Finance topics

September 24, 2011

World powers seek to contain Europe debt crisis

Filed under: Business, Homes — Tags: , , , — Gogo @ 3:36 pm

Under pressure from skeptical financial markets, the world’s economic powers scrambled on Saturday for ways to keep Europe’s debt crisis from spiraling out of control.

The continent’s financial woes grabbed the attention of the policy-setting committees of the 187-nation International Monetary Fund and the World Bank during the lending institutions’ annual meetings.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told the IMF panel that the debt crisis posed the most serious threat to the global economy and that failure to take bold action raised the risk of domino-style defaults by heavily indebted European countries.

He said the European Central Bank should try to ensure that governments pursuing sound reforms could get loans at affordable rates and that European banks have access to the capital they need to operate. The ECB is the central bank for the 17 nations that use the euro as a common currency.

Global financial markets plunged this week on fears of a possible default within weeks by Greece on its government debt and on worries a default would cause runs on major European banks with heavy exposure to Athens’ debt.

“The threat of cascading default, bank runs and catastrophic risk must be taken off the table. Otherwise, it will undermine all other efforts, both within Europe and globally,” Geithner said. “Decisions as to how to conclusively address the region’s problems cannot wait until the crisis gets even more severe.”

Geithner was one of a number of finance leaders demanding forceful action.

Mark Carney, the head of Canada’s central bank, called for “overwhelming” the problem with a big increase in Europe’s rescue fund for heavily indebted countries.

In an interview with CBC radio, Carney suggested that a European financial stability fund should be increased from 440 billion euros to 1 trillion euros. At current exchange rates, that would be the equivalent of expanding a $590 billion fund to $1.35 trillion.

“You need a big pot of money,” he said.

For Christine Lagarde, who took over as head of the IMF in June, the debt crisis was a tough first test. Lagarde has warned that without strong and collective action, the world’s major economies risk slipping back into recession.

To avoid that, finance officials of the Group of 20 major economies pledged on Thursday to “take all necessary actions to preserve the stability of banking systems and financial markets.”

But private economists have questioned whether the plan goes far enough to deal with market concerns that a Greek default is a virtual certainty.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said a second bailout package for Greece may have to be re-evaluated because of Athens’ problems in fulfilling earlier financial promises.

This re-evaluation could include changing the terms of the voluntary contribution from banks and other private investors to Greece’s rescue, two European officials said.

One of the officials said that Germany and other rich eurozone nations, including the Netherlands and Austria, are now pushing for an “orderly default” by Greece. That would entail losses for investors that go beyond the 21 percent cut in the face value of government bonds foreseen under the voluntary contribution. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

The comments underline how confidence is eroding among core eurozone countries over whether they can actually save Greece. The Greek debt is close to 160 percent of its gross domestic product and its economy looks set for a fourth straight year of recession.

Stock markets in Europe and the U.S. recouped some of their previous day’s hefty losses Friday, but investors remained skeptical about whether the world’s leading economies can keep the global economy from going over the cliff.

Despite the modest gains Friday, the worries are piling up for investors. The Federal Reserve warned this week that the American economy is in significant difficulty, while there were several downbeat European and Asian economic indicators.

Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State University’s Martin Smith School of Business said the great concern is that if Greece doesn’t make further painful cuts in government spending and ends up defaulting on its debt, the shock waves will rock big banks in Europe.

He said this would cause fearful investors to sell bonds of other heavily indebted countries such as Italy and Spain, countries with much bigger economies.

“The fear in markets is that the problem will spread to bigger economies such as Spain and Italy. Europe would not have the resources to handle a crisis of that magnitude,” Sohn said.

The finance officials at the Washington meeting said they believed that the 17 nations that use the common euro currency were getting the message they needed to move more quickly to reform their surveillance procedures and increase economic support.

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Associated Press writers Martin Crutsinger and Luis Alonso Lugo in Washington and Sarah DiLorenzo in Paris contributed to this report.

