June 2011

Companies Moving Jobs To U.S. From China To Avoid Inflation

June 28, 2011

MILWAUKEE (Scott Malone) – On a recent morning at Master Lock’s 90-year-old factory in Milwaukee, a cluster of machinery was whirring, every 2 seconds spitting out one of the combination locks used by American high schoolers as the company readied for the back-to-school rush. The seven-day-a-week, three-shift-per-day whirlwind of activity marked a change from two years ago, when the machine normally ran for just a few hours a day because the unit of Fortune Brands Inc was ordering more padlocks from suppliers in China instead of making them. Why move production from the world’s low-cost workshop back to a unionized U.S. factory where wages are six times higher than in China? Efficiency: The machine in Milwaukee is about 30 times as fast as the Chinese factories the company had been buying from, more than making up for the difference in wages. “I can manufacture combination locks in Milwaukee for less of a cost than I can in China,” said Bob Rice, a senior vice president at the largest U.S. padlock manufacturer. The factory has added about 78 workers over the past two years, boosting its workforce to 440. That is a small bit of good news for the long-suffering U.S. manufacturing sector, which shed about 2 million jobs, or some 14.6 percent of its employees, in the last recession. It has not recovered since and now employs 11.7 million people, down 34,000 from the recession’s official end in June 2009. Master Lock is not alone. General Electric Co and Boeing Co are also part of the small group of U.S. companies that are boosting production at their U.S. factories. A variety of factors are driving the shift, including rising wages in parts of Asia, surging fuel prices and the complexity of transporting goods across the Pacific. (Reuters Insider show: “Made in USA” Making Comeback as U.S. Manufacturers Expand: link.reuters.com/nuf42s ) ECONOMIC IRONY “What you’re starting to see is the economics shifting more into the United States’ favor regarding sourcing from the United States versus sourcing from a low-cost country,” said Daniel Meckstroth, chief economist at the Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI, a Washington trade group. There is an element of irony here. The United States’ sluggish economic recovery, coming at a time when emerging economies including China and India are enjoying brisk growth, is helping its manufacturers to close the cost gap on their foreign rivals. China’s inflation rate hit 5.5 percent in May, well ahead of the United States’ 3.6 percent headline rate. With Chinese wages rising at 15 to 20 percent per year, the labor costs of manufacturing in the two countries could pull even by 2015, a Boston Consulting Group study predicted in May. Rising oil prices, which drive up the cost of shipping goods by boat or plane, are also eating in to China’s edge. Automation also helps tilt the balance toward the United States. Bruce Crass, the Master Lock plant’s general manager, estimated that his plant — where the average worker oversees the operation of six high-speed machines — produces 24,000 locks a day with about one-sixth the number of workers needed by the company’s Chinese suppliers and rivals. Master Lock today makes about 55 percent of its padlocks in North America — in Milwaukee and at a satellite location in Nogales, Mexico — with the rest made in China. That is down from a 50-50 split two years ago. To be sure, these companies are the exception in the U.S. economy, where businesses from Apple Inc to Nike Inc focus on design and marketing, leaving production to independent contractors. Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Home Values Rise for First Time in 8 Months says S&P Case/Shiller

June 28, 2011

For the first time in eight months, home prices saw a month-over-month increase in April according to the Standard & Poors/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices. During April, the 10- and 20-City composite indices increased 0.8% and 0.7% respectively, compared with their March 2011 levels. Both indices remain below their April 2010 levels. “In a welcome shift from recent months, this month is better than last—April’s numbers beat March,” says David M. Blitzer, chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Indices. “However, the seasonally adjusted numbers show that much of the improvement reflects the beginning of the Spring-Summer home buying season. It is much too early to tell if this is a turning point or simply due to some warmer weather.” Compared to April 2010, the indices show declines of 3.1% and 4%, respectively, with metropolitan statistical areas Charlotte, Chicago, Detroit, Las Vegas, Miami and Tampa seeing new index lows. Regionally, 10 of the 20 MSAs showed positive monthly changes. One the whole, the monthly uptick has been detected in other housing indicators as well. “Other housing statistics show the same trends. Single-family housing starts were up in May, but still well below their 2010 levels and still very close to their 30-year low,” Blitzer said. “Existing home sales rose in May, but are still about 15% below last year’s pace and about 35% below their 2005 pace. …For a real recovery we would need to see several months of increasing home prices, large enough to shift the annual momentum to the positive side.  In short, better news, but still a lot of questions and a long way to go.” Written by Elizabeth Ecker

