Archive for January 3rd, 2012

Have I got a deal for you …

January 3, 2012

Hooray.

Big victory for the middle class.

President Obama got his 2-month payroll tax holiday.

So, 150 million folks get $1,000 in 2012 tax savings.

Oops.

The program is only for 2 months, so the committed tax savings are only $167.

Still better than nothing, right?

Not so fast

How is it being paid for?

Well, first, “paid for” is a misnomer … it’s being offset in the governments 10 year hypothetical budget.

Hypothetical because the Senate hasn’t passed a 2012 budget, let alone a 10-year budget.

OK, let’s pretend.

The 2-month payroll tax holiday is being offset (over 10 years) by an increase in mortgage fees,

Every new or refinancing  loan going through Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac – that’s over 90% of all mortgages – get tagged with an added  fee (20 basis points, .2 %)

According to NPR, the added fee works out to about $17 per month for an average mortgage of about $200,000.

So, let’s work the nums.

“Average” folks who don’t have or don’t get or don’t refinance a mortgage walk away with $167 free and clear.

That’s a good deal.

“Average” folks who initiate a loan or refinance through Fannie or Freddie get hit with $17 in added monthly fees as long as they hold a mortgage … assuming that the added fee never goes away – a pretty safe bet.

Let’s pretend the average guy stays mortgaged for 30 years.

What’s the financial impact?

Well, the nominal cost of the mortgage adder is over $6,000.

But, to be fair, let’s discount it back to a present value.

For 30 years, the mortgage cost adder has an PV of over $3,100.

So, for the average guy with a new or refinanced mortgage, the payroll tax holiday will COST him a NPV loss of almost $3,000.

Still wonder why the economy is in trouble?

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MSB alum is “Selling Abby Wambach” …

January 3, 2012

Punch line: Abby Wambach is one of few women soccer stars to cash in with her endorsements and appearances.  Her agent is Dan Levy – MSB MBA 1998.  That caught my eye.

When Dan graduated from MSB, he became Mia Hamm’s agent for her charitable endeavors …

The rest is history.

Business Week “Selling Abby Wambach

Abby Wambach – star of the U.S. women’s soccer team – observed: “We knew our playing resonated ….. but we didn’t know how it would translate into dollars and cents.”

Wambach, who’s been a professional soccer player for nine years and is among the privileged few whose sponsorship deals afford them a comfortable living.

When Wambach joined the women’s league, at age 22, she played on Mia Hamm’s team in Washington, D.C.

At the time, Hamm was among the most famous female athletes in the world.

Wambach took cues from how carefully Hamm managed her numerous endorsement deals.

She got rid of her first agent and signed on with Dan Levy of  Wasserman Media Group, Hamm’s agent

From the Athletes for Hope web site:

Dan Levy has been a pioneer in women’s sports marketing, creating some of the most unique marketing opportunities and deals in his field.

Prior to joining WMG, he helped propel Octagon and Bober Associates into the largest agencies devoted solely to the marketing of women’s sports athletes, and assisted in the formation of the Mia Hamm Foundation.

Joining WMG in 2006, Levy currently manages some of the world’s most accomplished female athletes, including Sue Bird, Mia Hamm, Maya Moore and Abby Wambach..

Way to go Dan!

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Good riddance: Electric car subsidies expire … at least, some of them.

January 3, 2012

According to the Wash Post

Two of the most wasteful subsidies ever to clutter the Internal Revenue Code went out with the old year when Congress declined to renew either

  • The 45-cent-per-gallon tax credit for corn-based ethanol.
  • A credit that gave electric-car owners up to $1,000 to defray the cost of installing a 220-volt charging device in their homes.  

But, he $7,500 tax credit that the government offers purchasers of electric vehicles did not expire at year’s end.

The Obama administration says that the credit helps build a market for EVs, which helps create jobs.

Sales of electric vehicles were disappointing in 2011, with the Volt coming in below the 10,000 units forecast.

Evidence is mounting that President Obama was overly optimistic to pledge that there would be 1 million EVs on the road by 2015.

More prosaic fuel-economy innovations such as conventional hybrids, clean-diesel cars and advanced gasoline engines all show much more promise than electrics.

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