Source

September 23, 2011

Big cash reserve powers vision for plant center here

Filed under: Mortgage, management — Tags: , , , — Gogo @ 1:44 am

Since James Carrington landed the lead role at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, the center has seen an infusion of cash, adding to an already impressive endowment. In January, the Danforth Foundation announced its final gift to center

September 16, 2011

Magnitude-6.6 quake shakes Japan

Filed under: Loans, technology — Tags: , , , — Gogo @ 5:20 pm

A magnitude-6.6 earthquake shook the east coast of Japan off Honshu early Saturday morning, the U.S. Geological Survey reported. No tsunami warning was issued, and no damage or casualties were immediately reported.

The 4:26 a.m. Friday (1926 GMT Thursday) quake was shallow, at 22.6 miles (36.3 kilometers) beneath the surface, the USGS said.

The USGS said the quake hit some 67 miles (108 kilometers) southeast of Hachinohe, in Honshu, Japan, and about 356 miles (574 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo, Japan

Source

September 14, 2011

New U.S. patent law to follow Canadian formula

Filed under: online, term — Tags: , , , — Gogo @ 5:08 pm

The United States is about to adopt the Canadian way of granting patents for new inventions, which may not necessarily be a good thing.

That is the opinion of some people from the arcane field of intellectual property rights, which is nowhere near as glamorous as what viewers see on Dragon

September 9, 2011

Clayton boasts pricey commercial office space

Filed under: Uncategorized, money — Tags: , , , — Gogo @ 1:12 am

CLAYTON

September 2, 2011

Thomas Perkins leaves News Corp. board

Filed under: Business, marketing — Tags: , , , — Gogo @ 8:08 pm

News Corp. on Friday said long-time independent board member and venture capitalist Thomas Perkins is leaving its board of directors.

The media conglomerate has been struggling with a phone hacking scandal at one of its British papers.

Perkins resigned from Hewlett-Packard Co.’s board in 2006 after learning that the company had hired private detectives to obtain his phone records. News Corp. didn’t say why he was leaving.

A message seeking from from Perkins was not immediately returned on Friday morning. He is one of the founders of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, a Menlo Park, Calif., venture capital firm that has funded many Silicon Valley companies.

Also leaving News Corp fast cash loans.’s board is Kenneth Cowley, a former News Corp. executive.

Cowley and Perkins will leave after News Corp.’s Oct. 21 annual meeting, the company said.

Standing for election at the meeting will be James Breyer, another venture capitalist and nominee to the board. He is a partner of Accel Partners and serves on the board of Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Dell Inc.

News Corp.’s independent directors, including Perkins, expressed their support for the company’s senior management in a July statement.

Source

August 28, 2011

Chinese refiner Sinopec 1H profit up 12 percent

Filed under: Homes, marketing — Tags: , , , — Gogo @ 11:16 pm

Sinopec, Asia’s largest refiner by capacity, said first-half profit rose 12 percent as higher oil, gas and chemicals revenues helped offset a loss in its refining business.

The company, also known as China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., said Sunday that its net profit in January-June was 41.2 billion yuan ($6.4 billion), or 0.475 yuan (7 U.S. cents) per share, based on international financial reporting standards.

The results were better than analysts had forecast. Profit a year earlier was 36.8 billion yuan.

The company attributed the improvement to higher oil and chemicals prices and better integration of its upstream and downstream businesses. But it said the outlook for coming months was uncertain.

“We are and we will be facing a complicated macro-environment,” said Sinopec’s chairman Fu Chengyu, noting the impact of the economic problems in the United States and Europe on the global recovery.

The 44 percent increase in global crude oil prices in the first half of the year was both a help and a hindrance. While Sinopec’s revenue surged 31.7 percent in January-June to 1.2 trillion yuan ($187.5 billion), buoyed by strong sales of oil, gas and chemicals, higher costs for imported crude oil pulled its refining business into loss no fax cash advance.

China’s controls on fuel prices have left refiners constantly battling losses as global prices have fluctuated.

The company’s refining unit posted a 12.2 billion yuan ($1.9 billion) loss in the first half, compared with profit of 5.7 billion yuan in the same period a year earlier.

With crude oil prices now in retreat, Sinopec’s refineries could see improved results later in the year, Citi analyst Graham Cunningham said in a report Monday.

“We believe there is a strong possibility the government could move ahead with a more liberal pricing mechanism for gasoline and diesel if oil prices moderate and domestic inflation begins to come down,” he said.

