May 2011

Business Challenging Funds Loan Scenarios » arkhamcity.org

May 29, 2011

Most standard commercial loans have quite stringent criteria for acceptable credit score scores by the guarantors for a industrial real estate loan . Hard funds loans are significantly more versatile and lower credit score scores are …

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Lockheed Martin Hit By Cyber Attack

May 29, 2011

WASHINGTON — Hackers launched a “significant and tenacious” cyber attack on Lockheed Martin, a major defense contractor holding highly sensitive information, but its secrets remained safe, the company said Saturday. Lockheed Martin, the Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon confirmed that the contractor’s information systems had come under attack. Lt. Col. April Cunningham, speaking for the Defense Department, said the impact on the Pentagon “is minimal and we don’t expect any adverse effect.” Still, the concerted attempt to breach the contractor’s systems underscored the risk to the nation’s critical defense data. Chris Ortman, Homeland Security spokesman, said his agency and the Pentagon were working with the company to determine the breadth of the attack and “provide recommendations to mitigate further risk.” Lockheed Martin said in a statement that it detected the May 21 attack “almost immediately” and took countermeasures. As a result, “our systems remain secure; no customer, program or employee personal data has been compromised.” The company’s security team is still working to restore employee access to the targeted network. Neither Lockheed Martin nor the federal agencies revealed specifics of the attack. ___ AP writer Jennifer Malloy contributed to this report from Los Angeles.

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Commercial Real Estate Loan Prices Increase in February, Business …

May 29, 2011

BOSTON–( BUSINESS WIRE )–The aggregate value of Commercial Real Estate ( CRE ) loans priced by DebtX that collateralize CMBS increased to 79.9% as of February 28, 2011 from 79.8%б as of January 31, 2011. …

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Commercial Real Estate Loan Prices Rise in April, RBC STUDENT …

May 29, 2011

(Source: Business Wire) – The aggregate value of Commercial Real Estate ( CRE ) loans priced by DebtX that collateralize CMBS increased to 80.9% as of April 29, 2011 from 79.8%as of March 31, 2011. Loan values were 76.4% …

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Don McNay: What to consider when offered a severance package

May 29, 2011

In the end there is once dance you’ll do alone -Jackson Browne In 1991, the IBM plant in Lexington, Ky. became Lexmark. IBM offered employee severance packages. People could take the package or take a chance that Lexmark would keep them on. Several IBM employees came to me for advice. Some took the package and others did not. I concluded that taking a package is an individual decision. There are no set guidelines. Many of the IBM employees were engineers or had heavy statistical backgrounds. They wanted an answer they could quantify. They sought me to calculate the present value of their package. After 30 seconds crunching the numbers, I asked the essential question: What are you doing to do with the rest of your life? Some had well thought out plans. They wanted to do charity work or start a second career. Others didn’t. Working at IBM was not just a job, it was a lifestyle. They had never thought about life outside the corporation. IBM employees were like a large family. They had generous benefits and perks. Most socialized with other IBM employees. Once someone started at IBM, they generally stayed for life. The idea of leaving IBM was painful. Companies who offer severance packages are generally established companies who sold the concept of lifetime employment concept. I’ve found that people leaving old line companies, even with a severance package, were more bitter than those where companies treat employees like interchangeable parts. If you work at a company with high employee turnover, getting fired is not a total surprise. People at a company like IBM never thought about working somewhere else. Many people who are married to their jobs. They don’t have hobbies or outside interests. Those people need to forget about a severance package and stay put. An engineer who came to my office with many boxes of data, that he brought on a moving van dolly. He had spent hours trying to quantify his decision. Before I started looking at his boxes, I asked some questions . Did he like his job? Yes. Did they want him at the new company? Yes. Would he enjoy retirement? No. Could he find a similar job? Not in this part of the country. Was moving an option? No. I told him to skip the number crunching. . He needed to stay where he was. He was stunned. He kept wanting me to look at his boxes. I wouldn’t look at his data. I told him it was irrelevant. After a while, my words sunk in. He worked happily for another decade. Economic decisions shouldn’t be ignored. Some severance packages are lucrative and offered on a one time basis. Financial considerations are one part of the package, not the whole package. The health of the company and industry are important factors to consider. I’ve seen people pass up a buyout and have their company go down a few years later. People often think their own industry is healthier than it is. It is good to get an objective opinion. There are economic factors I look for in a plan. First is lifetime income. It’s easier to leave if your lifetime income is secured. A second factor is health insurance. Larger companies have better benefits than what people can get on their own, especially if people have complicated medical conditions. I warn people getting lump sum packages not to make any sudden or stupid financial decisions. When severance plans are offered, I see hucksters come running, pitching everything from financial products to fast food franchises. The best advice is to take a deep breath. Talk, really talk, with your family, your bosses, your co-workers and the stakeholders in your decision. Get some outside and impartial advice. Make a decision based on information and logic, not on fear or emotion. It’s one of the most important decisions of your life. Even with good information, it is a decision you will ultimately make alone. Don McNay, CLU, ChFC, MSFS, CSSC is Chairman of the Board for McNay Settlement Group in Richmond, Ky. You can write to him at don@donmcnay.com or read his award winning column at www.donmcnay.com

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Addleshaws partner resigns amid expenses saga | News | The Lawyer

May 29, 2011

Commercial real estate partner Mark Gilbert resigned from Addleshaws’ LLP on 10 May following an internal investigation into alleged discrepancies in the equity partner’s claims. Gilbert is now a consultant at …

