tv Prime Interest RT May 14, 2013 4:29am-5:00am EDT
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there's a lot of money for capital markets so far in two thousand and thirteen we've seen sixty four public offerings in the u.s. raising seventeen billion dollars in a record since before the financial crisis in this last year is a thirteen billion dollars thirteen and may but there are still seven and a half months ago in two thousand and thirteen and we've seen in the last few years the i.p.o. market can easily be shut down whether it's the debt ceiling debate or an i.p.o. blunder itself like last year's facebook offering for now wall street enjoy the even money here's what's in your prime interest.
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now the increasing cost of college do it too ition is causing a major issues among young americans the average student graduates today with about twenty six thousand dollars in student loan debt the federal government issues direct loans between three point four and seven point nine percent and the rates are set to double on july first now senator elizabeth warren think students should be able to borrow money for the same amount that khalid are that banks are borrowing so last week she introduced a legislature and that would float money from the federal reserve to the department of education so they could cut the loan rate to just point seven five percent or earlier i spoke with me she said lock in from said cup a civic capital about senator warns bill and the student loan industry in general and here is what he had to say about the bill. on the river. the student loan
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market are positive for students who are positive for education these are all different questions here. i think it misses the mark and that's the problem with. what we need is more competition in schools we need to be driving down costs we don't need to be doing things just encourage students to take out loans and get educational they don't need perhaps don't even watch the education industry fosters on them and tells them of everyone i asked the hat so i think we need to get the government out of this is there's more government and that is what it does is. by cutting the rates two percent or whatever bracket started a quarter of a percent excuse me where is their oversight this encourages more people to take out loans because they look cheap. well joining me now in studio is r.t. correspondent margaret. thank you for joining me and mark is going to weigh in on
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his comments and how how do you feel about the student loan but what do you think a bubble exist or is this. a very you ask me if i think he's right no it's not right i mean that you know we should be investing in our students not our banks that is the bottom line you know an educated workforce is the crux of society and he's using the term student bubble and he's probably calling that from the housing bubble we're not talking about houses here we're talking about people and i think that his argument that we have too many educated people for a society to function just as apply with me well what about. being over educated i mean there's you know plenty of people who go and get a college education and they can't find a job or they end up working in stores or bartenders or something that would not require a college education i mean do you not think that we're in over educators id in any capacity in some cases yes but we should be doing in society is played placing an equal value on skill in terms of you know what what can you bring to the table
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along with that degree and i think that's what we're dropping the ball per se you know people they need to have a skill they can't just show up in it and say ok well we've got the i've got this degree now i get an automatic free pass into a job it doesn't work that way you know employers want to know what you can bring to the table so you know we need to place that equal emphasis to something i want to tell you about you know we see these students particularly graduating from law schools i was reading an article yesterday and last students are unable to find a job and they're suing their album auditors for misrepresenting lvalue a very degrees so do i think that there is too much value placed on a degree not necessarily but i think that we should have an equal value placed on skilled ok well when. i also brought up the issue of expectation it was kind of weighs in on exactly what you're saying is. you know that's still on bubble and me just talking about that field in expectations about will mean that you have to have a college degree in order to just get
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a basic job and here here's what nice that about it let's listen to his explanation first oh absolutely we're sued and won it's not actually the only expansion we've seeing throughout much of the so-called recovery and hispanic. people with students staying in school longer than what they need some because they can't find a job they go on and get it that's degrees you have people going back to college and middle age as obama tells them they need training returning for a lot. well period you know that i think he might be correct on there there needs to be the expectation needs to match the job market so people need to get a realistic perspective on what's out there before they apply for college that you know we need to have an idea of what we want to do prior to entering this this free thought process the forty years is probably not the smartest thing you can do if
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you're wanting to be gainfully employed at the end of it i also feel that not everyone has is made for academia i mean academia is a very specific type of the economy and not everyone needs that type of training there's plenty of jobs out there that don't require this you know advance type of study so it was here we were talk about the expectation but boy again he could play that clip of his of mischa's. comments on expectations out absolutely we seen the x. . in hiring trends well rounded companies insist upon degrees now whether a degree is really required for the position or not just because so many people have a degree so why not hire someone once so. when you look at all of these things in aggregate. it's just a step in the wrong direction we need more competition not less and that's