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Financial Regulatory Powers Might Be Outsourced To Wall Street-Funded Finra

June 28, 2011

Congress may outsource the job of regulating thousands of investment advisors to an organization funded by the professionals it regulates, Bloomberg News reports. Two and a half years after the worst financial crisis since the Depression, Washington lawmakers are focused on cutting funding from the government’s oversight of the financial industry, even before last summer’s Dodd-Frank law is fully implemented. House Republicans support a measure to flat-fund the Securities and Exchange Commission , to deny it resources that Democrats and SEC officials say are crucial to the protection of investors and the policing of financial crimes. And there’s another regulator eager to step in. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, an organization that oversees brokers and draws its budget from industry it regulates, is lobbying to replace the SEC in its oversight of nearly 12,000 investment advisors, who collectively manage about $40 trillion, Bloomberg reports. Industry experts say Finra is a weaker cop than the SEC. It levied $43 million in fines last year, compared to the SEC’s $1 billion. Finra spent $300,000 on lobbying in the first quarter of this year, the Associated Press reported this week. That’s 43 percent more than it spent during the same period last year. “They’re supposed to oversee the activity of the industry, but they are industry,” Denise Voigt Crawford, former commissioner of the Texas State Securities Board, told Bloomberg. The SEC, which draws funding from Congressional appropriations, has for months anticipated a reduction in its budget. The agency began slowing the pace of some investigations late last year, fearing it would have to contend with budget cuts. “It is not helpful for the wheels of investigations to grind to a halt,” former SEC lawyer Jacob Frenkel told the Wall Street Journal in December. The SEC’s expanding workload demands an expanded budget, SEC chair Mary Schapiro said in a speech to Congress last year, several months before the financial reform was passed. The agency, she said, should become self-funded, drawing its budget from penalties it levies. “The SEC languishes as one of the few financial regulators still subject to the annual appropriations process,” Schapiro said. “I believe that fees assessed on investors’ transactions should be dedicated to protecting investors.” Read the entire Bloomberg story here .

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Democrats Slam GOP As ‘Clueless’ On Debt