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Celamin Holdings NL (ASX:CNL) Signed Earn-in Agreement For Oued El Kebir Project

May 29, 2011

Celamin Holdings NL (ASX:CNL) Signed Earn-in Agreement For Oued El Kebir Project

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Celamin Holdings NL (ASX:CNL) Signed Earn-in Agreement For Oued El Kebir Project

May 29, 2011

Celamin Holdings NL (ASX:CNL) Signed Earn-in Agreement For Oued El Kebir Project

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Sino Gas And Energy Holdings Limited (ASX:SEH) Chairman Address At Annual General Meeting

May 29, 2011

Sino Gas And Energy Holdings Limited (ASX:SEH) Chairman Address At Annual General Meeting

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Sino Gas And Energy Holdings Limited (ASX:SEH) Chairman Address At Annual General Meeting

May 29, 2011

Sino Gas And Energy Holdings Limited (ASX:SEH) Chairman Address At Annual General Meeting

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Sino Gas And Energy Holdings Limited (ASX:SEH) Chairman Address At Annual General Meeting

May 29, 2011

Sino Gas And Energy Holdings Limited (ASX:SEH) Chairman Address At Annual General Meeting

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Rum Jungle Resources Limited (ASX:RUM) Ammaroo Phosphate Drilling Update

May 29, 2011

Rum Jungle Resources Limited (ASX:RUM) Ammaroo Phosphate Drilling Update

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Rum Jungle Resources Limited (ASX:RUM) Ammaroo Phosphate Drilling Update

May 29, 2011

Rum Jungle Resources Limited (ASX:RUM) Ammaroo Phosphate Drilling Update

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Rum Jungle Resources Limited (ASX:RUM) Ammaroo Phosphate Drilling Update

May 29, 2011

Rum Jungle Resources Limited (ASX:RUM) Ammaroo Phosphate Drilling Update

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NZ Trade Surplus Widens to Record, Improves Outlook on Productivity and Exports

May 29, 2011

NZ Trade Surplus Widens to Record, Improves Outlook on Productivity and Exports

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NZ Trade Surplus Widens to Record, Improves Outlook on Productivity and Exports

May 29, 2011

NZ Trade Surplus Widens to Record, Improves Outlook on Productivity and Exports

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NZ Trade Surplus Widens to Record, Improves Outlook on Productivity and Exports

May 29, 2011

NZ Trade Surplus Widens to Record, Improves Outlook on Productivity and Exports

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China’s industrial businesses’ profits up 29.7%

May 29, 2011

China’s industrial businesses’ profits up 29.7%

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US April’s consumer spending up

May 29, 2011

US April’s consumer spending up

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Resourcehouse launches USD3.6b IPO

May 29, 2011

Resourcehouse launches USD3.6b IPO

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China Southern to get 1st Boeing 787 Dreamliner

May 29, 2011

China Southern to get 1st Boeing 787 Dreamliner

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Japan’s consumer prices up 0.6%

May 29, 2011

Japan’s consumer prices up 0.6%

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Russia to lift the ban on grain export

May 29, 2011

Russia to lift the ban on grain export

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India- BJP in damage control mode as Sushma-Jaitley rift comes to the fore

May 29, 2011

India- BJP in damage control mode as Sushma-Jaitley rift comes to the fore

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India- Sighting of wild beasts now a thing of the past

May 29, 2011

India- Sighting of wild beasts now a thing of the past

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India- Hazare targets Modi govt

May 29, 2011

India- Hazare targets Modi govt

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USA- Harvard honours Ela Bhatt

May 29, 2011

USA- Harvard honours Ela Bhatt

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Pakistan- Mumbai attacks: ATC reserves verdict on judicial panel

May 29, 2011

Pakistan- Mumbai attacks: ATC reserves verdict on judicial panel

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Lockheed Martin under hack attack

May 29, 2011

Lockheed Martin under hack attack

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India advises its nationals to leave Yemen

May 29, 2011

India advises its nationals to leave Yemen

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Hoenig insists on Fed to raise interest rates

May 29, 2011

Hoenig insists on Fed to raise interest rates

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German May inflation rate down to 2.4%

May 29, 2011

German May inflation rate down to 2.4%

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India- Naidu bid to promote son irks Harikrishna

May 29, 2011

India- Naidu bid to promote son irks Harikrishna

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India- Court probes Kerala minister in new sexual harassment case

May 29, 2011

India- Court probes Kerala minister in new sexual harassment case

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Ian Fletcher: Why Johnny Can’t Innovate: The American Economy’s Most Surprising Deficit

