November 2011

Gilead agrees to buy Pharmasset for USD11b

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN) Gilead Sciences Inc. announced it will acquire Pharmasset Inc. for about USD11 billion, in order to expand business to experimental treatments for the hepatitis C virus, Bloomberg …

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S&P raises Brazil’s ratings to triple B

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN) Standard and Poor’s (S&P), the credit ratings agency, said that it decided to upgrade Brazil’s credit ratings to triple B from BBB- as a result of the country’s commitment to implement its …

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Illiquid Conditions Expected Amid U.S. Holiday; U.S. Debt Deadline Ahead

November 21, 2011

After the U.S. Dollar’s bull-run moderated during the second week of November, this past week’s price action showed that market participants continue to shed riskier assets for safer, …

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US Dollar Sell-Offs Continue to Be Very Well Absorbed

November 21, 2011

USD Dollar consolidating latest gains; more strength expected European Central Bank still holding out from more active role in crisis US officials fail to come up with deal to reduce …

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EURUSD: Keep Holding Short

November 21, 2011

I sold EURUSD at 1.3526 as prices completed a Head and Shoulders top bearish reversal chart pattern following a retest of support-turned-resistance at the bottom of a rising channel that defined …

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Iran’s aluminum exports surge 32% to USD267m

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN) The Iranian Mines & Mining Industries Development & Renovation Organization said that during the first seven months of the current Iranian calendar year, Iran’s aluminum and alumina exports …

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Iran’s annual copper production to grow to 700k tons

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN) The National Iranian Copper Industries Company’s Managing director, Ardeshir Sa’ad Mohammadi, said that the country’s annual production capacity of copper would rise 3.5-fold from the …

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Thai 2011 GDP growth to slow to 1.5%

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN) Thailand’s Office of the National Economic and Social Development Board (NESDB) said that due to the devastating floods that hit the country, growth of gross domestic product (GDP) for the …

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S Korea’s Oct industrial electricity sales up 9.1%

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN) South Korea’s Ministry of Knowledge Economy said that as a result of higher demand from energy-intensive sectors, sales of industrial electricity in October rose 9.1 percent from 2010′s …

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Rabbi Shmuley Boteach: Why Critics of Wall Street Exist Among Avowed Capitalists

November 21, 2011

A Wall Street banker friend of mine dismissed Occupy Wall Street as a bunch of socialists with too much time on their hands. Indeed, I myself criticized the protestors in an interview on CNN recently by saying that I lived under socialism in Western Europe for 11 years and the complete meltdown of their economies shows it leads to bankruptcy. I believe that people who can work have to work. I believe the government should be kept small and empower its citizens to be self-sufficient. I believe that human dignity is achieved through individual effort and receiving handouts undermines our self-sufficiency and our self-confidence. There have been times in my life when, due to financial pressures, I have had to turn for help from others. I obviously never felt good about it. It was humiliating, and I cannot imagine that anyone would believe that economic dependency of any kind should be a first choice. While government must, of course, provide a safety net for those in need, it dare never create an unhealthy reliance. But we should not dismiss the protests outright for, whatever they have morphed into, there exists an important message that ought to be heard. About 18 years ago I started writing columns about how the banking industry is taking over every other profession. My students at Oxford, where I had already served for four years as Rabbi, would discard their training as doctors and attorneys if the investment banks made them offers. I worried that the brain drain into banking would handicap professional talent in so many other sectors. How could it not? With the banks offering starting salaries in the hundreds of thousands of dollars and the potential to make tens of millions a year, you had to be crazy not to accept it. But even I could not foresee hedge fund managers routinely making half a billion dollars a year or feeling like failures for making just 10 to 20 million, a phenomenon I addressed in my book The Broken American Male . Now, since I am an avowed capitalist, why should there be any issue with banks or those who have legitimately found a means by which to produce staggering wealth, especially when a great many of the hedge fund managers known to me are highly charitable? For two reasons. The first is that any of us who have dealings with banks have learned just how awful they can be, how condescending, how greedy, and how dismissive. The second is that there seem to be two standards, one for Wall Street, the other for Main Street, and to the extent that OWS has garnered wider support, then it deserves it, because Wall Street refuses to reform itself and insists on retaining unfair privileges. I have earlier written of my battle with Bear Stearns over my treatment at the hands of a trader who tried to gorge me with fees. Then I had my issues with JP Morgan Chase, and I wrote about how, amid tens of billions of dollars in TARP money they received, they obstructed virtually every effort I attempted at a mortgage adjustment, which was the purpose of them receiving government assistance in the first place. Just getting someone on the phone was a near impossibility, and it was common, after waiting an hour to speak to someone, to suddenly have the line drop and nobody call you back. I have also had my run-ins with American Express and the utter incompetence and arrogance of some of the staff associated with the elite cards they offer, even as they charge you an annual fortune to have it. And if these were just my experiences, you could dismiss me as a grouch, but in the most prestigious and reliable news outlets, you will see endless horror stories of how the banks treat their customers. The same arrogance is manifest in the fact that the fund managers are insisting on retaining their absurd 15-percent capital gains loophole. Said loophole allows hedge fund managers and private equity firms to treat a substantial portion of their compensation as capital gains, meaning they are taxed at 15 percent rather than the 35-percent rate that applies to income such as wages and salary. To be sure, I think all taxes in this nation are way too high, and the last thing I want to see is tax raised anywhere. But I don’t want us little people to be suckers, either. And the idea that the tax rate is 35 percent on income over $379,150 but fund managers like John Paulson, earning as much as $15 billion in a single year, are able to pay a 15-percent tax rate on the majority of their income is unfair. The same of course applies to the bailouts that were given to banks but did not trickle down to end users like me. In August 2009 The New York Times released a story detailing former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s calls to his former firm, Goldman Sachs, in the days leading up to the A.I.G. bailout and financial collapse of 2008. Paulson asked for and received an ethics waiver from both the White House counsel’s office and the Treasury Department, allowing him to speak freely with Goldman Sachs chairman Lloyd Blankfein. Information obtained by The Times shows that during the week of the A.I.G. bailout Paulson spoke with Blankfein two dozen times, making their communication far more frequent than with any other bank chairman. Goldman Sachs, of course, was the bank that benefitted most from the A.I.G. bailout. All the above highlights a huge conflict of interest that the public is arrogantly told to accept as necessary on account of the “too big to fail” notion. And why, when the banks are borrowing money at 0.25 percent from the Federal Reserve, do we have to borrow at a minimum 3.25-percent prime rate that is often far greater for individuals with even a single credit blemish? Why the huge spread? This is where the objectors to Wall Street are gaining traction even among avowed capitalists, by demonstrating to the public that too many bankers insist on a privileged position, as if they are masters of the universe whom we have to support. I don’t want to see Wall Street punished, and I don’t want bankers treated any worse than anyone else. I reject class warfare. If people work hard and find ways to become extraordinarily wealthy, G-d bless them, and I hope they devote huge sums to charity. But just as the bankers should not be treated worse, they should not be treated better, either. What is needed is an even playing field, which, once achieved, will help reestablish the credibility of bankers and undermine their opposition. Rabbi Shmuley Boteach has just published Ten Conversations You Need to Have with Yourself (Wiley) and will shortly publish Kosher Jesus . Follow him on his website, www.shmuley.com , and on Twitter @RabbiShmuley .

