasury secretary while also offering a vote of confidence for Henry Paulson and insisting that he would be a valued adviser (along with other economic big-brains including some Democrats) in a McCain Administration.

4. Palin (Speaking) Power: Palin is a a huge draw these days on the campaign trail. Use that popularity and her populist appeal to speak to middle and lower middle class voters in a swing state somewhere in the Midwest. One Republican strategist suggested a speech by Palin on tax cuts -- strong territory for the GOP -- in Wisconsin, a huge snowmobiling/snowmaching state where she has high name ID and obvious appeal. Use the speech to paint the Obama economic plan as a risk the country just can't afford given the state of the economy.

5. Elevate Economic Gurus: While former Sen. Phil Gramm (he of the "nation of whiners" comment) is probably off the board, McCain has a stable of respected economic voices -- from former CEOs Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina to two-time presidential candidate Steve Forbes and former vice presidential candidate Jack Kemp. McCain needs to flood the zone (with apologies to Howell Raines) with smart voices testifying to his ability to reform the economy and laying out the basic principles of the sort of change -- and, importantly, break from the Bush economic policy -- that he would offer.

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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