June 28, 2011

WASHINGTON — Republicans are clueless about the economic devastation they are courting with brinksmanship over raising the nation’s debt limit, Democrats charged Tuesday. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) leveled the charge in his floor speech Tuesday morning, and his office followed with a press release pointing to a list of influential business leaders and economists who warn that the U.S. government’s failure to pay its bills would spark a new financial catastrophe. “Failure to avert this crisis would have dire consequences,” Reid said. “It would result in the most serious financial crisis this country has ever faced. Millions of Americans could lose their jobs. Social Security checks could stop. So could paychecks to our troops.” Reid argued that the GOP was willing to risk those financial hardships in order to protect subsidies for the oil industry and tax breaks for corporate jets. Soon after he fired that broadside, Reid’s policy shop pointed to a Tuesday morning discussion between MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough and two top Republicans — presidential contender Tim Pawlenty, the former governor of Minnesota, and Republican Party Chairman Reince Preibus. Pawlenty and Preibus had said they did not know what to expect from a default: Scarborough : What’s the impact if it’s not raised? Pawlenty : Well, we don’t know that. Scarborough : Well, I don’t know what’s going to happen to me if I jump off a cliff. But I think I’ll go splat. Preibus had a similar view: Scarborough : What do you believe, though? Do you believe that if we don’t raise the debt ceiling the economy will just keep chugging along normally or do you believe it will cause a financial crisis? Preibus : You know, I don’t know, because we’ve never been there before, Joe. Reid’s team noted that numerous economists, business leaders and Republican leaders have warned of disaster if the nation’s spending cap — now set at $14.3 trillion — is not raised by early August. Under a release titled “REPUBLICAN LEADERS CLUELESS ON THE CONSEQUENCES OF DEFAULT” Democratic Policy and Communications Center spokesman Brian Fallon named several of those who have been warning of the consequences of default. “While [Pawlenty and Preibus] may be at a loss to explain the consequences of a failure to raise the debt limit, many business leaders and fellow Republicans know the dire consequences of a failure to raise the debt limit,” the release said. Among those singled out were Warren Buffett, who said not raising the limit would be ” asinine ;” Republican elder statesmen James Baker , who backed the hike, and JP Morgan Chase boss Jamie Dimon, who echoed Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner in saying a default would be ” catastrophic .” Despite the Democrats’ criticism of Republicans, Don Stewart, a spokesman for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) was unimpressed with Reid’s own plan to reduce the deficit, citing a list of tax cuts Reid had mentioned and arguing that Democrats want to hike taxes a lot more. “The point is, Sens. Reid and [New York's Chuck] Schumer complained this morning that Sen. McConnell doesn’t support the Democrat plan to raise hundreds of billions in new tax hikes on job creators in the middle of an employment crisis,” Stewart said. “They’re correct: Sen. McConnell does not support hundreds of billions in new tax hikes on job creators. He agrees with what the President said last year — tax hikes in a down economy will make matters worse and slow job growth.” Stewart was referring to Obama’s decision to extend the Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy for two years. He also argued the money saved by ending the breaks for oil companies would not be nearly enough to eliminate the deficit, and suggested Democrats should offer their full list of tax hikes or revenue raisers. Fallon said the Obama administration has offered McConnell and Republican leaders hundreds of billions of dollars worth of choices to raise revenue, and all were turned down.

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Breakthrough Between Congress And Obama Admin Paves Way For Free Trade Deals

June 28, 2011

WASHINGTON — The White House and congressional lawmakers reached a deal Tuesday to propel three coveted free trade agreements toward a vote on Capitol Hill, though the ultimate fate of the pacts with South Korea, Colombia and Panama remained uncertain. Key lawmakers from both parties struck an agreement with the administration to extend aid for American workers displaced by foreign trade. The White House, acknowledging concerns from labor unions, had threatened to hold up passage of the pacts unless the Trade Adjustment Assistance program, or TAA, was renewed. But the process for ensuring passage of the trade deals and the assistance for workers was unclear Tuesday. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., said he planned to attach TAA to the Korea deal, the largest and most desirable of the trade pacts, when his committee began discussing the agreements on Thursday. But top Republicans balked at that proposal. Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, the top Republican on the Finance Committee, said it was a “highly partisan decision” that “risks support for this critical job-creating trade pact in the name of a welfare program of questionable benefit at a time when our nation is broke.” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said he would oppose any trade deal in which the worker assistance program was embedded. Republicans generally support both trade and worker assistance programs, so Baucus’ move could put GOP lawmakers in the awkward position of either having to vote against issues that traditionally have GOP support or handing President Barack Obama a victory on a top priority. Baucus negotiated with House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp, R-Mich., and top White House economist Gene Sperling to reach a deal on the substance of the worker assistance. Their plan would make benefits available to service as well as manufacturing industries, provide money for retraining and make affordable health care available. Camp said in a statement Tuesday the decision on how to move the trade deals and TAA through the House was an issue for Republican leadership to determine. A spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner said the worker assistance program should be dealt with separately from the trade agreements. Obama frequently cites passage of the three trade deals as an economic imperative for the U.S. He has touted the pacts as an opportunity to open overseas markets to U.S. companies and make American products more attractive in the global marketplace. White House press secretary Jay Carney said Tuesday: “Now is the time to move forward with TAA and with the Korea, Colombia and Panama trade agreements.” The pro-business U.S. Chamber of Commerce also urged lawmakers to move quickly to pass the pacts. “I urge members of both parties to seize a reasonable compromise and move the trade agenda forward,” chamber president Tom Donohue said in a statement. “The time to act is now.” The TAA program was expanded two years ago as part of Obama’s stimulus package to include aid for more displaced workers, but the expansion expired in February. The extension agreed to in negotiations is smaller than the 2009 package and would continue through 2013. Administration officials said continuing TAA would be paid by spending cuts, though Camp’s office said the details of where the cuts would come from were still being worked out. The U.S. signed the trade pacts with South Korea, Panama and Colombia in 2007 under President George W. Bush. But the then-Democratic-led Congress never brought the agreements up for vote, giving the Obama administration time to renegotiate areas it found objectionable. U.S. trade officials spent months negotiating outstanding issues on the pacts, reaching an agreement with South Korea in December. The pact would boost U.S. exports by $11 billion a year, according to the administration. Deals were struck this spring with Panama, one of Latin America’s fastest-growing economies, and Colombia. The administration says a final pact with Colombia will boost U.S. exports by more than $1 billion per year. All three agreements need congressional approval. Labor unions and key Democrats continue to have deep concerns in particular over the deal with Colombia, a country considered extremely dangerous for union organizers. While Colombia has agreed to implement an action plan for protecting worker rights and ending violence against union groups, the top Democrat on the House Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Sander Levin of Michigan, said Monday that he would oppose the trade deal if it did not include specific language committing Colombia to carry out those steps. _____ Associated Press writer Jim Abrams contributed to this report.

