December 2010

Maersk acquires Brazilian oil group in $2.4b deal

December 23, 2010

Maersk acquires Brazilian oil group in $2.4b deal

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Austria calls for strengthening euro

December 23, 2010

Austria calls for strengthening euro

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Obama hails New Start Treaty as New Era in Relations with Russia

December 23, 2010

Obama hails New Start Treaty as New Era in Relations with Russia

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BOK: S.Korea’s Inflation to Grow in Mid-3 Pct Range for Prolonged Period

December 23, 2010

BOK: S.Korea’s Inflation to Grow in Mid-3 Pct Range for Prolonged Period

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Greek Parliament Approves Austerity Budget

December 23, 2010

Greek Parliament Approves Austerity Budget

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UN: Export surge to lead Asia-Pacific to growth this year and next

December 23, 2010

UN: Export surge to lead Asia-Pacific to growth this year and next

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Indosat Mega Media deploys Elitecore’s convergent OSS/BSS platform

December 23, 2010

Indosat Mega Media deploys Elitecore’s convergent OSS/BSS platform

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Rovi to acquire Sonic in $720m deal

December 23, 2010

Rovi to acquire Sonic in $720m deal

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Teledyne purchases DALSA in $336 deal

December 23, 2010

Teledyne purchases DALSA in $336 deal

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DeCarta prepares for expansion with new funding round

December 23, 2010

DeCarta prepares for expansion with new funding round

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Supermicro expands double-sided storage(TM) total solutions

December 23, 2010

Supermicro expands double-sided storage(TM) total solutions

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Denmark’s Maersk to hike freight rate in Q1

December 23, 2010

Denmark’s Maersk to hike freight rate in Q1

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Video: U.K. Constructors Build Homes for Rent as Demand Rises

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Poppy Trowbridge reports on an increase in the number of Britons renting homes instead of buying, spurring constructors to build more homes for rental rather than sale.

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General Metals Announces the Members of Its Gold Production Team

December 23, 2010

RENO, NV–(Marketwire – December 23, 2010) –  General Metals Corporation (the “Company”) ( OTCBB : GNMT ) ( FRANKFURT : GMQ ), announces the appointment of Daniel J. Forbush as Chief Executive Officer of the Company, effective December 17, 2010. Mr. Paul Wang has concluded his term as President of the Company. Mr. Forbush will continue to serve as the Chief Financial Officer. 

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Video: Online Holiday Sales Reach $28 Billion; Dating Apps Grow

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Jane King summarizes the top stories this morning on the Bloomberg Business Report. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Online Holiday Sales Reach $28 Billion; Dating Apps Grow

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Jane King summarizes the top stories this morning on the Bloomberg Business Report. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Online Holiday Sales Reach $28 Billion; Dating Apps Grow

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Jane King summarizes the top stories this morning on the Bloomberg Business Report. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Commodity Prices Push Food Manufacturers to Trim Costs

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Olivia Sterns reports on the increase in commodity prices that is pushing food manufacturers to alter ingredients in some products to maintain profitability.

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Video: Commodity Prices Push Food Manufacturers to Trim Costs

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Olivia Sterns reports on the increase in commodity prices that is pushing food manufacturers to alter ingredients in some products to maintain profitability.

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Video: Commodity Prices Push Food Manufacturers to Trim Costs

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Olivia Sterns reports on the increase in commodity prices that is pushing food manufacturers to alter ingredients in some products to maintain profitability.

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Video: Tanzanian Gold Diggers Pay Tragic Dividend Hunting Ore

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Cam Simpson reports on his visit to northern Tanzania where he spoke to villagers searching among waste rock for tiny flecks of gold in a community where where almost half the people live on less than 33 cents a day. Security guards and federal police allegedly have shot and killed people scavenging the gold-laced rocks, according to interviews with 28 people, including victims’ relatives, witnesses, local officials and human-rights workers.

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Video: Tanzanian Gold Diggers Pay Tragic Dividend Hunting Ore

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Cam Simpson reports on his visit to northern Tanzania where he spoke to villagers searching among waste rock for tiny flecks of gold in a community where where almost half the people live on less than 33 cents a day. Security guards and federal police allegedly have shot and killed people scavenging the gold-laced rocks, according to interviews with 28 people, including victims’ relatives, witnesses, local officials and human-rights workers.

