November 22, 2024

Bucks: Shift in Treasuries System Vexes Older Investors

Pauline Gordon wants to know where her savings are.

Mrs. Gordon, an 85-year-old resident of Silver Spring, Md., was a satisfied, long-time user of the federal government’s old Legacy Treasury Direct system, which allowed users to buy Treasury bills and other securities by mail or phone and receive paper statements.

But the Bureau of the Public Debt, the Treasury arm that handles the sale and redemption of Treasury bills and other government securities, is phasing out the system and will shut it down on Nov. 1, 2012.

Paul Hosefros/The New York TimesA spokesperson for the Treasury Department says it is “overwhelmed” with requests.

Users must switch to the newer, Web-based TreasuryDirect system. Or they can arrange to buy Treasury bills, notes and bonds through a bank or broker. That’s what Mrs. Gordon tried to do.  “I’m 85 years old,” she explained in a phone interview. “I don’t get much involved with electronics, if I can avoid it.”

So when she received a letter about the change from the Treasury Department on March 30, she enlisted the help of her son, Robert.  He accompanied her to her bank and helped her get a signed affidavit, as required, authorizing the transfer of her securities to her broker. Then, they sent the paperwork to the Bureau of the Public Debt, which received the packet on April 27.

Four weeks later, the funds still hadn’t been transferred to her brokerage account. Another two weeks later, Robert Gordon called the information number given by the Treasury Department. “I left messages,” he said. “No one’s ever called me back.” When he did reach a person, he said, he was told the paperwork was received and was being processed.

Mr. Gordon knew his mother didn’t want to sell any of her securities — she is partial to Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities — but asked what would happen if she did decide she wanted to do so. He was told, he said, that she could sell them through the old Legacy Direct system. But she’s still worried. “The anxiety it’s causing her is considerable,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mrs. Gordon is fretting about what is happening with a large portion of her savings, and pesters her broker frequently about whether the funds have arrived.  “I’m very upset,” she said. “I can’t understand the government being so slow. There’s no reason for it. We filled everything out.”

Mckayla Braden,  a bureau spokeswoman, said Wednesday that the bureau was “overwhelmed” by requests from users of the old system and is working on processing them. “We were totally slammed,” she said. “Her request is not forgotten.”

Slightly more than 200,000 people are affected by the change, according to the Bureau of the Public Debt. Ms. Braden didn’t have information immediately available about how many users have switched to the new system. The problem is that most users of the older system are elderly — their average age is 75, and many are over 80. Many, like Mrs. Gordon, lack computers, or the inclination to use one. They invest in Treasuries because they are very safe, and not knowing where there money is stressful to them.

Now, an update: On Thursday afternoon, Mr. Gordon called to say that after Bucks contacted the bureau, he and his mother received phone calls telling them that a portion of her securities would be transferred to her brokerage account on Thursday. The remainder, he was told, would be transferred at a later date, after pending interest posts. Mr. Gordon said he was grateful for the update, because if only some of the securities had been transferred without explanation, he and his mother would have been even more concerned. “People need to know that it might go in stages,” he said.

Are you trying to move your Treasury investments to an outside broker? Has the switch gone smoothly?

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=d61d6c16d51d6d344442b04ea03669bc

Stocks & Bonds: A Mixed Finish After a Downgrade of Portugal’s Debt

The credit ratings agency cited concern that Portugal would not be able to meet goals for reducing its deficit because of the “formidable challenges” the country is facing in cutting spending.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 12.90, or 0.1 percent, to close at 12,569.87. The Dow had risen as many as 19 points in morning trading after the Commerce Department reported an increase in orders for manufactured goods.

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index fell 1.79, or 0.1 percent, to 1,337.88. The Nasdaq composite index rose 9.74, or 0.3 percent, to 2,825.77.

Bond prices rose, sending yields lower, as investors sought the relative safety of Treasuries. The benchmark 10-year note rose 17/32, to 100 2/32, and the yield fell to 3.12 percent from 3.18 percent late Friday.

Investors have been worried that Europe’s debt problems could slow the global economy and cause a crisis for European banks. “The European debt crisis is going to be with us for a while,” said David Kelly, chief market strategist at J. P. Morgan Funds. “There still is a very big issue out there.”

Tuesday’s trading volume was light with many traders on vacation after the United States markets were closed Monday for the Fourth of July holiday. Many investors are looking ahead to next week, when the aluminum maker Alcoa becomes the first major United States company to report results for the most recent quarter.

Last week, the Dow rose 648 points, its best week in two years, after Nike reported strong earnings and Greece cleared its final hurdle to receive another round of loans. Automakers also reported that their sales rose 7 percent in June compared with the comparable month a year ago.

Those gains erased nearly six weeks of losses. Stocks had been falling since late April because of concerns about the debt crisis in Europe, weak home sales in the United States and slow manufacturing. By mid-June, stocks had given up most of their gains for the year.

With last week’s rally, the Dow is down 1.8 percent from April 29, when it reached a three-year high. The Dow is up 8.6 percent for the year. The S. P. 500 is up 6.4 percent and the Nasdaq composite is up 6.5 percent.

“There hasn’t yet really been a reason to get concerned about corporate America,” said Randall Warren, chief investment officer of Warren Financial Service. “It’s the rest of the America that’s struggling.”

Even though companies have been reporting higher profits, unemployment has remained stubbornly high since the recession officially ended in June 2009. The Labor Department will report the latest figures on unemployment and payrolls on Friday, and analysts expect to hear more bad news. Many predict that the unemployment rate will remain at 9.1 percent, unchanged from May. They also expect that employers added only 90,000 jobs last month, below the 100,000 threshold that economists say is needed to prevent the unemployment rate from increasing.

Several stocks rose sharply on deals and other news. Immucor, a maker of blood-testing equipment, rose more than 30 percent after it agreed to be bought by a private investment firm, TPG Capital, in a deal worth $1.97 billion.

Southern Union, which operates oil pipelines, rose 4.2 percent after Energy Transfer Equity said it would pay $5.1 billion for the company. The deal trumped a $4.9 billion bid made in late June by a rival, the Williams Companies.

Netflix rose 8.1 percent, more than any company in the S. P. 500, after announcing that it would expand its online video streaming service to 43 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Chevron rose 1 percent, more than any stock in the Dow index, after the price of crude oil rose $1.95, to $96.89 a barrel.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=2fc0e271086526b653c75d6027b9453c