Sinopec said its crude oil output fell 5.4 percent to 156.3 million barrels, as maintenance of machinery in its oil fields in Angola forced a sharp cutback in production. Its natural gas output rose 27 percent to 253.88 billion cubic feet (7.19 billion cubic meters).

Source

August 27, 2011

BHP Billiton takes over Petrohawk Energy Corp

Filed under: Business, marketing — Tags: , , , — Gogo @ 3:40 am

BHP Billiton Ltd. announced Friday that it completed its takeover of U.S.-based Petrohawk Energy Corp.

BHP Billiton said the $12.1 billion acquisition follows the previously announced completion of the tender offer.

BHP Billiton petroleum chief executive Michael Yeager said the Petrohawk takeover adds high-quality growth to the company.

“With the completion of this transaction, BHP Billiton Petroleum is on track to deliver compound annual growth in production volumes of 10 percent for the remainder of the decade,” he said.

“We are excited that Petrohawk’s sizable U.S. work force is joining our talented group of professionals and we are ready to grow this business over the long-term,” he added payday loan online.

BHP Billiton announced in July it would buy Petrohawk for $12.1 billion in cash, giving it greater access to U.S. shale gas assets.

The acquisition gives BHP Billiton assets covering about 1 million acres in Texas and Louisiana, with an estimated 2011 production of 158,000 barrels of oil equivalent each day.

“Petrohawk has requested the New York Stock Exchange to take the necessary steps with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to delist Petrohawk’s common stock from the NYSE,” BHP Billiton’s statement said.

Source

August 25, 2011

Ticketmaster deal lets you to sit with Facebook friends at concerts, games

Filed under: management, news — Tags: , , , — Gogo @ 3:04 pm

The world’s largest ticket sellers and the world’s largest social network have created a new interactive venture to let people buy concert and sports tickets near their friends.

Their Facebook friends.

So far, 9,000 events are linked to the interactive seat-selection maps.

“All of our NHL clients are using it. The Air Canada Centre is using it for the Raptors, and we have basic concern configurations done for them,” Kip Levin, executive vice president of E-commerce at Live Nation, told the Star on Thursday.

Live Nation owns Ticketmaster, where North American revenue dropped 11 per cent last year, and new CEO Nathan Hubbard has declared the future lies in social media.

“The Number 1 driver here is just to make the experience better,” said Levin. “A lot of events are social, so it’s valuable to you as a consumer.”

Another driver is the fact that 40 per cent of tickets for some events go unsold on average, often because potential buyers were unaware of the event.

Ticketmaster is hoping concert or game fans will also recommend an upcoming event on Facebook so their friends might know about it and then buy tickets, Levin said.

With this new feature, ticket buyers can tag their seat purchase through their Facebook site. Before they buy a ticket, they can see where other Facebook friends who’ve also tagged their purchases are sitting.

Facebook gets no money from the deal, said Levin, but “our clients have the option of taking the information and extending it into their ad units for sponsored stories.”

Acknowledging Facebook users’ ire over privacy controls, the feature allows a ticket buyer to limit who on Facebook can see their purchase.

The electronically generated information also gives Ticketmaster another level of spurring sales, he said.

“We know you bought Leafs’ tickets in the past, so now we can recommend games that you’ll know you have friends going to.”

About 75 per cent of the people who use Ticketmaster.com also use Facebook, Ticketmaster said on its blog.E

Source

August 20, 2011

Tropical Storm Harvey strengthens, nears Honduras

Filed under: marketing, money — Tags: , , , — Gogo @ 3:48 pm

Tropical Storm Harvey has gained strength in the Atlantic Ocean and is threatening to bring high winds and several inches of rain to parts of Central America.

Tropical storm warnings have been issued for the Bay Islands of Honduras, the coast of Belize and parts of the southeastern coast of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. Watches are in effect for coastal Honduras and Guatemala.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Friday evening that Harvey’s maximum sustained winds are near 50 mph (80 kph). The storm was centered about 130 miles (209 kilometers) east of Isla Roatan, Honduras. It was moving west at 9 mph (14 kph).

Meanwhile, far out in the Pacific, Greg has weakened to a tropical storm and is expected to dissipate in the coming days.

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