September 2011

Italy must implement tougher austerity measures: German FM

September 26, 2011

(MENAFN) Germany’s Finance Minister, Wolfgang Schaeuble, said that following its credit downgrade, Italy should implement tougher austerity measures and apply more strict frugality, reported Xinhua …

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Russia, Ukraine try to find solution to gas issue

September 26, 2011

(MENAFN) Russia’s President, Dmitry Medvedev, and Ukraine’s President, Viktor Yanukovych, said that they were trying to find a solution to the gas dispute between the two nations, reported Xinhua …

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French CB refutes recapitalization plan of major banks’ funds

September 26, 2011

(MENAFN) France’s central bank governor, Christian Noyer, said that rumors about plans to recapitalize the funds of the country’s major banks were untrue, reported Xinhua News. Noyer added that …

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VW to invest USD19b in China

September 26, 2011

(MENAFN) Volkswagen Group said that from 2012 to 2016, the carmaker would invest USD19 billion in new products and production facilities at its Chinese joint ventures in the world’s second-largest …

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US- IMF calls for collective action on global crisis

September 26, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) International financial officials called Saturday for collective, decisive action to bring the global economy out of its current dangerous phase. ‘Today we agreed to …

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German opposition wants citizen vote on EU issues

September 26, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) Germany’s opposition Social Democrats (SPD) and Greens called on Sunday for European Union citizens to get more direct influence in European affairs via plebiscites on …

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Britain’s Labor Party has long way to go, says leader

September 26, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) Britain’s opposition Labour Party on Sunday urged the Conservative-led government of Prime Minister David Cameron to ‘change course’ over its strict austerity …

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Japan, World Bank Agree on Anti-Disaster Project

September 26, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) Japan and the World Bank have agreed to jointly study ways to help developing countries prepare for a major disaster. The agreement came in a meeting between Japanese …

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EU must expand rescue fund: Merkel

September 26, 2011

(MENAFN) German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, said that EU governments should expand mechanism including its rescue fund to prevent future financial crises from spreading out to other countries, …

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More Hit Movies Coming To Netflix

September 26, 2011

DreamWorks Animation, the company behind successful movie franchises like “Madagascar” and “Shrek,” said it had completed a deal to pump its films and television specials through Netflix, replacing a less lucrative pact with HBO.

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Toyota mulls shifting Korea-bound Camry output to U.S.: Nikkei

September 26, 2011

TOKYO (Reuters) – Toyota Motor Corp is considering shifting production of South Korean-bound Camry autos to the United States from Japan, the Nikkei business daily reported on Monday. The yen’s historic strength is pressuring Japan’s export-oriented manufacturers. (Reporting by James Topham; Editing by Chris Gallagher)

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Brad DeLong: Review: Ron Suskind’s Confidence Men

