Jay Hancock

Butcher, baker, unemployment line maker

November 22, 2008

In normal times, self-interest keeps society working and increases the wealth of nations. Corporations earn profits but also supply needed products. Consumers furnish their nests but also create jobs.

    Recent columns

  • Old Line lends to those it knows

    November 21, 2008

    As the economy slumps, one Maryland bank has not only stayed out of trouble but has burnished the kind of 24-karat lending record that rivals would covet even in a boom.

  • Falling costs raise risk of relapse on energy use

    November 15, 2008

    David Martinez fought back when energy prices soared two years ago.

  • White Marsh plant is model for reinventing auto industry

    November 12, 2008

    We financial blowhards have been proclaiming forever that Detroit automakers had to end business as usual.

  • Obama needs to focus on the worker

    November 8, 2008

    It's easy to look like a hero when you walk through the door, say corporate crisis managers.

  • While bailing out, U.S. is digging itself deeper into debt

    November 5, 2008

    So far, American taxpayers have put up $1 trillion to rescue banks and consumers who borrowed too much. Congress will almost certainly approve a stimulus package of $300 billion or so more.

  • OK, here's why deflation is also a very bad thing

    November 2, 2008

    A reader asks: Could you explain what is bad about deflation? I understand why inflation is bad, and I presume that deflation is the opposite of inflation. If so, why is it bad if my money is increasing in value rather than decreasing?

  • So, anybody out there in the market for a mall?

    November 1, 2008

    Bernard Freibaum, chief financial officer for General Growth Properties, began dumping his company stock six weeks ago.

  • Bank bosses might profit by sharing in the pain

    October 29, 2008

    When taxpayers bailed out Chrysler Corp. in 1980, CEO Lee Iacocca acknowledged the extraordinary assistance with a sacrifice of his own. He cut his salary to a dollar a year and trimmed other executives' pay by up to a tenth.

  • Omaha sage could get a Baltimorean 'never mind'

    October 25, 2008

    It's a beautiful idea: Constellation Energy shareholders reject the emergency merger with Warren Buffett's MidAmerican Energy Holdings, retake control of their company and watch the stock head back upward.

  • Bipartisan budget-cuts panel deserves consideration

    October 22, 2008

    Is Comptroller Peter Franchot grandstanding with his plan for a high-powered commission to find new state spending cuts?

  • High time for less fine print and more clarity

    October 18, 2008

    Can you blame Wall Street for being confused? Each mortgage security polluting our economy often holds hundreds of loans from dozens of states.

  • Now on sale: the plan to bail out the U.S.

    October 15, 2008

    The selling of Washington's new, improved rescue package contains more hype than a Billy Mays Mighty Putty infomercial, but the plan just may save the country. At least this week.

  • Another Depression?

    October 8, 2008

    Louis Galambos is scared about the economy and cautiously optimistic at the same time, which sounds about right.

  • The view from the financial ledge

    October 4, 2008

    Yesterday's bailout approval is not the end of the financial crisis. Rather, it halts the free-fall, if only temporarily. It furnishes a narrow ledge to perch on, assess broken bones and contemplate the abyss.

  • Stocks rise and fall, but the fundamentals stay the same

    October 1, 2008

    When everything seems upside down, when century-old banks fall like duckpins, when Democratic congresspeople want to rescue Wall Street and Republicans don't, when even "safe" investments seem risky, there are still eternal truths investors can embrace.

  • Bet on passage of a bailout, but more pain is on the way

    September 30, 2008

    Congress will pass a bailout package. The stock and credit markets are making sure of that.

  • Give fixed heating costs the cold shoulder

    September 27, 2008

    The first thing you need to know about recent energy-market gyrations and winter heating costs is to say "no thanks" to BGE Home's fixed-price natural gas offer of $1.599 per therm.

  • A new generation pays long-term cost of short-sightedness

    September 24, 2008

    SEPT. 24, 2028

  • Taxpayers should get a big chunk of bailed-out companies

    September 23, 2008

    Now that American taxpayers are about to set up the biggest-ever vulture investment fund, let's make sure they get the same kind of action as Wall Street's traditional carrion fowl.

  • Constellation brought the near-collapse on itself

    September 19, 2008

    Would Constellation Energy's near-collapse and emergency sale have been necessary if the General Assembly hadn't resisted and ultimately quashed its planned merger with Florida's FPL Group two years ago?

  • In propping up Constellation, don't let BGE customers fall

    September 18, 2008

    No wonder Constellation Energy CEO Mayo Shattuck wanted to merge two years ago with FPL Group of Florida.

  • AIG failure would bring pain to added millions of Americans

    September 17, 2008

    Henry Paulson could afford to apply tough love to Lehman Brothers, the investment company that entered bankruptcy proceedings this week. Lehman's collapse, the treasury secretary knew, would cause limited damage outside midtown Manhattan.

  • Convenient mall walk-in clinics fill an unmet need

    September 13, 2008

    Pam Wahbe and her family have a primary-care physician. But lately they've been skipping the traditional doctor's office for minor ailments and instead using a walk-in clinic at a Towson CVS drugstore.