May 28, 2011

I argued in a previous article why, despite America’s current obsession with government budget issues, the real key to bringing back our economy lies in a) fixing our trade deficit and b) restoring our capacity for innovation. Although the former problem has now grabbed significant public attention, most Americans seem to think that our national capacity for innovation is healthy and without problems. After all, we’re the home of Silicon Valley. So things must be going great, right? Unfortunately, no, and for the same reason that, as I explained elsewhere, our manufacturing sector isn’t healthy. While it’s true that there’s an enormous amount of innovation (and manufacturing) going on in this country, “enormous” is not, in and of itself, an adequate quantity. To figure out how much innovation (or manufacturing) is enough for America, the quantity must be measured against how much we need to maintain our living standard . And we are, in reality, falling short in both areas. As long as our manufacturing output is so small that we must run a trade deficit with foreign nations in order to satisfy our consumption desires, we aren’t manufacturing enough . As long as our innovation output is so small that American industry can’t keep pace with its foreign rivals and continues to inexorably surrender market share and technological superiority to them, we aren’t innovating enough. Yes, it’s nice that we have iPhones and other innovative American products. But for our economy to be truly healthy, we would have to be exhibiting that level of innovation in products across the board . Our cars would have to be as innovative as our iPhones. And our consumer electronics. And all the other by-no-means-low-tech products that increasingly aren’t even made in this country. Having a few superstar sectors in our economy simply isn’t enough to deliver the living standard that Americans want. To deliver this, we need an economy in which dozens of major metropolitan areas have the same sheen of prosperity, productivity, innovation and all-round economic sophistication that the San Francisco Bay Area has. That’s the vision to keep in your mind. Detroit as San Francisco. People forget how small Silicon Valley really is. According to the Labor Department, it only employs 225,000 people — in a U.S. economy with a labor force of 238 million . Unfortunately, the media in this country give so much excess attention to it — and the other fancy sectors of our economy, like Hollywood and Wall Street — that people mistakenly think it, and industries like it dominate the U.S. economy. Nice work if you can get it, but they don’t. What would it take to restore innovation to those sectors of the American economy that are deficient in it? The best analysis of this problem I know is by Gregory Tassey, the chief economist of the National Institute of Standards and Technologies, America’s only serious civilian industrial policy agency. In his book The Technology Imperative , and also in his essay , “Rationales and Mechanisms For Revitalizing U.S. Manufacturing R&D Strategies,” he argues that the key problem for U.S. innovation is what he calls the “valley of death” between pure science and commercialization. America remains strong (though in relative decline, compared to other nations) in pure science. We remain good at commercializing discoveries and inventions that can be sold for a profit. But we are weak at the vast area of research that falls between these two extremes. Before a new scientific discovery can reach fruition in actual products sold to customers, it must pass through many stages of research. And, crucially, much of this research cannot itself be turned to profit. But profiting from new discoveries is impossible unless this research is done. Because it is unprofitable, companies won’t, as a rule, engage in enough of this intermediate research. Therefore an economy that relies wholly upon private profit to finance innovation will fall short. This research isn’t academic science either, so don’t expect the professors to fill in. One way to look at this research is to call it useful but unpatentable ideas. Anybody who has ever talked to creative engineers, or patent lawyers, knows that a great many important ideas cannot be patented. Some are more discoveries than inventions. Others are too generic, or too easy to copy. Others consist simply in the painful process of trying and ruling out a hundred ways to implement some new fundamental principle in order to find the one or two ways that have a future. Other ideas are not the sort of things for which patents would be even relevant. In their case, one would ideally capture their value by means of proprietary technologies, first-mover advantage, or other commercial methods. But, for any of a dozen different reasons, one cannot. So if you do this research, somebody else can harvest the profits as easily as you can. The problem is a kind of “tragedy of the commons” applied to ideas. Historically, the only companies that engaged in this sort of research were very large companies with monopoly or quasi-monopoly power over their ultimate product markets: companies like the old AT&T with its Bell Labs, the old IBM with its Watson Laboratory, the old RCA with its Sarnoff Research Center, or the old Xerox with its Palo Alto Research Center. Because of their oligopolistic power, they were assured of a) capturing the value of whatever they discover, rather than having it swiped by a competitor, and b) bringing in enough money, over a long-enough time frame, to pay for expensive laboratories that may take years to produce results. There are still a few companies like this around, but not nearly enough to bridge the valley of death to the extent we need. So government has a legitimate role. This fact, of course, drives laissez-faire ideologues crazy. But it was recognized as far back as founding father Alexander Hamilton, whose Report on Manufactures , submitted to Congress in 1791, was partly about this very topic. (What constitutes high technology changes over time, but technological innovation has been the key to economic growth since the dawn of the industrial revolution.) During the Cold War, hundreds of billions of dollars, from the jet plane to the Internet, went into this sort of research. But because it was justified in terms of national security, not industrial innovation per se , we never really reached a solid understanding of what we was doing. So we never properly institutionalized it as a policy with an economic purpose. As a result, our efforts today in this area are pathetically small. For example, the Federal government’s Manufacturing Extension Partnership maintains a network of centers in every state designed to help American manufacturers adopt innovative technologies. One evaluation found that it generated $1.3 billion a year in cost savings for manufacturers and $6.25 billion in increased or retained sales — all for an annual federal outlay of only $89 million. A single Boeing 747 costs four times that. Another good but underfunded program is the Technology Innovation Program . An audit by the respected National Academy of Sciences vindicated its claim to generate economic benefits far exceeding its cost. One single $5.5 million grant, for example, seeded development of the small disk drive industry, which enabled creation of the iPod, the iPhone, TiVo and the Xbox. TIP’s 2012 projected budget? $75 million. Our rivals are far ahead of us in this game. Germany, where factory wages are now higher, and unemployment lower, than here, spends roughly two billion dollars a year on its Fraunhofer Gesellschaft . They even have a substantial presence in this country, to harvest useful American ideas for commercialization in Germany! To get our economy back on track, we need to stop dreaming that innovation is purely a self-financing private-sector game and start paying for the innovation we need. Either that, or we’re not going to get the economy we want.