September 26, 2011

When I first learned in 2009 that Ron Suskind’s next book was going to be 
about the making of a economic policy in the Obama administration, I looked 
forward to it. Previous books about the making of economic policy had 
degenerated into unseemly hagiography (cough Robert Woodward’s Maestro 
cough) or into gotcha books (cough Robert Woodward’s The Agenda cough). It 
seemed to me that Ron Suskind had done considerably better than “gotcha” 
books — or had written “gotcha” books that also had immense extra value 
added — on the Bush-era national security apparatus. I thought he would do equally well on economic policy. I thought the Obama economic-policy team was first rate. All five of the 
principals, Benjamin Bernanke, Timothy Geithner, Lawrence Summers, Christina 
Romer, and Peter Orszag, seemed to me among the very best candidates in the 
world for senior economic policymaking jobs in an American administration. 
And they were all my friends, or at least we were friendly. I did think that 
some of them were in the wrong jobs. Lawrence Summers made much more sense 
to me as Treasury Secretary than as NEC chair. Timothy Geithner seemed to me 
much better suited to be NEC Chair than to manage a large department with 
line authority. Nevertheless, even though the economic situation was horrible, the economic 
policy team looked good to me. I looked forward to a Suskind book that would 
tell of success: smart and serious people who knew what they were doing 
fighting about substance, presenting the president with good options, him 
choosing the best one, and the course of the economy during the Obama 
administration being if not great at least better than we all feared after 
the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers. And there is a perspective from which Obama administration economic policy 
has been a considerable success. The banking system collapse was averted. 
The spike of the unemployment rate to 15% or higher was averted. Obama 
passed a pretty good financial regulatory reform. Obama passed a pretty good 
health-care financing reform. Obama passed the largest quick fiscal 
expansion he could get through congress (using the Reconciliation process 
would have taken months and months longer). We are left with a jobless 
recovery, and with crippled mortgage finance and construction, and a ticking 
bomb in Europe. But, one could say that things could have been much 
worse–and would have been much worse had Republicans controlled any 
substantial share of economic policy or been more effective at blocking 
Obama initiatives. And of the successes of Obama administration economic policy perhaps the 
greatest success was the successful implementation of the “stress tests” of 
the banking system by Tim Geithner and his Treasury Department in the spring 
of 2009. The panic and the downturn could not be halted until finance became 
convinced once again that the key highly-leveraged money-center banks were 
well-capitalized. The government’s TARP authority was not large enough to do 
the job. Somehow, private investors had to be convinced that investing in 
the banks was a good idea. The stress tests did that, and played a role in 
restoring confidence in 2009 somewhat akin (albeit on a smaller scale) to 
Roosevelt’s abandoning the gold standard in 1933. It was a major 
achievement, well-executed–especially given that Tim Geithner was then 
”home alone” at the Treasury without confirmed deputies. But this is not the only perspective from which to view Obama administration 
economic policy. Since the spring of 2009 I have became more and more alarmed by the economic 
policy choices made by the Obama administration. A new administration needs 
to (1) forecast what is most likely to happen, and (2) design and implement 
policies that will deal with what is likely to happen, The Obama 
administration did that. I think that some of its initial policies were 
wrong, but given the press of events I would give the administration 
moderately high marks for the policies it designed and implemented up 
through, say, April 2009. Thereafter, however, things to me seemed to gradually fall apart. An administration has a third task it needs to carry out: (3) think hard 
about the risks–what if the administration has misjudged the situation? 
what if more things go wrong?–figure out what it needs to do to buy 
insurance against those risks, and do those things as well. It needs to ask 
itself: What if we are wrong in our estimation of the situation–what might the 
world then look like three years from now? 
 What if more things go wrong in the next year or two–what might the world 
then look like three years from now? In those possible scenarios, what will we wish then that we had done today 
to prepare the way for dealing with the situation? The major risks that confronted the Obama administration-to-be in the fall 
of 2008 and the winter-spring of 2009 that are relevant here were: That the moderate Republicans in the Congress would, rather than engaging 
in normal American governance, join their colleagues out of party loyalty 
and help them wage a scorched-earth war against all administration 
policies–even their own Republican policies–following the Gingrich 
playbook that the road to victory in the next election is to make the 
Democratic President be and appear to be a failure. That the Federal Reserve would ignore half of its dual mandate, and be 
satisfied with policies that avoided deflation now matter what unemployment 
rate or capacity utilization rate those policies brought. 
 That the recovery that would follow once the recession was over would be 
a slow, hesitant, “jobless” recovery. 
 That the initial shock to the financial system and downturn would be much 
larger than anticipated as of early December 2008. 
 That mortgage finance might not resolve itself, and that construction 
might remain deeply depressed for a very long time. That government attempts to support weak banking systems would set off a 
wave of sovereign debt crises that would then deepen the global downturn. That repeated waves of expansionary policies might set off a dollar and 
sovereign debt crisis inside the United States. To deal with all of these, Obama needed to staff his administration up–to 
choose and nominate officials and, if the Senate did not confirm them in a 
timely fashion, recess-appoint them. To deal with the first of these seven, the Obama administration needed to 
set up the Budget Act Reconciliation process and to husband executive branch 
authority so that it could conduct large-scale expansionary economic policy 
via Reconciliation and loan guarantees and quantitative easing if 
Republicans filibustered and the economy was still in the dumps in 2010 and 
2911. To deal with the second, the Obama administration needed to rapidly 
nominate and get confirmed Federal Reserve governors and a Federal Reserve 
Chair who would take the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate very seriously 
indeed if unemployment was above 9% and stable or rising in 2010 and 2011. To deal with (3) and (4) the administration needed to prepare the ground by 
doing more of what it had done to buy insurance against (1) and (2)–by 
warning at every opportunity that the first round of expansionary policies 
might not be enough, by preparing the ground via Reconciliation and by 
husbanding executive branch authority, and by making sure not to abandon the 
fight against unemployment for the fight for long-run fiscal stability until 
the recovery was well-established–lest the administration wind up in 2010 
and 2011 with a jobless recovery and few remaining tools to expand demand. 
To deal with (5), the administration needed to prepare the ground for using 
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to essentially nationalize, refinance, and work 
out mortgages nationwide, should it turn out in 2010 or 2011 that the 
recovery was not strong or sustained. To deal with (6), it would have been wise on day 1 to promote the IMF to the 
role of global technocratic crisis manager, and to get commitments from 
major credit-worthy economies that they would back the IMF with sufficient 
resources for it to actually handle the situation. should the 
mortgage-induced banking crisis of 2008-9 set off sovereign debt crisis in 
2010-11. I wasn’t a genius to see these as the risks. They were, at least in the 
circles in which I moved, obvious. Yet the only risk that the Obama administration has appeared to even think 
about guarding against is (7)–which is the one risk that has not come home 
to roost big time. For me the big question since the summer of 2009 has been: Why? Why didn’t 
the Obama administration make any significant effort to purchase insurance 
against risks (1) through (6)? Those were the questions that I hoped Ron 
Suskind’s book would answer for me. And, alas, it does not do much to do so. Instead, it falls into the Woodward 
The Agenda trap: it is a story of strong and colorful personalities 
knifing each other in internal bureaucratic bar fights with little sense of 
what the substantive policy arguments were, of the arguments’ merits and 
demerits, and of the stakes. Moreover, the book falls victim to the Teddy 
White disease: a reporter taking the time-colored recollections of 
individuals and turning them into a third-person omniscient capital “T” 
Truth, giving the narrative an authority it does not deserve. This is further compounded by Suskind’s having the implicit viewpoint of the 
third-person omniscient narrator jump away from one source to another when 
the first source tells a version of the story that Suskind does not want to 
highlight. References to seventeenth-century muzzle-loading musketry 
technology become in Suskind’s retelling references to twenty-first century 
pornography. People who steamrolled the entire Democratic coalition to get 
policy ideas that had their origins in the hard-right Heritage Foundation 
enacted into law are in Suskind’s view too weak to stand up to the big boys 
of the administration. Suskind wrongly thinks people who skip meetings to 
deal with crises are demonstrating their disloyalty to the president, when 
Obama would have been the very first to say: “What are you doing here? You 
need to be firefighting!” And Tim Geithner dresses badly and will never make 
the cover of the Financial Times “How to Spend It” supplement. And so what I at least regard as the big stories and mysteries of economic 
policymaking under Obama are largely passed by. 
In my view, Suskind’s greatest achievements in the 2000s came in stories 
where his third-person omniscient camera followed a single smart, talkative, 
quirky, and angry individual–John DiIulio, or Paul O’Neill–through the 
Bush administration. His narratives then acquire a kind of authority as one 
player’s view. And the damage done by the assumption of the third-person 
omniscient viewpoint is thus limited. But that is not the kind of narrative 
we have here. I had hoped to learn from Confidence Men why Federal Reserve Chair Ben 
Bernanke shifted from being the activist crisis manager and the advocate of 
aggressive quantitative easing that he was before mid-2009 to a man who does 
not take the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate to focus both on price stability 
and full employment seriously. And I had hoped to learn why Obama chose to 
renominate Bernanke Federal Reserve Chair over a candidate–Larry 
Summers–who had reason to think he was the default choice for the job and 
who does take that dual mandate seriously. I had hoped to learn why Barack 
Obama had been appallingly slow at nominating candidates to fill empty slots 
among the Governors of the Federal Reserve. I learn nothing substantial 
about any of these. I had hoped to learn why Tim Geithner had been strangely loathe to engage in 
large-scale quantitative easing using Treasury resources. Why wasn’t the 
PPIP developed and expanded further? I had hoped to learn why Geithner was 
loathe to even to set up the game table for the possibility that it might 
become advisable to use Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to intervene in the 
mortgage market on a large scale. People, after all, had been discussing 