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Senior Housing Properties Trust to Sell $6.5 Million Shares in Public Offering

June 28, 2011

Senior Housing Properties Trust (NYSE: SNH), a Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) that owns assisted-living communities, nursing homes and rehabilitation hospitals said it would sell at least 6.5 million shares on Monday. Proceeds would be used to reduce the amount due under the company’s revolving credit facility and for general business purposes, which could include funding acquisitions.  Senior Housing has about 142 million shares outstanding. As of June 24, 2011, the company owns 341 properties located in 37 states and Washington, D.C. with a book value of $4.1 billion before depreciation.  According to the prospectus, ninety-four percent (94%) of its rents come from properties where a majority of the charges are paid from private resources. The joint bookrunning managers for the offering are Jefferies & Company, Inc., Citi and UBS Investment Bank. The co-lead managers for the offering are Morgan Keegan, Morgan Stanley, RBC Capital Markets and Wells Fargo Securities. In other SNH news, the company said last week that it entered into a new $750 million unsecured revolving credit facility, which can be increased to up to $1.5 billion in certain circumstances. On Tuesday, the company said it plans 10 million common shares at a price to the public of $22.50 per share. The settlement of the offering is expected to occur on July 1, 2011.

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Harrison Street Raises $595 Million, Closes Fund

June 28, 2011

Harrison Street Real Estate Capital (“HSRE”) has completed its third real estate private equity fund, Harrison Street Real Estate Partners III, L.P. (HSREP III). The firm said exceeded its original goal of $500 million, receiving $595 million total.  Investors in the fund include U.S and European pension funds, insurance companies, endowments, foundations and family offices. The Fund already has invested more than 25 percent of the fund’s commitments in 24 real estate assets.  This third fund follows on the momentum of Fund I and Fund II, which raised $208 million and $430 million, respectively. Since the initial fund was launched in August 2006, the firm has raised over $1.2 billion in third party equity capital. The firm does not use a placement agent when raising capital. The firm puts its investments into the education, healthcare, and senior housing segments of the US real estate market. HSREP III, LP held its first closing last summer with a goal of raising $500 million and limited the Fund to its hard cap of $600 million.  According to Merrill, the $595 million in equity raised by the firm translates to investment power of over $2.0 billion, when leverage is applied. To date approximately $530 million of gross real estate investments in the fund have been made in 24 properties around the US. Some of the investments already made include six assisted living alzheimer’s care facilities around the Washington, D.C. market that combined are 90% occupied.  In addition, two senior housing communities in Oregon and Montana totaling 350 private-pay rental units. A 120-unit senior housing development in an affluent suburb of Houston, TX. Upon completion, in late 2012, this property will offer 85 units of assisted living and 35 units of Alzheimer’s space;    