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Video: Tanzanian Gold Diggers Pay Tragic Dividend Hunting Ore

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Cam Simpson reports on his visit to northern Tanzania where he spoke to villagers searching among waste rock for tiny flecks of gold in a community where where almost half the people live on less than 33 cents a day. Security guards and federal police allegedly have shot and killed people scavenging the gold-laced rocks, according to interviews with 28 people, including victims’ relatives, witnesses, local officials and human-rights workers.

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Video: Jessop Says Gold Price May Rise on U.S.-China Trade War

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Julian Jessop, chief international economist at Capital Economics Ltd., talks about the outlook for global trade. He speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Jessop Says Gold Price May Rise on U.S.-China Trade War

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Julian Jessop, chief international economist at Capital Economics Ltd., talks about the outlook for global trade. He speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Jessop Says Gold Price May Rise on U.S.-China Trade War

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Julian Jessop, chief international economist at Capital Economics Ltd., talks about the outlook for global trade. He speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Hardy Outlines Saxo Bank’s `Outrageous’ 2011 Predictions

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — John Hardy, a foreign-exchange consultant at Saxo Bank A/S, talks about the bank’s “outrageous” predictions for 2011. He speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Hardy Outlines Saxo Bank’s `Outrageous’ 2011 Predictions

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — John Hardy, a foreign-exchange consultant at Saxo Bank A/S, talks about the bank’s “outrageous” predictions for 2011. He speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Hardy Outlines Saxo Bank’s `Outrageous’ 2011 Predictions

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — John Hardy, a foreign-exchange consultant at Saxo Bank A/S, talks about the bank’s “outrageous” predictions for 2011. He speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Roberts Says U.K. Supermarkets May Benefit From Snowfall

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bryan Roberts, director of retail research at Kantar Retail, talks about U.K. christmas sales. He speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Roberts Says U.K. Supermarkets May Benefit From Snowfall

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bryan Roberts, director of retail research at Kantar Retail, talks about U.K. christmas sales. He speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Von Pfeil Sees Asian Inflation as ‘Cloud On The Horizon’

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Enzio Von Pfeil, chief executive officer at Commercial Economics Asia Ltd., talks about the outlook for Asian economies in 2011. He speaks from Hong Kong with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Dave Johnson: Corporations Don’t Do Bad Things, People Do!