using them as a “in case of emergency break glass” option since at least the 
Bear Stearns bankruptcy of early 2008. I learn nothing substantial about 
these. I had hoped to learn why the Obama administration had not done the natural 
thing–the thing that I had been told on my first day in the Clinton 
administration was the right way to do economic policy–and load as much as 
possible of your core agenda into the streamlined budget Reconciliation 
process, as a way of evading congressional procedural roadblocks. I learn 
nothing about this. I had hoped to learn why the Obama administration kept trying to make deal 
after deal with a unified Republican caucus that was following the Gingrich 
playbook that the road to victory in the next election is to make the 
Democratic President be and appear to be a failure by denying him everything 
that the press might call a success for the president. I learn nothing about 
this. So what do I learn? I learn that Barack Obama was very worried about the budget deficit and the 
rising national debt very early–so much so that he short-circuited his own 
bureaucratic processes and ordered reports from deficit hawk and OMB 
director Peter Orszag routed to him around the NEC process. And I learn 
that, perhaps as a consequence, Obama appears never to have registered how 
far off any possible Treasury bond crisis was. The message Obama needed to 
hear was, I think, something like: Analogies between today and the early 1990s, when immediate deficit reduction set off a strong recovery, are likely to be wrong. At the start of the 1990s the 10-year Treasury bond commanded an interest rate of 9%. Today it commands an interest rate of 3%. As of early 2009, or indeed as of today, a Treasury bond crisis is not one 
of the ten biggest dangers facing the United States economy. I do learn that the “do less” or “do no harm” Geithner-Emanuel alliance 
regularly kneecapped a Romer-Summers “do something” alliance–perhaps 
because Summers’ and Romer’s small CEA and NEC staffs could only come up 
with outlines and proposals rather than plans–which only the Treasury with 
its ample staff could produce–and, as Geithner liked to say, “plan beats no 
plan”. Suskind writes that Geithner thought Romer was of “no value on policy issues 
[of] financial rescue”, and that: Larry and Rahm were the only one’s that mattered. Larry’s problem was that he had no alternative, ever… never came up with an alternative strategy… Suskind then quotes Treasury Assistant Secretary Alan Krueger’s thoughts on 
the issue: Alan Krueger said one reason Treasury dragged its feet on constructing a plan for Citigroup’s resolution was Sheila Bair. They would have had to consult the FDIC chairwoman… her agency is in the business of closing banks. “The fear was that Sheila would leak it… there’d be a run on Citi.” He added that this was one of many reasons: The bottom line is that Tim and others felt the president didn’t fully understand the complexities of the issue, or simply that they were right and he was wrong, and that trying to resolve Citi and then other banks would have been disastrous. Krueger, for one, disagreed… I think that Alan Krueger is wrong here. First, in the early stages of any Democratic administration, the Treasury is overwhelmed with work. Assignments coming in are regularly dropped on the floor. Only the most immediate priorities of the Treasury Secretary get pushed through the bureaucracy. This was the case in 1993 when Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen had a full mesnie of confirmed assistant and undersecretaries to deploy. This was more the case in 2009 when Tim Geithner had no confirmed deputies at all. 
Second, Tim Geithner had, when he was President of the Federal Reserve Bank 
of New York, tried to get tough on the banks. That was what the Lehman 
Brothers bankruptcy was. It backfired, catastrophically. After that 
experience, Geithner was bound to seek policies that would restore 
confidence, recapitalize the banking system, and halt the panic without 
frightening or angering bankers. From his perspective the risks involved in 
trying to get tough on banks were so great that such policies were, if not 
unthinkable, simply not a high priority. Had Obama wished a Treasury 
Secretary enthusiastic enough about being tough on banks and bankers to push 
plans for doing so through the bureaucracy, he needed to have chosen another 
and very different Treasury Secretary. I learn that Barack Obama was attracted to the idea that on top of our 
business-cycle demand-driven downturn was a longer-run trend rise in 
technological unemployment that virtually guaranteed that the recovery would 
be “jobless”: [Summers and Romer] were concerned by something the president had said in a morning briefing: that he thought the high unemployment was due to productivity gains in the economy. Summers and Romer were startled. “What was driving unemployment was clearly deficient aggregate demand,” Romer said. “We wondered where this could have been coming from. We both tried to convince him otherwise. He wouldn’t budge.” Summers had been focused intently on how to spur demand, and on what might drive a meaningful recovery…. [W]ithout a rise in demand, in Summers’s view, nothing else would work…. But productivity?… If Obama felt that 10 percent unemployment was the product of sound, productivity-driven decisions by American business, then short-term government measures to spur hiring were not only futile but unwise. The two economists strained their memory… had they said something he’d misconstrued?… After a month, frustration turned to resignation. “The president seems to have developed his own view,” Romer said. And I learn that the team of Orszag-Obama starting from this position 
effectively kneecapped proposals for follow-on expansionary policies to 
boost employment in late 2009 and early 2010, letting the best be the enemy 
of the good. Orszag countered [in November 2009] that unless they did something large… $700 billion, “it wouldn’t jump-start or significantly move the economy”; but $700 billion was politically untenable…. Romer said this was the wrong approach…. $100 billion would mean one million new jobs. “A million people is a lot of people.” Obama was unenthusiastic. Romer, in meeting after meeting, came back with new plans, new ways either to locate $100 billion or to pitch it to Congress. Her appeals were passionate. She said they were falling into a “the perfect is the enemy of the good” trap…. In November…. [Obama] took Orszag’s position at a briefing…. “That is oh so wrong,” Romer blurted out…. “It’s not just wrong, it’s oh so wrong?” Obama queried…. “Enough!” he shouted. “I said it before, I’ll say it again. It’s not going to happen. We can’t go back to Congress again. We just can’t!”… Romer, visibly shaken… was summoned to talk privately in Jarrett’s office…. A few weeks later… Summers stepped up, offering, almost word for word, the position Romer had voiced previously. This time Obama listened respectfully: “I know you’ve got to make this argument, Larry, but I just don’t think we can do it.” As they left the meeting, Romer… said, “Larry, I don’t think I’ve ever liked you so much.” “Don’t worry, [Summers] quipped. “I’m sure the feeling will pass…” Now I know that one major reason why Orszag at least was insufficiently 
panicked about the unemployment situation in late 2009 was that he was still 
confident that the U.S. economy was about to undergo a rapid recovery–that 
we would see a “V” rather than the “L” that we are currently suffering 
through. If you have high confidence that a “V” is on the way, then it 
indeed makes little sense to devote limited presidential time and limited 
administration bandwidth to lobbying for a $100 billion fiscal expansion. If 
a bill producing such shows up on the president’s desk, of course the 
president should sign it–but from Orszag’s perspective it was not worth 
spending energy. I thought at the time that Orszag and Obama were wrong. 
But Suskind does not help me understand why Orszag and Obama were so 
confident that the “V” was coming–he doesn’t even hint that they had an 
argument. And, as 
Ezra Klein points out, the stories Suskind does tell repeatedly 
undermine his global narrative claim that the administration’s big problem 
was that Lawrence Summers was (a) too sure of himself, and (b) so good a 
debater that he won internal arguments he ought to have lost. If Larry 
Summers had been winning all the internal policy arguments, Ezra points out, 
then administration policy would have gone in “the direction Suskind clearly 
wishes the White House had gone.” I learn that, somehow, Tim Geithner managed to kneecap Barack Obama’s 
initial enthusiasm for Elizabeth Warren’s consumer financial protection 
agenda as a major administration initiative. Obama started out impressed 
with Warren. Suskind writes that Obama: … was particularly taken with Elizabeth Warren…. “Wow, she’s really something,” he said…. “Really good, we should get her out there more often.” Larry Summers and Anita Dunn… discussed for a moment how to get Warren more TV…. Alan Krueger smiled to himself. It was good Geithner wasn’t present. He despised the crusading Warren… And lots of people respected and approved of Warren–including, eventually, 
Christina Romer: Warren was caught off guard by Romer’s intensity, and her thoughtfulness…. Question after question, the two engaged in an intellectual thrust-and-parry, until finally… Romer broke her stride. “Why is it always the women?” Romer said. “Why are we the only ones with balls around here?” That night Warren got a call from Valerie Jarrett. “Wow, you really turned Christy Romer around.” But Obama would not appoint her to the agency whose creation she had worked 
so hard for: August 13 [2010], Warren finally got her meeting with the president…. The president offered a long explanation of the complex logistics whereby Warren would stand up the agency and become a special advisor… that way she wouldn’t spend months… on ice… I think I understand why Geithner viewed Warren’s potential appointment as 
too dangerous–the shadow of Lehman Brothers again, and Geithner’s judgment 
that the catastrophic reaction to not bailing out the creditors of Lehman 
Brothers was a powerful wakeup call on the costs of “tough on bankers” 
policies. But a reader of Suskind would not learn anything about Geithner’s 
reasons, other than Suskind’s claim that Geithner–who has so far never 
worked for a Wall Street firm for a day in his life, and who was one of the 
three who pulled the plug on Lehman–is a tool of Wall Street. Ex ante, I would have given long odds that Ben Bernanke would not forget 
about the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate. Ex ante, I would have bet long 
odds that Tim Geithner would not have turned into “Dr. No” in a situation as 
desperate as the one the Obama administration has faced. Ex ante, I would 
have given long odds that even if Geithner had started 2009 much too 
optimistic that he would have quickly marked his beliefs to market. Ex ante, 
I would have given long odds that Summers would have wiped the floor with 
Orszag and Geithner were the collegiality of the NEC process to break down 
and turn into out-and-out bureaucratic war. Why Obama chose the policies he did, why Geithner and Orszag and company were so optimistic in 2009, why the Reconciliation process was not teed up for emergency expansionary fiscal policy action if it turned out to be necessary, why Fannie and Freddie were not teed up for emergency mortgage action if it turned out to be necessary, why the administration turned so decisively away from unemployment and toward long-term deficit reduction in early 2010, why Summers and Romer did not wipe the floor with Geithner and Orszag in the 
long twilight bureaucratic struggle when NEC collegiality broke down, and 
 why Bernanke forgot about the employment and output part of the Federal 
Reserve’s dual mandate – these are all questions that I would dearly love to 
know the answers to. Two and a half years ago I would have given long odds that Ron Suskind’s 
book would provide me with a lot of the answers to these questions. It does not.