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Springpoint Expanding with $35 Million Senior Housing Construction

June 28, 2011

Construction for a $35 million Springpoint Senior Living community is underway in Red Bank, New Jersey, and the need for senior housing is clear as nearly all of the building’s 60 units have already been spoken for. The construction will be an addition to the already-existent The Atrium, which features luxury continuing care retirement, assisted living and affordable housing communities, and is expected to be completed toward the end of 2012. “We’re excited to expand our presence here in Red Bank as well as realize the full potential of our beautiful location on the Navesink River,” said Gary T. Puma, President and Chief Executive Officer of Springpoint Senior Living. “The Atrium at Navesink Harbor will stand as a flagship community for Springpoint.” The new units will consist of 35 one-bedroom and 25 two-bedroom apartments, and most of the apartments were pre-sold by groundbreaking time. Springpoint says it took a conservative approach to ensuring the new building’s success through the pre-sales and conducting extensive market research regarding the project’s viability and attractiveness to seniors. Springpoint Senior Living owns and operates 25 senior living communities throughout New Jersey, with another one in the works. Written by Alyssa Gerace

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Norbert W. Young Jr. Joins Newforma Board of Directors

June 28, 2011

Management Consultant and Former McGraw-Hill Construction President Brings Broad-Based AEC Expertise to the Industry-Leading Project Information Management (PIM) Software Company

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On Obama, Wall Street Shows A Reluctance To Commit

June 28, 2011

President Obama’s $35,800-a-plate fund-raising dinner was the talk of Wall Street last week.

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Dean Baker: Right to Rent: Will the Obama Administration Finally Fix Housing?

June 28, 2011

The concept of “right to rent” has been floating around Washington for almost four years . Under this proposal , foreclosed homeowners would be allowed to remain in their house as renters paying the market rent, for a substantial period of time (e.g. five years) following a foreclosure. While several bills have been introduced in Congress, President Obama may now have a new opportunity to take the lead on this issue. The overwhelming majority of mortgages that have been issued since the financial meltdown in September of 2008 have been bought by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac or insured by the Federal Housing Authority. This has led to an interesting, but predictable, outcome. The most recent data indicate that more than half of the new foreclosures are on houses where Fannie and Freddie either hold the mortgage or have insured the mortgage backed security in which it sits. Rather than being a problem for banks to deal with, the problem of foreclosures is now primarily a government problem, since the Federal government now owns and controls Fannie and Freddie. This means that President Obama no longer has to beg the banks to allow people to stay in their homes. He can do it himself. And, he can show the banks how to do it right. The main objection the banks continually raised when they were urged to make modifications rather than foreclose, was the one of moral hazard. If homeowners know that they can get both a lower interest rate and a big principle write-down by missing a few mortgage payments and pleading poverty, then you are giving them an enormous incentive to go this route. Millions of homeowners who are able to pay their mortgage will instead opt for modifications. The banks did have a point on the policy side. While some of the mortgage debt was held by banks, mortgage-backed securities are held by a wide range of investors including pension funds, mutual funds with 401(k) investments, and university endowments. It’s not obviously good to make these investors take a hit. And even with the banks, if their losses lead to more bailouts it’s the taxpayers who take the hit. And not all homeowners are struggling moderate-income families who got deceptive loans. Most homeowners are middle-income families who got prime loans. The politics look even worse. The Tea Party got started by a televised rant over paying “your neighbor’s mortgage.” It proved easy for the right to exploit this image of a gold-plated government handout, even though the actual Obama program was nothing of the sort. It is in this context that right to rent is largely bullet proof. It is no great handout. People will lose ownership of their home. But it will provide them with housing security for a substantial period of time. And it does it in a way that requires no taxpayer money and no new bureaucracy. As part of the foreclosure process, homeowners would be offered the opportunity to stay in their home paying the market rent, as determined by an independent appraiser. This is the same sort of appraisal process that banks use when considering a mortgage application. It can also be structured to ensure that millionaires are not gaming the system. The limits can be set so that the option only extends to homes that cost less than the median price or less than 1.5 times the median price in a metropolitan area. This won’t help everyone. Those who have lost their jobs and have no regular income or savings will find even the market rent unaffordable. However in many former bubble markets the market rent is less than half the mortgage that people who bought near the peak of the bubble would be paying. The switch to renting would make the home affordable and free up money to be spent on other items, boosting the economy. Of course the whole neighborhood gains if the house remains occupied rather than being boarded up as a foreclosure. It would take a law passed by Congress to create a right to rent for the people losing their home to foreclosure. However, President Obama could unilaterally act to require Fannie and Freddie to go this route. Fannie and Freddie already have very limited programs along the right to rent model in place, but they are cumbersome in their mechanics and have only been offered to a small number of homeowners. President Obama could tell these government-owned mortgage giants to start offering a rental option to all their foreclosed homeowners. The government already loses more than 50 percent of the loan value on an average foreclosure, so there is very little potential loss by allowing the rental option. And, if keeps people in their homes and shores up neighborhoods, there will be a very large gain. And, it will provide a good model for the banks.