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Robert Kuttner: American Policy Made in China

November 21, 2011

Last week, President Obama forcefully declared that the United States would not withdraw from the Asia-Pacific, telling the Australian Parliament that he was dispatching 2,500 Marines as well as ships and aircraft to serve at a base in the Australian port of Darwin. The message, in case anybody missed it, was unmistakably directed at China. But while Obama was making symbolic military gestures, his administration was doing nothing serious to contest China’s growing threat to America’s economic base. That threat is spelled out in an official government document that should be mandatory reading for all of us — the annual report of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission , released last Thursday. What’s noteworthy is that this is a bipartisan commission created by Congress, and that all of its 12 commissioners, six Republicans and six Democrats, signed off on the report. The basic findings: China is a mercantilist and authoritarian state that is determined to appropriate not only U.S. jobs but also U.S. advanced technology through illegal subsidies, suppression of worker rights, and deals with U.S. industry that are one part lucrative carrot (cheap wages, state capital) and one part illegal stick (if you want to do business in China, take a Chinese partner and share your trade secrets). Even then, you must produce mainly for export back to the U.S., not for sale in China. Worse still, U.S. industry has been happy to take these deals, which makes them a domestic ally of the China lobby. While our government periodically makes half-hearted complaints that the Chinese currency, the Renminbi, is seriously undervalued, American corporations like that just fine — because it makes their exports to the U.S. from Chinese factories even cheaper. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which fights industrial policy at home, lobbies fiercely against any pressure from Washington against Beijing’s mercantilism. So while the Obama administration flails around with small-bore military gestures and bipartisan free trade deals with smaller countries, it does not dare to challenge the grand bargain America’s corporations have made with China, or China’s own illicit policies. Among the Commission’s more important findings: The U.S.-China trade gap continues to widen, especially in advanced technology. China sold the US $81 billion in advanced technology products in the 12 months ending last August, and imported just $13.4 billion worth. The total trade deficit with China was a record $273 billion, more than half of America’s total trade deficit with the world. By mid-2011, China’s overall trade surplus of $3.2 trillion was up $800 billion in just a single year. Although China agreed in 2001 to stop explicitly requiring foreign companies to surrender their technology to China in return for market access and investment opportunities, the government in Beijing still employs several tactics to coerce foreign firms to share trade secrets with Chinese competitors. China’s industrial policy in general and its indigenous innovation policy in particular seek to circumvent accepted intellectual property protections and to extort technology from U.S. companies. These requirements and extortions explicitly violate prohibitions of the World Trade Organization. China is becoming a national security threat, both because it is an increasingly important player in the supply chain for advanced components no longer made in the U.S., and because of its sophistication in cyber-warfare: The U.S. government, foreign governments, defense contractors, commercial entities, and various nongovernmental organizations experienced a substantial volume of actual and attempted network intrusions that appear to originate in China. Of concern to U.S. military operations, China has identified the U.S. military’s reliance on information systems as a significant vulnerability and seeks to use Chinese cyber capabilities to achieve strategic objectives and significantly degrade U.S. forces’ ability to operate. Despite the threatening and unpredictable conduct of North Korea, the Chinese Communist Party appears to have calculated that its interests are better served by the support of the [North Korean] regime than by its removal. Likewise, China’s relationship with Iran undermines international efforts to curtail Iran’s pursuit of weapons of mass destruction and support of international terrorism. China continues to be an autocratic, one-party state that brutally represses dissent, even as it becomes a more effective state-led, pseudo-capitalist world power. Despite China’s increasing productivity, the Chinese government suppresses domestic consumption so that it can have ultra-low wages and cheap capital to build its economic machine and bribe American industry to collaborate with its mercantilism. Its state-owned industry sector is still immense, as its favoritism for domestic companies in its public procurement. Because of the American reliance on Chinese capital to finance the U.S. public debt and American capital markets and because so many of our largest corporations have made their separate peace with the Chinese regime, we may have already reached a