December 23, 2010

Are there “good” companies and “bad” companies? No, there are just companies, and companies don’t have moral characteristics any more than a chair does. Here is something to understand about the things companies “do.” If we LET a company “do” something, all companies HAVE TO do it. The misunderstanding of deregulation is that anything that CAN be done WILL be done. Anything. E. J. Dionne Jr., in Even progressives need CEOs writes that it is, … important to recognize that there is no single business class or corporate model. Obama doesn’t need to coddle CEOs so they will say warm things about him at parties in the Hamptons. He should figure out which parts of the private sector share an interest in reducing the dreadful inequalities that have metastasized over nearly four decades and in creating an economy that produces well-paying jobs. [. . .] Government policies, no matter how often we use the words “free enterprise,” through design or inadvertence, inevitably affect the private economy. Why not choose policies that specifically encourage sectors that create good jobs for Americans? The piece is well-worth reading because it points out that there are plenty of great business leaders who want to help the country address our problems and do better for our people. Mostly we hear today about the worst kind of self-interested, greed-driven business leaders because those seem to be the ones calling the shots for our economy and our political system. This is because we let the them get away with being the worst, so they rise to the top. We need strong regulations and tough laws so the good CEOs can do the right thing, and still remain competitive. Corporations Are A Good Idea Last year in Why I Am Pro-Corporate , I wrote about why corporations are a good thing The things that the corporate legal structure enables people to do are good for society. This is why We, the People decided to enact the laws that created corporations. If we want to be able to accomplish things on a large scale, like build a railroad or airports and airplanes or skyscrapers – or solar power plants to replace coal power plants – we want to enable people to more easily raise the necessary capital and amass the resources needed to get the job done. The legal structure of the corporate form of a business accomplishes this. Corporations are just an idea. They are just a bundle of contracts. They don’t do things, people do. Do Companies “Do”? Do They “Want”? It is the business leaders, not the companies, who make decisions and want things and do things. Companies are just things that don’t “want” any more than they “do.” They don’t “think.” They don’t “decide.” They don’t “respond.” Sentient entities want and do. It is the people who make decisions want and do things. Companies are not sentient entities any more than chairs are. And how we think about this affects the conclusions we reach. One reason we apply these characteristics to companies is because they want us to. (“They want.” There I go do it, too.) When the people who do marketing for companies (is that better?) try to make us think about companies this way, it is called “branding.” They try to make us believe that a company is somehow a sentient entity because then we can think they “are good or bad” and therefore form emotional attachments that cause us to be influenced into buying their products. This is really just a manipulation and a distraction but it affects our brains. It is so important to realize that we are dealing with individual people who run companies because then we can think clearly about how to deal with the problems that they cause. We have to understand the system, and what we are dealing with. We are dealing with people who run companies, not with companies. You can’t be “pro-business” or “anti-business” because business just is . But you can require that people do the right thing. We Need Very Strong Regulations And Tough Laws When we complain about Wal-Mart “doing” something we are misunderstanding the system. The people who run Wal-Mart will do what we don’t stop them from doing. They have to . They don’t necessarily want to. (Though some do.) That is what the system is. We set down rules, and they follow the rules. If something is not against a rule, then they don’t just do whatever it is, they have to . And if they do something that is against the rules but we let them get away with it, then they will continue and others will start doing that, too. Here is why: If Wal-Mart doesn’t then (the executives who run) Target or KMart or another company will, and then Target or KMart will have a competitive advantage, and after a while we’ll all be complaining about Target or KMart instead because Wal-Mart won’t be in the picture. They have to do everything we let them do. That is how the system works, and that is why we have to have strong regulations and tough law. Instead of complaining about the things the business leaders do, we have to make strong regulations and tough laws to stop them and we have to enforce them . Period. We, the People have to use government “interference” and use force and that is our job and our responsibility to each other and to all of the business leaders who want to do the right thing . It Is Not Fair To The Good, Responsible Leaders Not To Let’s say you are running Wal-Mart and you want to pay people more and want to provide good benefits. But the law does not require you to. If you do these things anyway, and your competitor doesn’t, you are putting your company at a disadvantage, and you are risking the livelihood of everyone in the company . Think about the conflict and pressure that creates in good people who want to do good things. They can’t do good things unless we make all the businesses do good things. Companies are forced by competitive pressure to do the things other companies do, whether they “want” to or not. There isn’t really a middle ground. Our system of competition forces companies to do everything they can get away with, and they will do that, and the only thing that will stop them is We, the People actually stopping them. So don’t complain about things companies are doing, and certainly don’t blame the companies. What do you have to do is change the rules. It just isn’t fair to good people who want to do good things to do anything else. We have been letting good people down by listening to and doing the bidding of the likes of the Chamber of Commerce and the others who are fronts for the worst among the business community, who are working to corrupt our business environment and our politics. Most Business Leaders Are Good People Almost all corporate leaders are good, responsible and well-intentioned. For this reason they want and need clear rules that let them operate their companies responsibly. This is why listening to the greedheads who are always complaining about government and regulations is such a mistake. Most business leaders want to do the right thing and good, strong regulations and laws that are enforced let them do that. The deregulation and lack of enforcement that we see all around us today forces them to do wrong things in the name of staying competitive. When you initially deregulate, good corporate leaders will try to be responsible and they will have every intent of doing so. They will live up to their promises. But along will come other corporate leaders who just want to make money for their companies,and more to the point, for themselves. They will do whatever we let them do to accomplish that. They will push up to and a bit beyond the exact wording of what they think they can get away with. The “good” CEOs will be at a disadvantage and will be forced to do the same. Clear And Strong Regulations When I ran a company I had a rule for agreements – get everything on paper and signed because the people talking about things today on both sides might get in a car wreck, or move to another company or forget or whatever and all that is left is the agreement and not the intent of the agreement. Similarly, we need to clearly lay out every little part of what can and cannot be done because that is what people will do in the end. Business leaders want and need a clear playing field with rules that are strong enough to enable them to do the right thing and remain competitive. Let’s help them out. This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture . I am a Fellow with CAF. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

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Holiday Shoppers Sprint To End; Retail Revenue Up