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what cheapening monny elizabeth warren wants to do it just encourages more people to get your careers they can't use and in fields where there are no johns there on the first. so i was kind of really interesting so what you're mentioning about lawyers joining this is they're all a mater i mean do we think things that you know the college degree is really worth because i know you said we need college degrees to be a well functioning society but is it possible that cause dreams are over cost and you know period that is a possibility you know i went to george washington at the time it was rated one of the highest per cost for a year i think it was fifty two thousand a year when i went there and i you know there was this question i think that they were paying the university president at the time three million dollars a year to be the university president and you know maybe that cost doesn't really
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jive with what i got from my bachelor's in hindsight now does that mean that it wasn't worth it i don't know if i can say that per se but you know again going to an institution like that it sets up a student eighteen nineteen years old for a predatory loan which was the original intent of our discussion taking it back to those predatory loans you know what what rights do they have to sign on the bottom line and maybe maybe the regulations should be a little bit different what about the need for a vote vocational skills and vocational training i mean there's plenty of demand for these types of jobs do you think that we should put more emphasis on vocational training you know i think yes and no. it needs to be individual based if we have a student who maybe isn't fit for academic life who would be better suited in a vocational training sector i.e. welding for example you know there are a lot of jobs like that you are right and perhaps we should be focusing prior to college and helping students find out exactly what their needs in this market i
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think in some cases yes ok now student loans that are in ninety day delinquencies they've increased steadily in the past year and i asked me if you think that governments will have to increase lending standards because of this and here. what he had to say about that. well we've already seen increase default rates and interest and just keep going up or not and we keep reworking questioning what do we do about it so raising the lending standards up president obama wants to do the exact opposite of that. so because the government is so heavily involved in student loans and they're loaning out so many and now dealing with the rates are increasing do you think that the government should increase lending standards in order not to have a debt issue with i don't know if they should increase the standard i think the standard is pretty strong with as it is you know something a senator elizabeth warren was trying to do she was trying to say ok we're going to
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lower these interest rates for a year we're going to get the fed to subsidize these loans we're not going to leave it up to private banks anymore you know and i think that she made a very excellent step in the right direction in terms of helping these students you know our debt crisis is you mentioned earlier one trillion dollars isn't that amazing student debt and one trillion i don't know if we're ever going to get that paid off but i do know that we have to do something because in july if congress doesn't act student loan interest rates are set to double of double but if you can't repay loans you write about i want to be kind that's an excellent point period but at the same time you know there has to be more than just raising the standard i think that that would show a lot of people out of college who maybe are all over educated no i don't think we're rich over educated at all i think that perhaps there needs to be something else in place besides relying on loans prior to entering college that would that would be what i would say to that great thank you so much for weighing in on the.
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next we're going to talk with prime interest producer just underhill about the soaring cost of college tuitions and just what the rising default rate might mean for the market university and bob english and i will go at it discussing the latest a bloomberg embarrassment across just saying richard branson and car i was latest public brock's the world stage. wealthy british style sign it's time to. find. markets can the. find out what's really happening to the global economy with mike's
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conjure for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune into kinds a report on our. real damage and complexity of this oil spill was not something you can grasp just by looking at dirty birds we have between four to five million people in this directly affected area of the coast and it's pretty clear why it's not being reported because b.p. can't afford to have a reported all along the gulf coast are clean they are safe and they're open for business if b.p. is the single largest oil contributor to the pentagon the us war machine is heavily reliant upon b.p. and their oil this is a huge step backwards for democracy it's a step forward for oligarchy carex it is toxic is a look a lot like spraying in vietnam it was it was not a picture that either the government or b.p.
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really wanted to have out there i don't want dispersants to be the agent. of this bill's. release be told language. will use programs and documentaries in arabic it's all here on. reporting from the will talks books fifty yard p. interviews intriguing stories are you. still been trying. to find out more. visit our big teeth.
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an estimated one point eight million students are graduating college this year and according to a survey commissioned by adam levin of credit dot com almost half of students between the age of eighteen and twenty four so they have borrowed money to pay for college this represents a drastic shift as less than a quarter of all baby boomers went into debt to pay for higher education among recent graduates one the fifth believe that students should borrow as much as they need and that no amount is too much meanwhile ninety percent of baby boomers and seniors disagree for more on shifts in college tuition costs and the rise in student loans we turn to private interest producer justin undergo. just think can you tell us a little bit more about what's happening in this trend and increasing college tuition absolutely so college tuition has been increasing steeply over the past twenty years and that's far more sharply than the consumer price index which is.