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Maritime firms to struggle with credit squeeze

September 26, 2011

By Randy Fabi and Harry Suhartono SINGAPORE (Reuters) – With fears of a recession rising, the maritime industry will find it increasingly difficult to obtain financing for expansion over the next year, with the exception of the offshore-energy sector, industry experts said. The economic gloom in Europe and the United States has amplified the pain for shipping companies, already struggling with rock-bottom freight rates and a glut of new vessels that were ordered when times were good. The International Monetary Fund last week warned that the West could slip back into recession next year unless they quickly tackled economic problems that could infect the rest of the world. “Given the underlying economics of oversupply and current day (freight) rates, the banks are far more cautious,” said Gervais Green, head of Asia shipping with law firm Norton Rose. “If they are going to put money into a project, it is on very particular terms.” Executives from the world’s top banks in shipping finance, including DnB NOR , HSH Nordbank and Deutsche Bank , will gather with the maritime community in Singapore on September 27 and 28 to discuss survival, recovery and opportunities in this gloomy economic environment. CREDIT WOES The depressed freight market has forced shipping companies to use more of their reserves to buy vessels and expand their operations as banks tighten their credit lines. Before the economic downturn three years ago, ship owners typically needed to place a down payment of only around 20 percent of the value of a vessel, with banks providing the remainder of the funding. Today, some medium-sized firms must provide as much as 50 percent down payment to get a loan, leaving many unable to stay competitive against industry leaders such as A.P. Moller-Maersk and Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC). Bankrupt shippers Korea Line, The Containership Company, and Omega Navigation Enterprises are the most high-profile casualties so far this year. “Large projects with strong companies behind it will get financing,” said Erik Borgen, Asia director for DnB NOR bank. “The banks themselves are a bit too exposed today, so there are only a small amount of banks prepared to be involved in the ship-financing side.” Despite the difficult environment for most of the maritime sector, there are some businesses that remain attractive to banks. With oil prices expected to remain high, the offshore-energy sector is considered one of the rare bright spots in the shipping industry with banks fiercely competing to finance lucrative projects. “In the offshore sector, there are some very large deals still being done. We are working on several right now and there is appetite to do more,” said Green of Norton Rose. (Editing by Vinu Pilakkott)

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Al Norman: Wal-Mart’s Manhattan Project

September 26, 2011

New York Study Says Retailer Will Kill 14,000 Jobs By Al Norman Unlike the top secret Manhattan Project in the 1940s, which produced the first atomic bomb, Wal-Mart has made no attempt to hide its ambition to carpet bomb all five boroughs of Manhattan with its stores. But a new study this week says that for the giant retailer to match the market share it has across America, Wal-Mart would have to open 159 stores in New York City — and nearly 14,000 jobs would be lost at other merchants. This would be the retail equivalent of an atomic bomb dropped on the retail economy in Gotham. The report released by the Alliance for a Greater New York (ALIGN) and the Murphy Institute at the City University of New York, titled The Walmartization of New York City , projects that to achieve a 21% share of the grocery market in New York City, Wal-Mart would have to open 159 stores — which would result in the net loss of nearly 14,000 retail jobs and result in a loss of over $353 million in total wages a year for all remaining retail workers in the city. Municipal officials rarely comprehend the difference between gross jobs and net jobs. They see a new store going up, and are convinced it means new jobs. But because much of what Wal-Mart sells is already being sold at existing merchants scattered across the city, the net jobs figure is really the bottom line. The ALIGN study estimates that 159 Wal-Mart stores would “create” 9,950 gross jobs — but at the same time “this would result in the loss of 13,930 jobs in the neighborhoods surrounding the Wal-Mart stores,” resulting in a net loss of 3,980 jobs. But there are other costs as well. If the experience of other states is any guide, as many as 4,200 Wal-Mart workers in Manhattan will end up relying on state and federal tax payers for health care benefits from Medicaid, according to the new report. That figure ought to give New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg pause. Yet three months ago, Hizzoner referred to Wal-Mart as “one of the greatest corporate citizens in the country.” What we do know is that Citizen Wal-Mart is one of the greatest political spenders in the country. According to the Walmartization study, in the first half of 2011, Wal-Mart spent $2.1 million on lobbying expenses in New York — which is over six times as much as they spent in the past four years combined. Like other Wal-Mart urban forays into Chicago, Boston, and Washington, DC, these campaigns resemble “a full political campaign” the analysis says, with TV and radio spots, newspaper display ads, billboards, polls, and petitions. Wal-Mart has to sell itself before it can sell its Chinese products. Since the mid 1990s, Wal-Mart has been methodically replacing its ‘old” discount stores in suburban and rural markets (many built as recently as the mid-1990s) with larger supercenters. But this big box format approach will simply not fit into urban areas because it’s hard to assemble 30+ acres of land in densely populated cities. The Walmartization report suggests that almost three out of four (72%) of these projected Wal-Mart stores will be the Express store format that Wal-Mart launched this year, with footprints of only 15,000 square feet each. The ALIGN/CUNY study estimates Wal-Mart could add 4 million square feet of retail stores in New York City. But 114 of these units would be smaller stores, or a total of 1.7 million square feet — 43% of Wal-Mart’s projected selling space. The 35,000 square foot Wal-Mart Markets would make up 30% of the total square footage. The larger superstore format would be used in only 11 locations, for a total of 1.1 million square feet, or only 27% of the total selling space. The economic fallout from Wal-Mart’s Manhattan Project should come as no revelation to anyone who has been watching the retail skies. A report released in January of 2011 by the Hunter College Center for Community Planning & Development, and the New York City Public Advocate, concluded that “the opening of a Wal-Mart in New York City would likely eliminate more jobs than it creates, result in the loss of independently owned small businesses, and create an increased burden on taxpayers.” That study referred to Wal-Mart as an “economic Trojan Horse.” In an email to supporters this week, ALIGN said “the reality behind Wal-Mart’s new hype is excruciating pain for our local economy: shuttered local businesses, depressed wages, and an army of workers dependent on strapped public coffers for basic necessities like food and health care.” Study authors Josh Kellermann and Stephanie Luce conclude that “Wal-Mart destroys more jobs than it creates, drives out locally-owned competitors, and undermines wages for the rest of the industry.” Yet there is still hope for New Yorkers. “We need not be forced to choose between Wal-Mart jobs and no jobs,” the study says. “The jobs will be created by other retailers, as long as New Yorkers demand an alternative to Wal-Mart.” If the political mantra this fall is: “It’s about jobs, stupid,” then Wal-Mart’s Manhattan Project is a total bomb. Al Norman is the founder of Sprawl-Busters. His new book, “Dancing on Wal-Mart’s Grave,” is due out later this fall. His website is http://www.sprawl-busters.com

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Retail bosses survey darkening skies

September 26, 2011

BERLIN (Reuters) – The deteriorating outlook for the world economy, and what retailers can do to cope, are likely to be the dominant themes at the annual World Retail Congress in Berlin this week. Executives from companies including France’s Carrefour , Britain’s Kingfisher , Neiman Marcus and India’s Reliance Industries , will be discussing a slide in consumer confidence across Europe and the United States. Shoppers are curbing spending amid fears major economies are falling back into recession and a sovereign debt crisis in the euro zone could spark another financial markets meltdown. Retailers are traditionally wary of stepping into the political arena for fear of alienating some of their customers. But as the outlook deteriorates, they may become more vociferous in calling for policymakers to take action to boost growth, such as easing monetary policy or slowing down the pace of austerity measures. Planet Retail research director Robert Gregory thought much of the focus at the three-day conference would also be on how companies can cope by, for example, maximizing their potential in still growing subsectors like online retailing and tapping relatively undeveloped markets, like those in Africa. “Multichannel and best practice will be among the major talking points,” he said, referring to store-based retailers’ attempts to integrate their businesses with the internet. It will not all be doom and gloom either, as retailers will be present from fast-growing markets like India and Brazil. India’s Reliance Retail said last week it saw same-store sales rising 20 percent this fiscal year. (Reporting by Mark Potter and Victoria Bryan; Editing by Mike Nesbit)