December 23, 2010

NEW YORK — Holiday shoppers are racing to the end of the season at a more feverish pace this year, with retail revenue up 5.5 percent during the last weekend before Christmas. The figure, released by ShopperTrak on Wednesday, is a drastic improvement from the same weekend last year, when revenue dropped 6.2 percent because a big East Coast snowstorm closed malls and kept shoppers at home. This year’s improvement is especially encouraging for retailers, for whom a big weekend all but sealed a shopping season of healthy revenue gains. ShopperTrak reported shoppers spent $18.83 billion Dec. 17-19. That includes $7.58 billion spent on what retailers call “Super Saturday” – the Saturday before Christmas. The number of shoppers rose 3 percent over the weekend before Christmas last year. ShopperTrak expects retail spending to rise 4 percent for the holiday season. It fell 0.4 percent during the 2009 season. Anything over 4 percent is considered a healthy gain. The final days leading up to Christmas are important for retailers. Some do a third of their annual business during the season. The final countdown to Christmas is especially important. ShopperTrak estimates that the 10 days before Christmas usually make up 31 percent to 34 percent of holiday-season retail revenue. Consumers appeared to be in the mood to hit just one location for their shopping needs, with Thomson Reuters reporting that traffic at malls was higher on Super Saturday than a year ago. But ShopperTrak anticipates this Thursday will likely edge out Super Saturday to become the second-biggest sales day this season behind Black Friday, as last-minute shoppers scramble to pick up gifts. Black Friday sales were $10.69 billion, according to ShopperTrak. The Walking Co. store at Circle Centre Mall in downtown Indianapolis has seen a steady flow of customers. “We’re at least breaking even with where we were last year, if not better,” manager Robert Stapleton said. Recent data from MasterCard Advisors’ SpendingPulse, which tracks spending across all transactions including cash, shows Americans were spending more on clothing, luxury goods and even furniture during the period from Oct. 31 through Saturday. Online spending has also been strong. As of Friday, shoppers have spent $27.46 billion online since Nov. 1, up 12 percent from a year ago, according to research firm comScore Inc. Improved spending is also a sign that the economy may be regaining its footing. The Commerce Department reported earlier this month that November retail sales rose 0.8 percent, marking the fifth straight monthly gain. Department stores led the way with a 2.8 percent gain, the biggest for this category since a 3 percent increase in November 2008. Retailers are expected to have a strong December, with Thomson Reuters predicting that revenue at stores open at least a year will be up 3.6 percent on average for the month. Discount stores like Target Corp. and BJ’s Wholesale Club Inc. are expected to do well, along with teen clothing retailers like Abercrombie & Fitch Co. and Zumiez Inc. This figure is a key gauge of a retailer’s health because it measures results at existing stores instead of newly opened ones. ___ AP Business Writer Tom Murphy contributed to this story from Indianapolis.

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U.S. Federal Court Orders Two Real Estate Companies to Pay CoStar Group $1.1 Million in Damages for Illegal Password-Sharing

December 23, 2010

Think illegally sharing passwords to online services is worth the risk? A landmark verdict handed down this week by a federal court that awarded more than $1.1 million in damages for illegally sharing passwords may convince you otherwise. CoStar Group, Inc. (Nasdaq: CSGP) announced a significant legal victory in breaking up a multi-state, multi-defendant password-sharing network that involved companies in Orange County, California, Houston, Texas…

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To Small To Save: How The Fed Let Community Banks Fail

December 23, 2010

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve Board, chastised for regulatory inaction that contributed to the subprime mortgage meltdown, also missed a chance to prevent much of the financial chaos ravaging hundreds of small- and mid-sized banks.

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Video: Bronzo Says Confidence Building in Sustainable Recovery

December 23, 2010

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — Mark Bronzo, who helps manage about $21 billion at Security Global Investors, talks about the outlook for equities and the U.S. economy. Branzo talks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Rovit Says Sure-Fit Sales Rising at `Double-Digit’ Pace

December 23, 2010

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — Hugh Rovit, chief executive officer at Sure-Fit Inc., talks about the company’s performance. Rovit also discusses Sure-Fit’s marketing strategy and product lines. He talks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Groenewegen Says Cornering of Copper Could Be `Problem’

December 23, 2010

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — Gijsbert Groenewegen, founder of Silver Arrow Capital Management, talks about the outlook for commodities including copper and gold. Groenewegen, speaking with Matt Miller and Emily Chang on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart,” says a cornering of the copper market could be a “huge problem.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: U.S. Stocks Rally as S&P 500 Rises to Two-Year High