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Michael Port: Innovtion Starts With You

May 28, 2011

Every successful entrepreneur, indeed every successful person, is an innovator. You might be saying to yourself, “Not me, I’ll never invent the light bulb. Don’t confuse the idea of innovation with the idea of invention. An innovator can change perspective and adopt new habits. Innovation is changing the way you do and see things. It is asking yourself, “How will I view my business differently today than I did yesterday?” For many people, innovation can be overwhelming. We can feel trapped by our business, stuck in habits, practices, and perspectives. “I work with clients one at a time,” you might think. The idea of creating and licensing intellectual property may seem beyond your reach. You feel safe with your present practices. I know. I’ve been there. I still am, because it’s not a one-shot deal. You can’t innovate and be done with it. Innovation, building a bigger, better business, is an organic process, iterative and ongoing. Every time you solve a problem or meet a challenge, a new one presents itself. Innovation is a process of creation, maintenance, and destruction followed by re-creation and so on. It’s very rare to be able to dust off your hands and say, “Now then, I’m done.” What does it really mean to innovate? Divesting the busywork that takes up too much of your time, which would be better spent with your clients on your “real” work — that’s innovating. Figuring out how to outsource the mechanisms for keeping in touch with clients through regular mailings or other contact — that’s innovating. Implementing new record-keeping systems — that’s innovating. Finding little ways to alleviate annoyances — that’s innovating. Restructuring your business so it’s built for growth, while at the same time lightening your load — that’s innovating. My dear friend, Hal Macomber , whose insight on innovation and doing projects has been invaluable to me, likes to use the orange juice carton example to illustrate this cycle of innovation. For a long time, orange juice was sold in cardboard cartons with cardboard spouts. But orange juice in this form (i.e., not frozen concentrate) didn’t last very long. So something had to be done to give the orange juice longer shelf life. Pasteurization turned out to be the answer, which was great, except for one thing: Orange juice (which is a long-lasting acid liquid) degraded the cardboard spout. One challenge solved, another presented. Something had to be done, or the paperboard industry couldn’t supply cartons to the orange juice producers anymore.The next innovation was the plastic spout on the cardboard juice container. Great, again. Of course, the plastic spout likely brought its own new challenges, but we won’t get into those. As each new hurdle is overcome, another presents itself. And the cycle repeats again and again. Take the plunge and become an innovator. It’s not nearly as daunting as it seems. In fact, it can and should be exhilarating, which is not to say it won’t be hard work — it will be, but that’s okay because in the end you’ll be experiencing the deep sense of purpose that comes from the pursuit of mastery.

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Grocery Store Workers Go On Hunger Strike Over Stagnant Wages

May 28, 2011

All night long, Jose Garcia performs his job while surrounded by food — a painful bit of irony, he says. The 52-year-old Mexican immigrant works the overnight shift cleaning floors inside a Cub Foods store in Minneapolis, Minn., a job he’s mostly appreciated for the nine years he’s held it down. But lately, waxing aisle after aisle filled with groceries has simply reminded him of how little he has. Despite his long tenure with the same cleaning company, Garcia says he earns a wage of $9 an hour — more or less the same rate he was making when he started cleaning floors back in 2002. Taking inflation into account, his salary has effectively gone down since he started working on the cleaning crew. There are times when he can’t afford as much food as he’d like. He says it pains him to see workers at the store throw out unsold perishables like roasted chicken at the end of the night. “It’s perfectly good food,” Garcia says through a translator. In the past, when he’s asked if he can take the food home, he says he’s been told that under-the-table giveaways are against store rules. Sometimes he resorts to visiting the charitable food pantries around town. The irony there doesn’t escape him, either: Grocery stores like the one where he works often donate the very food that goes to those pantries and, eventually, to the needy like himself. Like a lot of the workers who clean retail and food stores these days, Garcia doesn’t work directly for the store he cleans. He’s employed by a company called Carlson Building Maintenance, which has a contract to wax and buff the floors inside Cub Foods stores, a chain concentrated in Minnesota. Cub is owned by Supervalu, a grocery conglomerate that also has Acme, Albertsons and Shoppers among its many holdings . Although they had once been decent-paying union jobs, a lot of the cleaning and other grunt work in grocery and retail stores now gets farmed out to third-party contractors like Carlson. Sometimes there are even sub-contractors beneath the contractors. If these companies can’t get the job done at a certain price point, the retailer will simply find another company that will. The system puts downward wage pressures on bottom-rung workers like Garcia. If someone can work at the same job for roughly a decade and not see a raise, Garcia wonders, then what kind of promise does American employment actually hold? “I started out working thinking I would make more money at some point,” says Garcia. “As the years have gone by, instead of things getting better, things have gotten worse.” Despite the stagnant pay, he says his workload has managed to increase. Whereas three workers used to clean the floors of a store, Garcia says two workers are now expected to complete the same task. He says he often has to work through breaks to get the job done. Although he has no children, Garcia says he has a mother and a wheelchair-bound sister to look after back in Mexico, where he tries to send $300 or $400 each month. He declined to say whether he’s documented to work here. Feeling desperate, Garcia and a former coworker are now in the midst of a hunger strike, posting up at an encampment in Minneapolis to bring attention to their plight. The goal of organizers and local clergy is to bring Cub Foods management to the bargaining table to negotiate pay. Veronica Mendez, one of the organizers, said most grocery-store cleaners in the area are earning around $7.50 or $8 an hour and doing more work than they did just a few years ago. “The reason is, these big stores are pitting the cleaning services against one another to get the lowest cost,” Mendez said. “The cleaning workers at those stores are the ones who pay.” With other cleaning jobs that have several layers of sub-contracting, “there are workers who end up not getting paid at all. … Retail cleaning is in a downward spiral, and it’s going from bad to worse.” The Minneapolis City Council has taken notice of the workers’ plight. It passed a resolution on Friday saying that “retail cleaning workers have seen good-paying jobs of ten to eleven dollars per hour deteriorate into jobs barely paying minimum wage over the last ten years.” Even though the workers are actually employed by Carlson, they tend to blame Cub Foods and Supervalu for the squeeze they feel. But the folks at Supervalu say the workers’ beef is with Carlson, not them. “The people who clean the floors are employed by an outside company,” said Mike Siemienas, a Supervalu spokesman. “We ensure that the company we contract with follows all laws. Other retailers in the Twin Cities area use third-party floor-cleaning companies. It’s a very common practice.” Siemienas referred any question on workers’ wages to Carlson. Amy Rotenberg, a spokeswoman for Carlson, says the company offers fair and competitive wages, given the current job-market woes. “This is a very challenging economy and a very tight market, and these are entry-level, unskilled jobs,” Rotenberg says. “And, frankly, if we want to get into a discussion of what’s a living wage, that’s for Congress to decide and not us as private businesses.” Rotenberg says the company has managed to avoid laying off workers despite the recession and slow economic recovery. Mario Colloly Torres, another hunger striker, says he worked under Carlson in another store for about a year and a half until he was recently fired. (Torres says he was fired for organizing workers; Rotenberg says he was fired for cause.) “We don’t have enough money to put food on the table,” Torres says. “The situation is getting worse.” He has two daughters back home in Mexico but he’s no longer sure if he can afford to get them good educations. Garcia isn’t sure if there’s any other work he can do. He doesn’t speak much English, and he doesn’t have qualifications for much beyond manual labor. Besides, the jobs that have been added during a sluggish recovery have tended to be lower-paying retail jobs anyway — the kind of gig that Garcia no longer believes can go anywhere. A report released earlier this year by the National Employment Law Project found that lower-wage industries accounted for half of the job growth during the first year of the post-recession rebound. “For those seeking to move up in the labor market,” the report noted, “the current distribution of job opportunities has deteriorated.” The situation has Garcia wondering if maybe he should retreat home, where he’d at least be able to spend time with his family. “I’m considering going back to Mexico next year,” says Garcia. “I’m older now. There aren’t that many opportunities for me anymore.”