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Rio Tinto eyeing Australia aluminum business spin-off: paper

September 26, 2011

(Reuters) – Global miner Rio Tinto is considering spinning off part of its Australian aluminum assets as a planned carbon would raise costs, the Australian Financial Review said on Monday. Rio has been working with Macquarie Group and PricewaterhouseCoopers to consider its options for the business, the paper said. Rio’s aluminum business in Australia is made up of three refineries, three smelters and two bauxite mines, the paper said, adding Rio would hold onto the mines as they offer the highest margins. Rio last week told investors it plans to achieve 40 percent earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization margin from the aluminum business through the sale of two non-specified assets, the paper said. Rio Tinto officials could not be immediately reached for comment by Reuters. (Reporting by Narayanan Somasundaram; Editing by Balazs Koranyi)

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Jeff Sweat: Five Questions for Simon Mainwaring

September 26, 2011

We First author on how brands and agencies can create positive change Branding consultant author Simon Mainwaring was an agency star, but his work as worldwide creative director for Motorola at Ogilvy and other agencies didn’t exactly point to his latest venture — a book and social branding firm that aim to help create a more equitable world. Mainwaring’s book, We First: How Brands & Consumers Use Social Media to Build a Better World, lays out a new model for corporations and consumers to do good. I caught up with Mainwaring to find out more about such concepts as “contributory consumption” and how agencies can help brands re-invent themselves in a troubled world. Jeff Sweat : Why do you think a book like yours is necessary? Simon Mainwaring : A book like We First is necessary right now for three reasons. The first is the fact that we now live in an intimately connected global community. There are many individuals, companies and even countries operating in what I call a “me first” mentality, which is effectively a purely competitive approach to life, treating the planet as if it has infinite resources and pitting one country against another for supremacy. But, as we discovered on Wall Street, as we see through the internationalization of currency, as we see through the effects around the world of various disasters, we are intimately connected. As such, we need a book that reframes business and the role of companies. The second is that, as a function of the information provided by the Internet, consumers and business leaders are more aware than ever of the trouble that we are in, whether it’s poverty, disease, climate change or environmental degradation. And so there’s a greater need than ever to respond to these challenges with fresh thinking. And third, it’s because of the arrival of social technology and its transformative potential. I believe the true power of social media is its ability to scale and accelerate these connections. JS : In your book you say that there are changes that corporations need to make. What are some of those? Mainwaring : The challenges for corporations are three-fold, and they affect every tier of the hierarchy within the corporation. First, the C-level: Executives can no longer hide behind the corporate veil. They need to be accountable for what their companies do, because entities are responsible for socially irresponsible behavior. Second, companies are challenged to position themselves as places where people want to work. One of the most powerful ways they can do that is to align their social outreach around their core values and make a positive contribution to the marketplace. And third, in terms of organizational structure, it’s enormously challenging for companies that in the past have privately held a monopoly to realign themselves in a way to take advantage of the social business marketplace. Traditionally, companies are structured around a hierarchy. Now various people, including Charlene Li, who wrote a wonderful book called Open Leadership, have examined in detail what this reorganization might look like, whether it’s hub-and-spoke, whether it’s a dandelion, whether it’s some form of distributed organization that does away with the hierarchy but still allows for centralized control. JS : Why does social media make this change possible? Mainwaring : Consumers now have a voice. And the fact that consumers can be creators, producers and distributors means they can push back against brands to punish them for their socially irresponsible behavior or reward them for their responsible behavior. We already see consumer adoption of new technology moving faster than brand and agency adoption. In a sense, consumers are more sophisticated in their use of these tools than brands or agencies. And as consumers become more aware of the power they have, their sway over companies will increase. JS : You mentioned one concept in the book, “contributory consumption.” Tell us a little about that. Mainwaring : The engine of capitalism, like any engine, needs to be serviced. And the way that we’ve been running the engine of capitalism has been to think profit for profit’s sake and really damn the consequences, even to the point where Wall Street largely came unstuck in 2008. Contributory consumption at its broadest level is a way of servicing that engine, because brands, companies and institutions cannot survive in societies that fail, in which case we need to make a proportional contribution to the maintenance of the well-being of the entire business ecosystem on which all these companies depend. And if you look at the reality in the United States, where you have more than 40 million people below the poverty line and 42 million on food stamps, and then you look at poverty around the world, clearly the way we’re running the engine of capitalism is not serving us well. Contributory consumption builds on some amazing work done by other people, including the “(Product)Red” campaign and “1% for the Planet” [and others], all of which give consumers the opportunity to make a proportional contribution to something they care about. JS : What role do you think the advertising community plays in this new system or this new world? Mainwaring : The advertising industry is facing several challenges. One is that their traditional intermediary role is being challenged because consumers are talking directly to brands. And a lot of brands are therefore taking their social business units in-house, which robs an agency of its stewardship role. Even though social technology is powerful, it is not an end in itself. The marketplace is still driven by a timeless currency of emotion. And the way you leverage emotion is in your storytelling, and that’s where advertising agencies are completely relevant and essential to the future. JS : Your book talks about the idea that businesses need to recognize that working for the social good benefits them, too. Do you think that they’re capable of recognizing that? Mainwaring : I think companies are waking up. Any one of us at any given time is a parent, an investor, an employee, a shareholder. And as we’re becoming increasingly aware of the global crises that we all face, we’re realizing that each of us need to play a more contributory role in what we do.

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ECB fights to avoid role in euro zone rescue fund