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Woman ‘Shocked’ Over Abercrombie & Fitch Headscarf Firing

June 28, 2011

Hani Khan, 20, of Foster City said she had never faced discrimination before being fired from an Abercrombie & Fitch subsidiary at Hillsdale Mall.

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Global Nickel Investments NL (ASX:GNI) Update On Half-Year Company Activities

June 28, 2011

Global Nickel Investments NL (ASX:GNI) Update On Half-Year Company Activities

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Peel Mining Limited (ASX:PEX) Report Strong Off-Hole Anomaly at 4-Mile Silver-Lead-Zinc Discovery

June 28, 2011

Peel Mining Limited (ASX:PEX) Report Strong Off-Hole Anomaly at 4-Mile Silver-Lead-Zinc Discovery

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US Food and Drug Administration Clears Mesoblast Limited (ASX:MSB) Phase 2 Trial to Treat Degenerative Disc Disease

June 28, 2011

US Food and Drug Administration Clears Mesoblast Limited (ASX:MSB) Phase 2 Trial to Treat Degenerative Disc Disease

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Securing a Strategic Partner Well Underway for Sundance Resources Limited (ASX:SDL) Mbalam Iron Ore Project

June 28, 2011

Securing a Strategic Partner Well Underway for Sundance Resources Limited (ASX:SDL) Mbalam Iron Ore Project

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More High Grade Uranium Intercepts Extend Deep Yellow Limited (ASX:DYL) Ongolo Alaskite Resource Area

June 28, 2011

More High Grade Uranium Intercepts Extend Deep Yellow Limited (ASX:DYL) Ongolo Alaskite Resource Area

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Kingsrose Mining Limited (ASX:KRM) Announce High Grade Discovery at Talang Santo Prospect, Way Linggo Project

June 28, 2011

Kingsrose Mining Limited (ASX:KRM) Announce High Grade Discovery at Talang Santo Prospect, Way Linggo Project

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U.S shares close in green…

June 28, 2011

U.S shares close in green…

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Fading the Rally- NZD/USD Short Scalp

June 28, 2011

Fading the Rally- NZD/USD Short Scalp

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What Trading Style Should I Adopt

June 28, 2011

What Trading Style Should I Adopt

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US Dollar Index Approaches Key Support Ahead of Crucial Greek Vote

June 28, 2011

US Dollar Index Approaches Key Support Ahead of Crucial Greek Vote

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Sell USD/CAD After Failure to Hold Above Range Top at 0.9880

June 28, 2011

Sell USD/CAD After Failure to Hold Above Range Top at 0.9880

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Russia to re-import EU vegetable products

June 28, 2011

Russia to re-import EU vegetable products

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U.S. Stocks rise by opening, depite consumer confidence declined dissapointedly in June..