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‘From The Brink Of Extinction’

May 28, 2011

WASHINGTON — Vice President Joe Biden on Saturday credited the Obama administration’s intervention for the American auto industry’s recovery from “the brink of extinction” and pointed to Chrysler’s early repayment of the federal loan that saved it from disaster. “This announcement came six years ahead of schedule – and just two years after Chrysler Corp. emerged from bankruptcy,” Biden said in the administration’s weekly radio and Internet address. “It’s a sign of what’s happening throughout the American automobile industry.” Biden also said that General Motors, which went through bankruptcy and has come back strong, announced in the past week that its Detroit Hamtramck factory in Michigan will run three shifts for the first time in its 26-year history. “You know, that’s 2,500 more good, paying jobs,” he said. Biden, who provided the weekly address because President Barack Obama was traveling in Europe, credited the efforts of the Obama administration for the resurgence of the auto industry through its assistance. “Because of what we did, the auto industry is rising again,” Biden said. “Manufacturing is coming back. And our economy is recovering and it’s gaining traction.” Obama will visit a Chrysler plant in Toledo, Ohio, next Friday to discuss the carmaker’s recovery. Chrysler announced Tuesday the repayment of $5.9 billion in U.S. loans and $1.7 billion in loans from the governments of Canada and Ontario. It covers most of the federal bailout money that saved the company after it nearly ran out of cash in 2009 and went through a government-led bankruptcy. GM and Chrysler were on the verge of collapse in the final days of the Bush administration after Congress failed to approve an emergency loan package. The Bush administration gave the companies $17.4 billion in loans and required them to develop a restructuring plan by mid-February 2009. Obama’s administration pumped billions more into the carmakers later that spring but won concessions from industry stakeholders, allowing them to push GM and Chrysler through bankruptcy court in the summer of 2009. The Republicans’ weekly address focused on the party’s plan to create jobs. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., said boosting employment requires cutting taxes, reducing regulations, completing bogged-down trade agreements with several countries and expanding energy exploration in the United States. “All of these elements will help encourage growth and long-term economic stability,” Cantor said. “By putting in place policies that encourage businesses to expand, innovators to innovate and allows leaders to lead, we will not only begin to put our budget on a path to balance, but we’ll get Americans working again.” ___ Online Array Array

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Greece Could Make Big Money By Selling State Assets: ECB