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below now from one thousand nine hundred seven to one nine hundred ninety the slopes were roughly the same between college tuition and the consumer price index but between one thousand nine hundred and two thousand we can see that college tuition doubled the slope of the c.p.i. and then between two thousand and now two thousand and thirteen the slope has doubled again while the slope of the c.p.i. has remained constant. while white house cards this skyrocketing cost of education well here we're just looking at two wishing cos we're not looking at the total cost of education so while tuition has certainly been increasing if we look at the total cost of education which involves more than just two ition this is per student at public universities this is remained roughly constant and we're using the scale on that side. eighty percent of in romans college moment in the u.s.
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is that state and municipal colleges so if the actual cost per student is an increasing their tuition is increasing great what is causing this increase in tuition well that's a good question for that we're going to need another graph and this is tuition as a share of higher education costs so if we look at fiscal year two thousand twenty percent of the cost of higher education was paid for by tuition whereas seventy two percent was paid for by the school by states state funding and we can see that slowly shifted over the years and there is in two thousand and eight there was a precipitous drop in the share that states paid to make up for the. students had to pay more a little bit more intuition and that meant maybe taking out more loans and students were able to absorb a lot of these costs and so more loans and more more amounts for each of the loans so how's the total amount that states are spending has that increased as well as.
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the amount that they have been spending has actually decreased in some states but as a dollar amount what we haven't seen is we haven't seen a three fold drop as we've seen in the chart in the amount that states are paying for education that's made up for the fact that there are more people attending colleges so the same amount of money is out there to feed more or less the same amount of money is out there to feed the same amount or more miles and there's not as much funding per student. or it seems that a lot of the ship is now going to the federal government has the federal government are they picking up the bill well what we haven't seen is we haven't seen the same default rate right now as as there was in the 1980's but it's certainly been increasing over the past three years and we're talking about nonprofit particularly public colleges and while it's true that there has been
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a modest increase in the default rate for federal loans this is far lower than the default rate of for profit institutions for profit institutions over ninety percent of students take out federal loans and these loans have more than twice the rate of public colleges so this is a sector that is the most responsible for the increase in the default rate. so do you think it's more important for the government to increase competition or should the government won't more to make up for the well this is a tricky thing you know it's sort of the cycle that gets itself we see more and more people taking out loans because because they can't afford the cost of and institutions that some people believe that this actually increases the. price of colleges that they can they can charge to to their consumers so to say ok thanks thank you.
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it's time for the daily mail all joining me now is crime and just producer bob english great to start off a new week right here and with you thank you jack so we have a great story reporters have admitted that they used the information that they gathered in the company's financial terminals to gain instant financial new now in a market where every microsecond equals profits should bloomberg employees of be able to use the bloomberg terminals for reporting well it's funny how this came about because i think one of the reporters of bloomberg noticed that goldman trader had not logged in for a while and she called goldman or he called goldman goldman said what do you mean
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how can you tell that we don't have this log in information or that this person has a log on and that's how the story came about so i think it's interesting that the chinese walls of bloomberg are not as strong as those that we see at j.p. morgan and goldman between their prop and float apartments which is kind of a joke but you see them saying well i actually feel that. why not. this is their terminals their infrastructure and their company why can't they use the tools they have well like i said they're supposed to be certain chinese walls between between different departments of what i was getting up before is that if you're a j.p. morgan and you're trying to sell your client something you're not supposed to take information from other departments and use that to your advantage now it probably happens every day but that's the way it's supposed to happen so bloomberg is finally getting called out in this and it's interesting maybe you can go into a little history about how bloomberg came about they have almost a near monopoly on the business that they're in which is selling their terminals and here's