  • Legg Mason manager's plan seems to be crash and bear it

    September 10, 2008

    Legg Mason's Bill Miller isn't getting any love for his stock-picking. But perhaps we should admire him for his titanium stomach, in the way people appreciate snake charmers or Evel Knievel.

  • Let's skip biography and get to economy

    September 6, 2008

    No wonder both presidential candidates are promising change. Even the stupid don't need to be reminded that, yet again, it really is the economy that will dominate voters' concerns.

  • What's behind shortfall in state's taxes? Try smuggling

    September 3, 2008

    State bean counters blame the crash in sales-tax collections on high gas prices and a weak economy.

  • There's gold in those mountains of Garrett

    August 30, 2008

    Just as they did in the 1980s, human ingenuity and Mother Nature are working together to solve the energy crisis. There is an Appalachian energy boom from West Virginia to New York, exemplified by a group of farmers and other landowners who expect to lease nearly a tenth of Maryland's Garrett County next week to natural-gas prospectors for $36 million.

  • A simple, honest version of the slots referendum

    August 27, 2008

    Supporters and opponents of Maryland slot machines are arguing over the wording of a slots-approval measure on November's ballot. The language goes on and on about education but says nothing about horse racing. Here's how an honest version would read:

  • Build the natural gas terminal, but not at Sparrows Point

    August 20, 2008

    Maryland undoubtedly needs more and cheaper energy, but we're not going to do just anything to get it. We won't strip state forests for fireplace fodder. We won't reverse pollution controls on cars and power plants.

  • Ferris missed a chance to act

    April 11, 2008

    David A. Dadante was making questionable stock trades almost immediately after Ferris Baker Watts took him on as a client in early 2003.

  • Point's future is up to Annapolis

    March 26, 2008

    The global economy has done its part: Russia's OAO Severstal has agreed to buy the Sparrows Point steel mill and invest in badly needed upgrades.

  • Primary voters have real choices

    February 8, 2008

    Critics of American politics - generally from the left - often say there's no difference between Democrats and Republicans.

  • Being free of Mittal is a good thing for the Point

    February 21, 2007

    Getting sold by Mittal Steel might be the best thing to happen to Sparrows Point in a long, long time.

  • Ground rent law violates the principles of due process, fair play

    December 13, 2006

    Because Deloris McNeil missed paying a $96-a-year ground rent bill, she lost the Fayette Street house she had bought for $44,500 and lived in for years. The tiny, delinquent bill morphed into creditor-seizure powers that trumped fair play, common sense and fundamental rights.

  • However it's spun, Baltimore is losing a headquarters

    December 20, 2005

    As sales of key corporate citizens to out-of-town landlords go, the merger of Constellation Energy with FPL Group isn't that bad. So why are they trying to spin us like a dynamo in a heat wave?

  • U.S. probes grant to city nonprofit

    October 2, 2005

    The U.S. Education Department's inspector general is investigating whether a senior official of the agency improperly helped the National Federation of the Blind win a key federal grant around the time she was discussing taking a job at the Baltimore-based nonprofit.

  • Big rise in Md. tax revenue is partly credited to home sales

    July 31, 2005

    WHAT'S BEHIND the surprising spurt in Maryland tax collections and what Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. calculates is a billion-dollar budget surplus?

  • Reform goes back to start on nonprofit boondoggle

    July 20, 2005

    FAITHFUL READERS know about a $2 billion federal boondoggle called the Javits-Wagner- O'Day program, which pays peanuts to disabled people working on no-bid government contracts, enriches nonprofit executives and operates with little oversight or control.

  • A warning to charitable donors and a case for tougher disclosure laws on nonprofits

    June 19, 2005

    RIIIING. IT'S the National Federation of the Blind of Oregon, calling across that state. They want money "to help the blind of the area," according to a fund-raising script from 2003.

  • Nonprofits seem in no big hurry to fix their problems

    March 2, 2005

    The nonprofit-industrial complex knows it has a problem.

  • Chimes, other charities are object of badly needed reform

    December 5, 2004

    FEDERAL authorities have launched a tax probe of Baltimore-based Chimes Inc. and have proposed sweeping governance standards, including executive salary limits, for Chimes and other nonprofit groups that get $2 billion annually from taxpayers to employ the disabled.

  • The lights start to flash at end of the blackout

    August 20, 2003

    IN ECONOMICS there's a heads for every tails, a pull for every push, and the happy reciprocal of the Blackout of 2003 will be the purchase of billions of dollars' worth of electrical transmission hardware.

  • Citigroup gets a black eye in Rusnak caper

    May 28, 2003

    JUST WHEN you thought it was safe to walk down Wall Street again without two Dobermans to repel the white-collar muggers, Allied Irish Banks brings new allegations of misdeeds against Bank of America and Citigroup.

  • Bailout pays airlines for years of bad management

    September 30, 2001

    AS HE pursued his doomed merger with United Airlines earlier this year, US Airways chief executive Rakesh Gangwal said "there is no Plan B" if regulators were to block the deal.

Jay Hancock

Jay Hancock

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