May 28, 2011

ATHENS/BERLIN (Angeliki Koutantou and Annika Breidthardt) – Greece could raise up to six times more than planned by selling state assets, an ECB policymaker said, as the country’s leader renewed efforts to forge a political consensus on new austerity measures. Echoing earlier views from the IMF, European Central Bank Board member Juergen Stark said on Saturday that Greece’s privatization program was nowhere near ambitious enough. The program — part of a broader package of fiscal reforms to help stave off fiscal meltdown — is intended to raise 50 billion euros by 2015 “The Greek government has shares in listed companies, it owns real estate. Experts estimate the sales potential (from privatizations) at up to 300 billion euros ($429.5 billion),” Stark told German newspaper Welt am Sonntag. The ailing euro zone state, whose debt burden stands at around 330 billion euros, needs to garner support from opposition parties for fiscal reforms before the European Union and International Monetary Fund will free up more payments from a bailout package. EU officials have asked Athens to step up privatizations urgently and suggested setting up a trustee institution to help oversee the process, similar to the body that privatized East German companies after the fall of communism. But the EU has not asked to play a major role in the asset sales and is only offering its expertise, Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said on Saturday [ID:nLDE74R01U] Stark, who also reiterated ECB opposition to any form of Greek debt restructuring, echoed the IMF in his comments on asset sales. The fund’s European department director, Antonio Borges, said earlier this month the 50 billion euros cited as a figure for proceeds represented “probably less than 20 percent of all the assets the Greeks could privatize. “A part of these assets must be mobilized to lower the debt level. Furthermore, privatizations cause more efficiency in the entire economy,” Stark was quoted as saying on Saturday. STILL SEEKING CONSENSUS Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou on Friday failed to broker a consensus for the government’s austerity program and reforms, including privatization, across various political parties. On Saturday, he said there was still common ground with opposition parties on austerity policies and he hoped they would respond to his call for consensus on the way ahead. “I believe there are several points we converge on,” he told reporters, a day after opposition parties rejected his call for backing. “I will not stop seeking consensus. I hope several political forces respond so that we help ourselves exit this crisis in a faster and stronger way.” The opposition has rejected proposed tax increases to help reduce the budget deficit, arguing instead for tax cuts to revive economic growth. The IMF has said it cannot release its part of a 12 billion euro aid tranche to Greece next month unless European partners guarantee they will meet Greece’ funding needs for the next 12 months, something Germany and other north European creditors are unwilling to do without major Greek concessions. (Writing by Annika Breidthardt; Editing by John Stonestreet) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Japan, EU Set To Talk Free Trade Agreement

May 28, 2011

BRUSSELS — Japan and the European Union agreed at a summit meeting Saturday to begin negotiations on a free trade agreement that would deepen economic ties between two of the world’s largest economies. As a bloc, the EU is the world’s largest economy; Japan is number four. Negotiations will be preceded by what the leaders called a “scoping exercise” to ensure that both side share the same goals and level of ambition for the negotiations. At the summit, held in the picturesque Castle of Val-Duchesse, the leaders also agreed to work toward greater nuclear safety worldwide and to create closer political ties. The meeting was attended by Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan; Herman Van Rompuy, president of the European Council; and Jose Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission. “Radiation does not stop at national borders, and neither should our collective responsibility,” Barroso said at a joint press conference after the meeting. “So when we talk nuclear, we talk global.” Japanese officials are sensitive about being stigmatized by the nuclear accident that followed the devastating earthquake and tsunami of March 11. They believe that some tests on imports of Japanese food are too stringent, even when the food is produced far from the site of the disaster. And they say the loss of tourism, even in areas far from any contamination, will hurt the country’s economy. Barroso sought to allay those concerns Saturday. “We firmly believe that Japan is safe and open for business,” he said. But the negotiations on a free trade agreement may be difficult. The European Union imposes a 10 percent tariff on goods imported from Japan while Japan imposes no tariff on those imported from the European Union. Japanese officials told The Associated Press before the meeting they see the issue as relatively simple. But EU officials see it as more complex, and they insisted successfully that the talks also take into account non-tariff barriers to trade and investment. They say, for example, that in the EU public procurement is open and they want to make sure that is the case in Japan, as well. EU officials also say that, while foreign investment is equal to 30 percent of gross domestic product in the EU, in Japan the figure is only 3 percent, and the reasons for that must be explored in the talks to come. Still, all three leaders said the benefits of successful negotiations would be very significant. Kan said the outcome “would be important for the global markets.” Van Rompuy agreed. “The potential economic and political results are huge, in terms of jobs, growth and a shared destiny,” he said. The leaders said that, in the political sphere, Japan and the European Union share the same values, including support for democracy and human rights, and should work together in resolving problems from Middle East and North Africa to North Korea. They also said they would cooperate in showing leadership on the issue of climate change. Van Rompuy is fond of writing haiku, a form of Japanese poetry, and he ended his post-summit statement with one that referred to the earthquake, the tsunami and the nuclear disaster. “The three disasters/Storms turn into a soft wind/A new humane wind,” Van Rompuy wrote. The Japanese prime minister liked it. “This is a haiku which really touches your heart,” he said.