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a story from economic policy journal which i used to write for this comes from november of two thousand and nine and the editor is recounting exactly how this came about and bloomberg in the one nine hundred eighty s. when he was trying to gain his market share developed a system his bloomberg system and he got a monopoly on what's called the inside so what is the inside quote it's a quote that primary dealers those that trade with the fed show amongst themselves when trading treasury securities with the fed back in the one nine hundred eighty s. the federal reserve didn't announce in advance changes in their fed funds policy you get a sense for what the fed was doing by watching what trades that was putting on this trading was done through the primary dealers and was reflected in the primary to primary dealers inside quote treasury securities so when the fed entered the market you could tell by seeing the changes on the inside quote as a primary dealers adjusted their quotes to the trades before bloomberg the only people that saw the inside quote were the primary dealers themselves and afterwards if you wanted that very insightful information you had to go to bloomberg well i
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mean isn't that the nature of this industry you know those what that the largest computers when it doesn't the best infrastructure way so you're drawing an analogy to you know. it would be the only one answer according yes it well it would be a money monday if we could get into co-location and high frequency trading which we will be discussing tomorrow. but i guess moving on to the next topic we have well ok so richard branson over the weekend he two and a half years ago he made a bet with tony fernandez and he lost the bat and the bet was team would finish first in the two thousand and ten formula one grand prix and oddly dobby and the loser had to dress and the other four other. flight attendants on their airline they both have their lines right and so the loser has to dress as a female flight attendant on the other person there i don't know if they were. lined up that they had addressed the female flight attendant and that's the level
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that branson took it to this. and i think we have some pictures. to have years of do with the event kept getting pushed back because the royal wedding got in the way the house burned down in necker island but as a man of his words he kept his bat and one of the biggest advantages to this was he raised over three hundred thousand dollars for the starlight foundation which is for a seriously ill children which is which is great and i'm pulling for him especially with virgin galactic i'm excited to see this to go but i don't really have much more to say about this i want to start my own deal with service or variance and ok and honor of mother's day richard branson if you come on in prime interest i will host a fundraiser here in d.c. for your mother's foundation the eve branson foundation which aims to help young girls and alice know. their education and business and health care now mr branson do you do you love how i think. i love it i hope i hope he pulls through i hope
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he's a big prime introspect and. i think we have some news about michael dell to get into our icon and picking michael. dell out of dell or yeah his own namesake has this deal and i guess i can has a proxy war. icon is trying to sweeten the deal dell wants to pay twenty four points. billion dollars to the shareholders for the company and icahn is offering a little bit more twelve billion dollars a share extra in cash or stock and this is carl icahn is of course the same guy who got into a big time with bill ackman on c n b c a few months ago and that was over and that's still going on and i can't wait for the next but maybe maybe we'll see dell an icon on t.v. well michael dell is the son of the founder of dell so he was there anything that he had done maybe that didn't help the company well i'm not an expert on this particular company but i will say in terms of carl icahn he is
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a very powerful and astute activists investor and that means what he's buying shares in a company he's trying to influence the board of directors and he wants to influence what you want to have my shareholders meeting and yeah i would on this sale and they might. in august they're supposed to have a shareholder meeting and the question is are they going to vote before that on whether or not to take this dell offer or are they going to hold out for icahn so it's a big deal. thanks for joining me thank you. today we got schooled on prime interest university we learned a lot about student loans thanks to professor shad block and two of our producers
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fed mouthpiece john hensel rad service and now over the weekend in the campus paper not much new but keep the rumors flying out the student loan are the student union john looks like the bloomberg crowe got caught cheating on cold but next time. over the econ one hundred one at least the i.p.o. market looking strong thanks to the fed's monetary gree and whether it's chairman bernanke we are chairwoman yellen who conducting the grand tightening experiment we hope the q.e. lab is well ventilated the one point six trillion dollars in accessory reserve is quite the power and serve. all we can say is we're happy to vote you class clown thanks for watching and make sure you come back to prime interest tomorrow you can follow us on facebook at facebook dot com my mentor is all of us here have a great night.
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dangerous experiments on prisoners they want to make money and they have these healthy guinea pigs in the regular society and now they will be used prisoners i mean they wish they could. drug tests on human guinea pigs. to call deadly pills. the subway he was killed. he didn't. let him down. is pharmacy really about helping people. in russia was bills. fuel for it's fun to read. code for it
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the infrastructure of the police state is already in place freedom of speech advocates condemning the us justice department. for. unprecedented intrusion. international efforts to find common ground on the syrian crisis see the israeli prime minister fly into russia to meet president putin. on a soyuz capsule bring. home safe and sound five month mission.
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