June 28, 2011

U.S. Stocks rise by opening, depite consumer confidence declined dissapointedly in June..

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European shares closed in green on Greek bailout optimism

June 28, 2011

European shares closed in green on Greek bailout optimism

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Euro Lower Ahead on Greek Default Worries

June 28, 2011

Euro Lower Ahead on Greek Default Worries

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U.S. Dollar Consolidation Ahead, AUD/USD Approaches Apex

June 28, 2011

U.S. Dollar Consolidation Ahead, AUD/USD Approaches Apex

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Girls in India forced to undergo sex change operations

June 28, 2011

Girls in India forced to undergo sex change operations

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US consumer confidence weakens on the present economical conjunture…

June 28, 2011

US consumer confidence weakens on the present economical conjunture…

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Consumer Confidence and Home Prices shed light on the U.S. scene

June 28, 2011

Consumer Confidence and Home Prices shed light on the U.S. scene

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Greenback Pares Gains as Commodities Boost Australian Dollar

June 28, 2011

Greenback Pares Gains as Commodities Boost Australian Dollar

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Greenback Maintains Losses as Confidence Slumps to 7-Month Low

June 28, 2011

Greenback Maintains Losses as Confidence Slumps to 7-Month Low

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Forex: Euro Rallies On Hawkish ECB, Sterling Correction On Tap

June 28, 2011

Forex: Euro Rallies On Hawkish ECB, Sterling Correction On Tap

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Crude Oil, Gold to Rise as US Dollar Weakens Ahead of Greece Vote

June 28, 2011

Crude Oil, Gold to Rise as US Dollar Weakens Ahead of Greece Vote

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EUR/NZD Trend Resumes Against Resistance at 1.7800

June 28, 2011

EUR/NZD Trend Resumes Against Resistance at 1.7800

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EURUSD: Short Entry Ahead on Bounce

June 28, 2011

EURUSD: Short Entry Ahead on Bounce

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Confidence Slipping on Greece as Violent Protests Erupt in Athens

June 28, 2011

Confidence Slipping on Greece as Violent Protests Erupt in Athens

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US Dollar to Trim Recent Gains as Greece Passes Budget Plan

June 28, 2011

US Dollar to Trim Recent Gains as Greece Passes Budget Plan

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Greece to vote to more cuts

June 28, 2011

Greece to vote to more cuts

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Nissan to increase its global market share to 8%

June 28, 2011

Nissan to increase its global market share to 8%

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China, UK to target USD100b bilateral trade by 2015

June 28, 2011

China, UK to target USD100b bilateral trade by 2015

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India’s Tata to appeal against court decision

June 28, 2011

India’s Tata to appeal against court decision

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IMF grants Liberia USD7m of disbursement

June 28, 2011

IMF grants Liberia USD7m of disbursement

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UK’s annual growth downwardly revised, pushing the pound further to the downside

June 28, 2011

UK’s annual growth downwardly revised, pushing the pound further to the downside

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Europe Ahead: U.K. growth expected unrevised as eyes still locked on the Greek parliament

June 28, 2011

Europe Ahead: U.K. growth expected unrevised as eyes still locked on the Greek parliament

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FINANCE VIDEO: Direct Nickel Capital Raising and Proposed Listing Exec; Chairman Julian Malnic and CEO Russell Debney

June 28, 2011

FINANCE VIDEO: Direct Nickel Capital Raising and Proposed Listing Exec; Chairman Julian Malnic and CEO Russell Debney

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ADX Energy Limited (ASX:ADX): Mobilization Incident Free for Sidi Dhaher Exploration Well

June 28, 2011

ADX Energy Limited (ASX:ADX): Mobilization Incident Free for Sidi Dhaher Exploration Well

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British Pound Slides as GDP Revised Down on Lower Consumer Spending

June 28, 2011

British Pound Slides as GDP Revised Down on Lower Consumer Spending

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Sell Cable at 1.6150

June 28, 2011

Sell Cable at 1.6150

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