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The Summer Gas Squeeze

May 28, 2011

NEW YORK — There’s less money this summer for hotel rooms, surfboards and bathing suits. It’s all going into the gas tank. High prices at the pump are putting a squeeze on the family budget as the traditional summer driving season begins. For every $10 the typical household earns before taxes, almost a full dollar now goes toward gas, a 40 percent bigger bite than normal. Households spent an average of $369 on gas last month. In April 2009, they spent just $201. Families now spend more filling up than they spend on cars, clothes or recreation. Last year, they spent less on gasoline than each of those things. Jeffrey Wayman of Cape Charles, Va., spent Friday riding his motorcycle to North Carolina’s Outer Banks, a day trip with his wife. They decided to eat snacks in a gas station parking lot rather than buy lunch because rising fuel prices have eaten so much into their budget over the past year that they can’t ride as frequently as they would like. “We used to do it a lot more, but not as much now,” he said. “You have to cut back when you have a $480 gas bill a month.” Alex Martinez, a senior at Arcadia High School outside Los Angeles, said his family’s trips to San Francisco, which they usually take once or more a year, are on hold. As he stopped at a gas station to put $5 of fuel in his car – not much more than a gallon – he said the high prices are crimping social life for him and his friends. “We’re always worrying, `How are we going to get home. We’ve got less than half a gallon left,’” Martinez said. “We definitely can’t go out as much, and we can’t go as far.” As Memorial Day weekend opens, the nationwide average for a gallon of unleaded is $3.81. Though prices have drifted lower in recent days, analysts expect average price for 2011 to come in higher than the previous record, $3.25 in 2008. A year ago, gas cost $2.76. The squeeze is happening at a time when most people aren’t getting raises, even as the economy recovers. “These increases are not something consumers can shrug off,” says James Hamilton, an economics professor at the University of California, San Diego, who studies gas prices. “It’s a key part of the family budget.” The ramifications are far-reaching for an economy still struggling to gain momentum two years into a recovery. Economists say the gas squeeze makes people feel poorer than they actually are. They’re showing it by limiting spending far beyond the gas station. Wal-Mart recently blamed high gas prices for an eighth straight quarter of lower sales in the U.S. Target said gas prices were hurting sales of clothes. Every 50-cent jump in the cost of gasoline takes $70 billion out of the U.S. economy over the course of a year, Hamilton says. That’s about one half of one percent of gross domestic product. The Commerce Department reported Friday that consumer spending rose just 0.1 percent in April, excluding the extra money spent on more expensive gas and food, while wages stayed flat for the second straight month. Mike Nason, a marketing consultant from Laguna Niguel, Calif., says he’s clipping coupons to save money for gas and cutting back wherever else he can. His daughter Chandler, 17, recently settled for a prom dress that cost $170 instead of asking her parents to spend $400 for another that caught her eye. “In prior years we would have spent more money on the dress, but money has become a big object,” he says. The tourism industry is bracing for an uncertain summer. AAA predicts the typical family will spend $692 on its vacation, down 14 percent from $809 last year. Many of those surveyed said they are planning shorter trips and expect to pinch pennies when they arrive. AAA estimates 34.9 million Americans will travel 50 miles or more from home this weekend, an increase of about 100,000 from last year. But they will have to do more complicated math to make the summer budget work. The median household income in the U.S. before taxes is just below $50,000, or about $4,150 per month. The $369 that families spent last month on gas represented 8.9 percent of monthly household income, according to an analysis by Fred Rozell, retail pricing director at Oil Price Information Service. Since 2000, the average is about 5.7 percent. For the year, the figure is 7.9 percent. Only twice before have Americans spent this much of their income on gas. In 1981, after the last oil crisis, Americans spent 8.8 percent of household income on gas. In July 2008, when oil price spiked, they spent 10.2 percent. Average hourly earnings, meanwhile, have risen just 1.9 percent in the past year. That’s only just enough to keep up with inflation. The good news is that analysts expect gas to fall to $3.50 a gallon in the coming weeks. In order for household gasoline expenses to return to their historical place in the family budget for the year, gas prices would have to fall by about half and stay that way for the rest of the year. Demand for gasoline has fallen for eight straight weeks as drivers try to cut back, but higher prices can’t keep drivers parked for long. Even with high prices this year, the government expects gasoline demand to grow slightly for the year. “Drivers try to do what they can, but they have to go almost all the places they go,” says David Greene, a researcher at the Center of Transportation Analysis at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and manager of the Department of Energy website fueleconomy.gov. “There’s no magic gizmo that will drastically change someone’s gasoline use.” Mike Siroub clutched his heart as he described the experience of filling up lately. He owns a Union Oil gas station in Arcadia, Calif., but one of his cars is also a 1975 Oldsmobile. “Think about it,” he said. “If you’ve got a car with a 30-gallon tank and gas is $4 a gallon and you fill it up, you’re out $120.” He says high gas prices will keep him home this weekend. And he runs a gas station for a living. As he greeted a steady stream of customers at his station, he laughed and said, “I have to pay for gas just like everyone else.” ___ Associated Press writers John Rogers in Los Angeles and Brock Vergakis in Norfolk, Va., contributed to this story. Jonathan Fahey can be reached at . http://www.facebook.com/Fahey.Jonathan

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Big difference Separating Household and Industrial Mortgage Loans …

May 28, 2011

Knowledge commercial mortgage loans is an crucial factor of enterprise success. When producing a enterprise strategy or determining to broaden a organization,

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Ian Fletcher: Why the Budget Is the Wrong Thing to Fight About