December 23, 2010

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Deborah Kostroun reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks gained, sending the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index higher for a fifth day, as government data showed the economy grew last quarter at a faster pace than previously estimated. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks.(Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Canaccord’s Adam Cutler Likes Vivus, Orexigen Stocks

December 22, 2010

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — Adam Cutler, an analyst with Canaccord Genuity, talks about the outlook for weight loss drugs made by Arena Pharmaceuticals Inc., Vivus Inc. and Orexigen Therapeutics Inc. He speaks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Saluzzi Says U.S. Stocks in `Short-Term Trading Market’

December 22, 2010

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — Joseph Saluzzi, co-head of equity trading at Themis Trading LLC, and Dan Deming, a trader at Stutland Equities LLC, talk about the outlook for the U.S. stock market. They speak with Emily Chang and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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WATCH: New Car Runs On Air

December 22, 2010

There are cars that run on gas, electricity, vegetable oil, even human waste, and now there is a car that runs on air. The AirPod has been created in the UK and runs on compressed air. This CNN video demonstrates how the three-wheeled, two door, steering wheel-free vehicle zips around. (It is also oddly reminiscent of a car from “The Jetsons,” but that was probably not planned.) Compared to a standard car, the AirPod emits a fraction of the pollution, can reach up to 50 mph, and will cost around $10,000 . Motor Development International hopes that the AirPod will be the future of urban transportation. WATCH this car run on air:

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Steven Bulwa: How Much Can a Business Grow? The Limitations of a Finite Economy

December 22, 2010

While I congratulate Mark Zuckerberg on being named Time ‘s person of the year it makes me wonder whether we have taken our social networking euphoria to bubble extremes. The stock market is salivating over a Facebook IPO and from what I read the current valuation is somewhere north of $43 billion . Speculation is that Facebook’s current year revenues are around $2 billion . Google’s (GOOG) market valuation is almost five times that at $190 billion and current year revenue is about $22 billion . These two Internet behemoths sport a combined market valuation of $230 billion on $23 billion in revenue. There have been times in history when the U.S. stock market traded at a Price to Earnings below 10, less than these companies’ combined Price to Sales. That is a rather shocking comparison. Unreal Expectations Last week, Wedbush Morgan analyst Lou Kerner raised his rating on Google to Outperform from Neutral and set a $750/share price target for the company’s shares , saying: We are raising our rating and price target on Google based on our belief that mobile and social secular trends are accelerating the growth of time spent online and the growth of global searches. Coupled with the increasing global domination of Android, strong moves in local, rapid market share gains by the Chrome browser, and the potential of Chrome OS, we believe Google is remarkably well positioned to benefit from the major secular trend of our times — the digitization of human life. The problem with this thesis is that even as we “digitize” our lives, the population’s consumption patterns remain finite. Growth is constrained by the absolute spending power of businesses and consumers. Even if the form of consumption shifts there are still limits on the value attainable. While the market gets creative with new ways to justify higher valuations, remember “price per click” from the first internet bubble, as a company’s size increases, growth becomes more difficult. In a recent blog post, author and former venture capitalist Peter Sims talks about the challenges Google faces not to suffer the same fate as every other dominant tech company before it : The company has run out of easy growth opportunities and must now find big chunks of new revenue. With the core search business maturing, Google increasingly seems to increasingly feel the need to make some “big bets.” That is a problem that maturing companies face that CEOs call “the tyranny of large numbers.” Great Companies/Bad Stocks There is no doubt both Google and Facebook are fantastic and wildly innovative companies that have changed consumers’ lives and consumption patterns. What they have not done is changed the rules of investing or altered the limitations posed by a finite economy. Both companies carry massive and historically unprecedented valuations only witnessed in previous stock market bubbles. During the internet bubble of 2000, InfoSpace (INSP) stock traded for $1300, it now fetches $8/share. So while we take a moment to toast Zuckerberg’s accomplishments, I wonder if it marks the top of the current iteration of the Internet stock bubble.

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Video: Behravesh Says Housing in `Doldrums’, Consumer Improving

December 22, 2010

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Inc, talks about the outlook for housing and the U.S. economy. Behravesh talks with Mark Crumpton on Bloomberg Television’s “Bottom Line.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Behravesh Says Housing in `Doldrums’, Consumer Improving

December 22, 2010

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Inc, talks about the outlook for housing and the U.S. economy. Behravesh talks with Mark Crumpton on Bloomberg Television’s “Bottom Line.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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