September 26, 2011

By Marc Jones WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The European Central Bank battled to avoid being dragged further into the area of fiscal policy this weekend, as its policymakers stood firm against using the ECB to help supercharge the euro zone’s rescue fund. The 17-country euro zone wants to convince financial markets that its bailout fund is big enough to handle any future debt troubles, but without having to tap resistant governments for yet more taxpayer money. Over the last few weeks, the plans have been gathering momentum. One of the ideas that has been floated is to give the fund the ability to borrow money from the ECB’s currently unlimited lending operations, which it could then use to inject into troubled government bonds or banks. There was widespread rejection of such a maneuver, however, by key ECB figures and Klaus Regling, head of the fund, known as the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF). “There are serious concerns about the compatibility with the ECB because it may not be in line with the prohibition of market financing, so I think it is very unlikely that you will see that,” Regling told a panel discussion organized by the Euro50 group. For the ECB, it is a case of not being dragged further beyond the central bank’s core task of keeping inflation in check. The ECB is already deeply uncomfortable about buying government bonds, something it started doing last year, and there are fears its independence is being compromised. “I think the whole idea of leveraging the EFSF is one of a variety of financial engineering innovations that have been put forward. Some of them are better than others, I’ll leave it at that,” Ireland’s ECB Governing Council member Patrick Honohan told Reuters, when asked whether the ECB could be involved in bolstering the EFSF. “I think there are many other opportunities and possibilities that are maybe higher on the list (than using the ECB),” he said. ECB Executive Board member Juergen Stark and former ECB heavyweight Axel Weber also hit out at pushing the central bank beyond its remit. “For monetary policy to remain effective, its responsibilities must remain within clear limits,” Stark said in a speech. “Opportunistic manipulations of the monetary policy framework of course damage the foundations on which that framework rests.” LIQUIDITY DELUGE Stark’s comments came just hours after U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner bluntly told European governments to eliminate the threat of a catastrophic financial crisis by teaming up with the ECB to boost the bailout capacity. The International Monetary Fund also applied pressure, saying it would support interest rate cuts. Antonio Borges, head of the fund’s European department, urged the ECB to continue to buy bonds once the EFSF gets the power to do so, saying the ECB was the only player with the ability to scare market speculators. Financial markets now expect the ECB to cut rates by 50 basis points back to a record low of 1 percent next month. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet warned at the IMF meeting that the euro zone was at the epicenter of a much bigger sovereign debt crisis and that risks to the stability of the financial system had risen considerably. Policymakers also indicated the ECB was ready to firehose another round of ultra-long liquidity into the banking system to subdue funding fears, a further move back in the direction of full crisis mode. Debates at the meeting saw bankers recommending three- or even five-year funding operations, although ECB members suggested one-year operations were the likely first step. “One of the instruments we had was, in the context of full allotment of policy, to have one-year tenders,” Austria’s Ewald Nowotny said. “I think it might be advisable to think about reintroducing this approach. We could discuss a reintroduction.” DOUBLE-DIP? Rate-cut expectations were also given a further boost by gloomy comments about the economy and the first signs the bank now fears the euro zone could fall back into recession. “It is more likely now that the second half of 2011 will be less positive than expected and the key question is whether the current slowdown in the global economy is largely a transitory phenomenon … Could it lead to a double-dip or is it just a soft patch? This is the issue we will have to monitor,” said Stark, who oversees the economics department. Nowotny said growth forecasts could well be cut , while Weber warned he expected a further escalation of the debt troubles. “I fear very much the situation is going to deteriorate further before it improves,” Weber said during a question-and-answer session. “We all understand that there needs to be further action because what has been decided so far has not convinced the markets … Ultimately I believe that if markets become much worse than they are now we will see drastic action (by policymakers to resolve the crisis),” he said. (Editing by Dale Hudson)

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State Farm pay $5 billion to cover weather damages

September 25, 2011

(Reuters) – State Farm Insurance has paid $5 billion to its customers for weather-related catastrophes — damage to cars, homes and other property so far this year — the largest U.S. insurer of homes and cars said on Sunday. That payout has been increased by wildfires, tropical storms and hurricanes during the summer, which came after last spring’s spate of tornadoes and hail storms. The company did not provide a comparable figure for the year-ago period. Through September 23, State Farm has receive more than 970,000 catastrophe claims, stretching from wildfires in western Texas to storm damage in Maine. The company’s catastrophe claims work is in addition to the 11 million to 12 million other auto, home and business claims reported to the company in a typical year. Earlier this month, Allstate Corp said it had lost $500 million on Hurricane Irene, much less than the $2 billion it lost from severe thunderstorms and tornadoes during April and May. (Reporting by Matt Daily in New York; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)

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Charles Gasparino: What Is the Real Solyndra Scandal?

September 25, 2011

The left wing media loves a good scandal, particularly one that somehow points out how allegedly greedy capitalists rip off taxpayers. If these capitalists are in any way connected to the Republican Party, like defense contractor Halliburton, it’s feeding-frenzy time. But if the scandal involves one of the liberal media’s pet causes like “affordable housing” to the poor, scandals such as the widespread accounting fraud at the government mortgage lender Fannie Mae and the massive pay packages handed out to the agency’s top executives are just not such a big deal. That is until Fannie imploded and taxpayers were stuck paying the bailout bills. All of which brings us to the sad story of Solyndra, and how wasting more than $500 million of taxpayer money on a dubious technology isn’t really much of a scandal, at least according to some of my colleagues in the financial press. Solyndra is a company that was supposed to develop solar panels, and help the US compete with those financed and controlled by the Chinese government, which have cornered the market in these products. The reason it needed the government money was not just to better compete with the Chinese, but also to produce “green” energy and jobs for a Liberal’s wet dream. But the dream was deferred because the Chinese are better than we are at this business (which may not be much of a business in the first place), and Solyndra’s business model made no sense — it was trying to sell solar panels at prices well above the market rate. American taxpayer money was wasted just about the moment the Obama Administration signed over the checks. Joe Nocera of the New York Times points out that the Republicans are now blowing the entire Solyndra mess way out of proportion with Congressional hearings and probes just to embarrass the president as the 2012 election approaches. More importantly, he believes it’s absurd to call any of this a scandal because new technologies like solar power are by nature risky, and it is the government (ie, the American taxpayer) who must shoulder this risk for the sake of a better future because private money for such necessary projects is hard to come by. “But if we could just stop playing gotcha for a second, we might realize that federal loan programs — especially loans for innovative energy technologies — virtually require the government to take risks the private sector won’t take. Indeed, risk-taking is what these programs are all about,” Nocera writes. He doesn’t know it, but Nocera has just identified why Solyndra is a very big scandal. First put aside his lame arguments about the necessity of the government funding stuff for the public good that the private sector doesn’t. The government wasn’t supposed to be taking “risks” with the money that Solyndra was given in the first place. This was “stimulus” money. It was supposed to be spent on “shovel ready” jobs, according to President Obama, then-House speaker Nancy Pelosi and just about every left-of-center economist when they began humping passage of the $800 billion stimulus package back in 2009. The package — sold as a jobs bill to both repair our crumbling infrastructure of roads and bridges and put people back to work — was supposed to keep unemployment initially at around 8%, bringing it down to around 7% or lower by now. At the time, President Obama pointed out that the risk was not spending the money fast enough to boost an economy heading for the deepest recession since the 1930s. This money, he assured us, wasn’t to be spent on risky, albeit, noble ventures that may or may not work, but on projects that produced immediate, and much needed jobs. The same Republicans who Nocera and the left-wing media attack as partisan on the Solyndra matter, doubted the efficacy of such programs, accurately pointing out some notable government-sponsored stimulus failures like FDR’s WPA effort in the 1930s, which failed to make much of a dent in the Great Depression, and George Bush’s own half-hearted stimulus that did nothing to forestall the 2008 financial crisis and Great Recession that followed. Put aside the obvious hype that accompanies partisan warfare in Washington (Does Joe really think the Democrats are any less partisan when they get their hands on something like this?) In attacking Solyndra, Republicans are accurately pointing out the wishful thinking Lefties are pinning on green technologies in either creating jobs or products that actually work. After all, when was the last time you saw an electric car power up outside in the Whole Foods’ parking lot? They’re also pointing out a very real scandal: Why the $800 billion stimulus package failed to work in any measurable way as unemployment remains above 9 percent and economic growth appears to have stalled. Some liberals like my friend Arianna Huffington have accurately pointed out that the problem with the president’s stimulus is just how poorly it was administered. “The stimulus package failed because it was all over the map. It was not a targeted, clear jobs creation program,” she told me during our appearance on ABC’s “This Week.” And here in lies the Solyndra scandal. I’m sure some people were put to work building the Solyndra factory that was supposed to make all those solar panels that were supposed to just fly off the assembly line before the company went bankrupt and wasted $500 million of taxpayer funded loan guarantees, but was this the best use of money designed to create lasting jobs and lasting stimulus? The answer is pretty clear: Not even close. If you look at what we know about Solyndra’s failure, Arianna has it pretty much right: The administration rushed the loan through, didn’t give much thought about the company’s ability to create jobs, much less the sustainability of its business model before it became unsustainable and declared bankruptcy. I can’t tell you whether Solyndra will ever live up to the legal definition of a scandal similar to accounting frauds of Enron and WorldCom where senior executives went to jail. The FBI is investigating the matter and the company’s chief executive officer and chief financial officer recently asserted their Fifth Amendment rights in front of a House investigative committee. Keep in mind that innocent people take the Fifth all the time and FBI will often investigate issues for the US Justice Department that receive massive press attention without charges being ever filed. But “scandals” don’t have to lead to high crimes and jail terms. They often lead to public disgust and retribution at the ballot box. And President Obama has shown the scandalous proclivity to put ideology over the general welfare of the American people. Why else did he waste so much political capital on passing an unpopular health care law when Americans were losing their homes due to high unemployment? Why else would he divert money that was supposed to employ construction workers to finance a company that builds products no one wants? I suspect there will be many more Solyndras out there, so this scandal will keep getting bigger and bigger, whether the media likes it or not.