May 28, 2011

The country is consumed right now with the fight over the Federal budget, specifically Rep. Paul Ryan’s (R-WI) plan to balance it by (mostly) radically cutting spending on medical programs, especially Medicare. The recent Republican loss in New York’s 26th district’s special election — which had more to do with my friend Jack Davis running on a third-party ticket — has been interpreted as a referendum against the Ryan plan. And the states are, of course, tied up in budget battles of their own, most visibly the aggressive push to cut the cost of public employees by curtailing their unions. Unfortunately, while all these fights are, of course, important, they are still, fundamentally, the wrong economic issue for America to be fighting over right now. Because despite Rep. Ryan entitling his plan “The Path to Prosperity,” none of these controversies touch upon the true fundamentals that determine that prosperity. All these controversies are, at bottom, about one thing: rebalancing public-sector spending. And it is fantasy to imagine that this is the key to putting our economy back on track. To hear some Republicans talk, you’d think that if only we squeeze hard enough, and go whole hog for their eat-your-spinach skinflint economics, prosperity will return. This is the elevation of deferral of gratification to the master key (if not the sole!) economic virtue, from which all else will follow. If only we’re tough enough on ourselves right now. Unfortunately for Republicans, that kind of tightwad economics rightly died in the Keynesian revolution over 70 years ago. It’s not so good for Dems either. To hear some of them talk, you’d think that if only we pump up government spending enough, perhaps financed by higher taxes on the rich, we can pump-prime our way back to prosperity. This is the elevation of counter-cyclical Keynesianism (spend your way out of a cyclical downturn) into non-stop stimulation of the economy, whether its problems are cyclical or structural. The fundamental economic problem we face right now isn’t recession–in which case we could just sit back and wait for it to end, with a little help from the standard playbook. It is the structural underperformance of the U.S. economy, for reasons that weren’t caused by the recession and won’t go away when it ends. As a result, Republicans and Democrats are arguing about how to divide the pie, when the real question is how to bake more pie in the first place. So… what is the solution? What do we have to fix? The number one thing is trade. Free trade collapsed a very long time ago. What we have today is not free trade at all, it’s ruthlessly manipulated trade — manipulated by America’s big trading partners, starting with China but including many others. And we’re doing nothing to stop them. America’s titanic ( $497 billion last year) trade deficit is ripping the guts out of industry after industry, but we have no answer. And you can’t gut industry after industry and expect not to reduce your GDP. If we didn’t have this horrendous trade deficit, we simply wouldn’t be fighting many of these budget battles. Why? because we’d have a larger GDP, so tax revenues would be higher. Spending on public benefits would be lower, and painlessly so, because fewer people would be poor and middle-class people would have more money to take care of themselves. How much GDP have we already lost? The Economic Strategy Institute estimated in 2001 that the trade deficit was shaving at least one percent per year off our economic growth. This may not sound like much, but because GDP growth is cumulative, it compounds over time. Thus economist William Bahr has thus estimated that America’s trade deficits since 1991 alone (they stretch back unbroken to 1976) have caused our economy to be 13 percent smaller than it otherwise would be. That’s an economic hole larger than the entire Canadian economy. Size of GDP is, ultimately, more important than size of government. We can have legitimate liberal vs. conservative arguments over the latter, but even from a conservative point of view, it’s far more important to have a government that conduces to a GDP large enough to provide all the things we want than to have a small government per se . Growing the economy may, in fact, call for increased spending in some areas. Even a precocious third-grader can see why even fiscal tightwads should make an exception for spending that ultimately brings in more money than it costs. What kind of spending are we talking about? One kind is government programs to fill in the gaps in the private sector’s innovation capabilities. Such programs fund, for example, technology research to bridge the gap between pure science and corporate research and development (R&D). This is the so-called “Valley of Death” in the innovation system: the private sector can’t make money doing such research, but it can’t ultimately keep generating new products unless somebody does it. So it’s appropriate for the federal government to step in. America’s hidden history of doing this stretches from the Internet back to founding father Alexander Hamilton. We still have such programs today, but on a tiny scale compared to what we need — and tiny compared to what our rivals do. Thus the giant stimulus package it passed in 2009 included money for every Congressional pork barrel under the sun, but nothing for one of the industrial-policy programs with the best track record of saving and creating jobs: the Manufacturing Extension Partnership, despite a campaign promise to double the program’s funding. This program maintains a network of centers in every state designed to help American manufacturers adopt innovative technologies. One evaluation found that it generated $1.3 billion a year in cost savings for manufacturers and $6.25 billion in increased or retained sales, all for an annual federal outlay of only $89 million. Another good but underfunded program is the Technology Innovation Program. Free market ideologues have repeatedly tarred this program as corporate welfare despite the fact that an audit by the respected National Academy of Sciences vindicated its claim to generate economic benefits far exceeding its cost. One single $5.5 million grant, for example, seeded development of the small disk drive industry, which enabled creation of the iPod, the iPhone, TiVo and the Xbox. This is how you make an economy grow — not by squeezing the economy you already have, or borrowing yet more money to “stimulate” it. As a result of America’s neglect of such programs, there is a starvation of basic and applied research in areas such as biocomputing, computer architecture, software, optoelectronics, aeronautics, advanced materials, factory automation, sensors, energy conversion and storage, nanomanufacturing, robotics and green energy. We are in danger of having our economy fail to grow because we were so busy arguing over the harvest that we neglected to plant the seeds.

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Video: Westman Says Yandex Technology as Good as Google

May 28, 2011

May 27 (Bloomberg) — Mattias Westman, chief executive officer of Prosperity Capital Management Ltd., discusses Russian seach-engine Yandex NV’s $1.3 billion U.S. initial public offering, Yandex’s competition with Google Inc. and factors driving Russia’s technology industry. Westman speaks with Cory Johnson on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Loopt’s Altman Says Groupon Partnership Looks Promising

May 28, 2011

May 27 (Bloomberg) — Sam Altman, chief executive officer of Loopt Inc., talks about the company’s agreement with Groupon Inc. Groupon, the largest provider of online daily deal coupons, plans to alert customers to nearby discounts using location data from Loopt’s mobile-phone application. Altman speaks with Emily Chang on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Honda’s North America production to reach 100%

May 28, 2011

Honda’s North America production to reach 100%

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China’s coal production up 11.1% in Q1

May 28, 2011

China’s coal production up 11.1% in Q1

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British Pound to Decline as Interest Rate Hike Outlook Withers

May 28, 2011

British Pound to Decline as Interest Rate Hike Outlook Withers

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FOREX: Dollar – Expect Little from NFPs, Keep a Wary Eye on the S&P 500 and Talk of the QE2 Expiration

May 28, 2011

FOREX: Dollar – Expect Little from NFPs, Keep a Wary Eye on the S&P 500 and Talk of the QE2 Expiration

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Canadian Dollar to Rise as Ahead of GDP Report, Rate Decision

May 28, 2011

Canadian Dollar to Rise as Ahead of GDP Report, Rate Decision

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