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Swiss- UBS CEO quits over trading loss; board speeds up overhaul

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) Oswald Gruebel resigned on Saturday as chief executive of troubled Swiss bank UBS, saying he took the blame for the $2.3 billion loss run up in alleged rogue trading in …

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US- Geithner demands greater European efforts to fight economic crisis

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner demanded Saturday that the eurozone make greater efforts to fight the global economic crisis, in an address to the …

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Germany- Merkel party MP wants permanent euro mechanism sooner

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) A senior lawmaker from German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives said on Saturday the euro zone’s permanent rescue mechanism should be introduced sooner than …

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Russia- Putin’s Kremlin shuffle no surprise for Russia

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) Russian Premier Vladimir Putin tried to keep Russians guessing about whether he would return to the presidency in 2012, For four years, according to Reuters. Putin, …

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US- stronger efforts needed for debt crisis

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner wants faster and bolder action to deal with the European debt crisis, and he’s calling that crisis the most serious risk to the …

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US- Reset endures no matter who is Russia’s president

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) The White House said on Saturday it expects to keep making progress in the ‘reset’ of U.S.-Russia relations regardless of who becomes the next Russian president, …

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Pakistan warns US against hot pursuit on its soil

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) Pakistan’s foreign minister on Saturday warned the United States against sending ground troops to her country to fight an Afghan militant group. Pakistan’s Foreign …

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Hijacked Spanish oil tanker freed by Pirates

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) The owners of a Spanish oil tanker that was hijacked off West Africa 10 days ago says the vessel has been freed and the 23-member crew is OK. Consultores de …

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WTO cuts world trade growth expectations for 2011 to 5.8%

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) The World Trade Organization’s (WTO) director-general, Pascal Lamy, said that the organization slashed its trade growth forecasts for the year from 6.5 percent to 5.8 percent, reported …

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Iran’s 2011 crude steel production up to 8.768m tons

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) World Steel Association (WSA) said that in 2011′s first eight months, Iran’s crude steel production grew 13.1 percent from 2010 to reach 8.768 million tons, reported Tehran Times. The …

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Iran’s subsidy reform plan cuts poverty: WB

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) The World Bank (WB) said that Iran was able to decrease poverty and income inequality notably following the launch of its subsidy reform plan in December 2010, reported Tehran Times. The …

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Iran’s inflation to drop 10% next year: IMF

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said that next year, Iran’s inflation would decline around 10 percent from the forecasted rate of 22.5 percent in the current year, reported Tehran …

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Nationwide in talks to buy Harleysville

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) Nationwide Mutual Insurance’s Chief Executive Officer, Stephen Rasmussen, said that the company is in talks to obtain Harleysville Group Inc. (HGIC), reported Bloomberg. Rasmussen stated …

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Boeing hands over first 787 Dreamliner to ANA

September 25, 2011

By Tim Hepher SEATTLE (Reuters) – Boeing’s long-awaited 787 Dreamliner became a commercial reality on Sunday when the U.S. planemaker signed a final contract to deliver the world’s first lightweight composites jetliner to its Japanese customer. Boeing says the plastics-based structure will generate 20 percent fuel savings for All Nippon Airways and other airlines, and give passengers a more comfortable ride with better cabin air and large, electronically dimmable windows. The aircraft was handed over three years behind schedule after persistent delays that cost Boeing billions of dollars. “It took a lot of hard work to get to this day,” said Scott Fancher, vice president and general manager of the 787 program. “Just about an hour ago we transferred ownership of the first 787 to All Nippon Airways,” he said at the outset of two days of celebrations at the plane’s Seattle production plant. The $200 million long-range aircraft, which boasts a graceful new design with raked wingtips, will leave for Japan on Tuesday and enter service domestically on October 26. Boeing has taken orders for 821 Dreamliners, which will compete with the future Airbus A350, due mid-decade. The much-anticipated handover came a week after another major first delivery — the 747-8 Freighter — was abruptly postponed because of a contract dispute with the customer. CHALLENGES AHEAD Boeing has never disclosed the amount of money spent to develop the Dreamliner, but experts estimate the program is billions of dollars over budget. The Seattle Times reported on Sunday that 787 program costs had topped $32 billion. That estimate raised questions, the newspaper said, over whether the revolutionary jetliner would make money for Boeing before “well into the 2020s, if ever”. After a series of glitches in bringing the airplane into service, Boeing also faces a challenge in reaching its target of lifting production to 10 aircraft a month by 2013, analysts say. “First delivery is the end of a long and painful road for Boeing,” aerospace analyst Scott Hamilton said. “They have never had a commercial airplane program that has had this many problems, so yes, it is a milestone but the challenges aren’t over yet. Boeing still has to achieve a smooth production ramp-up and still has to do rework on some 40 airplanes that it says will (take) years to complete.” Boeing has declined so far to say how many aircraft it needs to sell to break even. “If it is 1,200, they should make money; if it is larger than that it could be challenging,” Hamilton said. The planemaker, meanwhile, is locked in a legal dispute with one of its top labor unions in Washington state, where it has traditionally built its aircraft. The International Association of Machinists and the National Labor Relations Board have accused Boeing of building a non-union 787 assembly plant in South Carolina to punish the IAM for past strikes. Boeing denies that claim, saying the jobs in South Carolina represent new employment, not the relocation of existing work. The issue has become a political lightning rod, with Republicans denouncing the Democratically controlled NLRB as being unfriendly to U.S. companies. (Additional reporting by Kyle Peterson, Editing by Dale Hudson)

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Novartis cut 2,500 jobs globally: report

September 25, 2011

ZURICH (Reuters) – Swiss drugmaker Novartis cut 2,500 jobs at sites across the world in a bid to control costs, the daily Tages Anzeiger reported on Saturday. Like many pharmaceutical companies, Novartis is starting to face generic competition, with its breast cancer drug Femara and its blood pressure medicine Diovan losing patent protection. A spokesman for Novartis said the firm could not confirm that number. Novartis’s local rival Roche has announced it would cut several thousand jobs in a cost-saving drive. (Reporting by Catherine Bosley; Editing by John Stonestreet) (Corrects headline and first paragraph to say job cuts have already been made)

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Europe Aiming To Ramp Up Crisis Fund As Other Nations Raise Alarm

September 25, 2011

WASHINGTON (Dan Flynn and Jan Strupczewski) – Europe is working to ramp up the firepower of its bailout fund, top officials said on Saturday, as the United States, China and other nations raised the alarm about its debt crisis hurting the world economy. Financial markets plunged last week on fears that Greece’s near-bankruptcy could spread to other euro zone countries, heaping pressure on European policymakers to prevent a repeat of the chaos that swept the world in 2007-2009. The European Union’s top economic official, Olli Rehn, said as soon as the region’s governments confirm new powers for their 440-billion-euro fund, known as the EFSF, attention will turn to how to get more impact from the existing money. “We need to find a mechanism where we can turn one euro in the EFSF into five, but there is no decision on how we could do that yet,” another senior European official said on condition of anonymity. The United States and other nations have urged Europe to leverage up the fund, possibly with support from the European Central Bank. But officials from the ECB and from Germany, the region’s paymaster, remained wary of using the central bank, which has a strict mandate to pursue low inflation. “We should not think of leveraging a public pot of funds as a free lunch,” said ECB Governing Council member Patrick Honohan. Nonetheless, arming the euro zone with a bigger warchest to lend to governments or shore up banks was the focus of top finance officials from around the globe who met in Washington for semiannual meetings of the International Monetary Fund. The sovereign debt crisis threatens to throw the euro zone into recession and has placed a troubling drag on an already slow U.S. economy. It could come to weigh on emerging economies too. “Brazil’s experience with past crises suggests you have to confront the problems in a fast, consistent manner,” said Brazilian central bank chief Alexandre Tombini. “The longer it takes, the higher the cost, the more contagion spreads. You have to act with overwhelming force.” The IMF’s steering committee said in a statement that the euro zone was committed to whatever was needed to resolve the single currency bloc’s crisis. It warned that the global economy had “entered a dangerous phase, calling for exceptional vigilance, coordination and readiness to take bold action” to cope with Europe’s financial stress and prevent it infecting others. European officials were scrambling to put in place a comprehensive crisis-fighting plan by the time leaders from the Group of 20 nations meet in France in early November. Greece is at the epicenter of the crisis but it has threatened to spread to several other euro zone countries. Italy, the third-biggest economy in the currency bloc, has also struggled to retain investor confidence, but Italian Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti said on Saturday its financial house was “in order.” U.S. Treasury chief Timothy Geithner, in his most explicit warnings to date, said the ECB should take a more central role in fighting the crisis. “The threat of cascading default, bank runs, and catastrophic risk must be taken off the table,” he said. CALMING NERVES Investors took some comfort on Friday from signs of new resolve by European officials, after nearly two years of what many saw as half-hearted action. “It is encouraging that … European officials are signaling a better appreciation of the depth and potential consequences of the crisis,” Mohamed el-Erian, co-chief investment officer of bond giant PIMCO, said on Saturday after further signals that Europe was bolstering its defenses. “Now they need to translate this into decisive actions underpinned by a common vision of what they want the euro zone to look like in five years time.” Some policymakers now talk openly of a possible Greek default and the need to move much more aggressively to prepare for it. “Decisions as to how to conclusively address the region’s problems cannot wait until the crisis gets more severe,” Geithner said. His warning was echoed by China’s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, who urged quick action to bring greater financial stability to the Europe. Canada’s central bank governor, Mark Carney, told Canadian radio that the euro area’s bailout fund should be more than doubled to “the neighborhood of a trillion euros.” BATTENING THE HATCHES A default by Greece could cause a domino effect in other highly indebted euro zone countries, putting at risk European banks which hold their debt. Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said Athens was determined not to default and would stay in the euro zone. “Greece will always be in the euro and Greece will never go bankrupt because this would be destructive for the euro zone and for many other countries beyond the euro zone,” he said. Athens is in tense talks with the IMF and European authorities to secure a new 8 billion-euro installment of its rescue package. In return, it has pledged deep austerity measures but negotiators are frustrated at what they say is Greece’s slow reform pace. A loan payment, however, is still expected to be made in October. The next installment is due in December. Venizelos was quoted by two newspapers on Friday as saying an orderly default with a 50 percent “haircut” for bondholders was one way to resolve the heavily indebted euro zone nation’s cash crunch. European banks have agreed to take a 21 percent loss on their Greek bonds in a restructuring deal. To battle the crisis, Geithner called for more cooperation between European policymakers — who set their own tax and fiscal policy — and their central bank. One option to increase the potency of the EFSF would be for the ECB to commit large amounts of funding, with the temporary bailout fund putting forward money to cover potential losses. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said he was open to the idea of leveraging Europe’s rescue fund but said that did not necessarily mean the ECB should provide the extra firepower. [ID:nS1E78N083] In another sign of new thinking by Europe, Schaeuble said Germany backed bringing forward the launch of the euro zone’s permanent rescue mechanism, which is currently scheduled for mid-2013. The new mechanism would give policymakers powers to impose losses on private bondholders in a default and could be leveraged more easily than the temporary version of the fund. Germany, as the strongest economy in Europe, needs to play a central role in any effort to curb a debt crisis, but public opinion there has turned against further big bailouts for fellow euro zone countries. Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Oil falls below $80 per barrel on demand concerns

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Youm7) Oil fell for a third straight day on Friday on worries that the global economy is headed for recession and could cut demand for crude. Economies around the world are at risk of …

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US- Golf in Arizona unlike anyplace else

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Youm7) Tired of chilly weather last winter, Wayne Johnson and Rachel Wright decided it was time to get away. Johnson has family in the Phoenix area, so they figured why not head to the …

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US- NASA’s dead satellite falls, starting over Pacific

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) NASA’s dead 6-tonne satellite plunged to Earth early Saturday, but more than eight hours later, US space officials didn’t know just where it hit. They thought the fiery fall …

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Lack of Sleep in Obese Teens Can Lead to Diabetes: Study

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) Obese teens who don”t get enough sleep might be at a higher risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, a new study has found. Researchers at The Children”s Hospital in …

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Japanese H-2A Launches with New IGS Military Satellite

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) Japan has launched a new Information Gathering Satellite (IGS) known as Optical-4, via their H-2A (H-IIA) launch vehicle. Given the military nature of the payload, …

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Yahoo receives several strategic inquiries

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) Yahoo’s co-founder, Jerry Yang, said that the company received a number of offers from several parties including firms that were interested in unspecified strategic options, reported Gulf …

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Pound declines to lowest level

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) International Monetary Fund (IMF) said that the sterling pound recorded its fifth consecutive decline compared to the dollar, reported Arabian business. IMF stated that Central Bank …

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EU, ECB must join forces: Geithner

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) US Treasury Secretary, Timothy Geithner, said that European countries should collaborate with the European Central Bank (ECB) in order to lessen the threat of a financial crisis and enhance …

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Brazil downs outlook

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) Brazil’s central bank’s president Alexandre Tombini said that the bank plans to reduce its expectations regarding the local economic growth in the light of the declining economy, reported …

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India to monitor local currency

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) India’s Finance Minister, Pranab Mukherjee, said that in order to know when and whether the government would need to take steps and intervene to control the local currency’s swing, for some …

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Ikea to increase stores in China

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) Ikea Group’s CEO, Mikael Ohlsson, said that in order to obtain higher and faster growth in China, the furniture retailer would increase the pace of store openings in the country almost to …

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HP obtains Autonomy Corp

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN) Hewlett-Packard Co’s (HP) Chairman, Ray Lane, said that the company obtained the second-largest software company in UK in an USD10.3 billion deal worth, reported Bloomberg. Lane stated …

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Russia- Medvedev nominates Putin for Russian presidential race

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) Russian President Dmitry Medvedev nominated Prime Minister Vladimir Putin as the ruling political party’s candidate for the presidential election in Russia in March …

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Obama to host Honduras president

September 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) U.S. President Barack Obama will hold a meeting on October 5 at the White House with the President of Honduras Porfirio Lobo during which they will discuss bilateral …

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