tipping point where Washington is unwilling to make more than token complaints that Beijing knows not to take seriously. Though China’s suppression of the value of its currency has been thoroughly documented, Treasury Secretary Geithner has repeatedly refused to formally cite China as a currency manipulator, which would compel the U.S. government to pursue sanctions. While the West teeters on the brink of a second recession and perhaps a collapse of the Euro, China’s autocratic state capitalism is largely unchallenged by either the U.S. or Europe. After the most recent European summit meeting desperately sought to cobble together a new bailout fund, European leaders went hat in hand to Beijing, where they were told in no uncertain terms that if they wanted China’s help, they needed to stop pressing trade complaints and change China’s status from “non-market” to “market” economy. This is how China exercises its immense leverage to tilt the playing field even more extremely in Beijing’s favor. As the Commission reports, this is the 10th year of China’s provisional membership in the World Trade Organization. Though the U.S. government and others still have some leverage to change China’s behavior, if they choose to use it, the Commission reports that China hopes gradually to “strong-arm its way into market economy status, and shake free of restrictive terms and obligations in its [WTO] accession agreement.” Many Americans naively emphasize China’s great progress in improving its educational system. While we can only applaud the social strides China has made, the source of America’s growing economic disadvantage vis-à-vis Beijing lies elsewhere. While Republicans and Democrats elsewhere agree on nothing, all commission members after extensive testimony and study agreed on the mounting threat of Chinese mercantilism. The problem is that other Republicans and Democrats — such as those in Congress and in the White House, have a much more benign view of the Chinese government and continue to naively promote a “free trade” that China doesn’t practice. And while U.S. industry occasionally complains about the outright theft of intellectual property, for the most part the largest corporations like the deal they have with its outsourcing, its cheap and docile labor and its capital subsidies by the Chinese government. The Commission reports that this costs the U.S. between 600,000 and 2.4 million jobs. It is ironic that both the Republican jingoism, support for expanded democracy overseas, and saber rattling against other perceived threats, and the Obama administration’s desire to look credibly tough in the Pacific, both stop well short of defending America’s real national interests against Beijing. As for those 2,400 Marines soon shipping out to Australia, they just might have the sweetest posting of any U.S. servicemen and women anywhere. Reenlistments should be no problem. Our newly truculent policy toward China might as well be called “Throw another shrimp on the barbie.” Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect and a senior fellow at Demos. His latest book is A Presidency in Peril .

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USD/NOK Expected to Rally Back Towards 6.00 Over Coming Days

November 21, 2011

Eur/SekThe market remains very well supported and we look for a continuation of gains and fresh upside extension back towards key multi-week resistance by 9.35 over the coming days. A sustained …

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US Dollar Index Classical Technical Report 11.21

November 21, 2011

US DOLLAR INDEX: The market is expected to remain very well supported on dips after showing some clear signs of a material base in the previous month. Key previous multi-week range resistance …

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GBP/JPY Classical Technical Report 11.21

November 21, 2011

GBP/JPY: This market could be in the process of establishing a major base following the intense rally beyond the 122.50 area in recent weeks. However, the latest round of setbacks will need to …

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EUR/JPY Classical Technical Report 11.21

November 21, 2011

EUR/JPY: The latest break back below the daily Ichimoku cloud delays any hopes for a meaningful recovery on the cross and opens the door for a more significant decline back down towards critical …

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USD/CAD Classical Technical Report 11.21

November 21, 2011

USD/CAD: Our constructive outlook remains intact with the market well supported in the 0.9900 ahead of the latest bounce. Look for the formation of a fresh higher low ahead of the next major …

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NZD/USD Classical Technical Report 11.21

November 21, 2011

NZD/USD: The latest break back below 0.7730 confirms our core outlook and should now open the door for a bearish resumption back towards the key October lows at 0.7465 over the coming sessions. …

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AUD/USD Classical Technical Report 11.21

November 21, 2011

AUD/USD: The latest break and close back below 1.0200 further solidifies our core bearish outlook and now opens the door for an acceleration of declines back below parity. From here wee see risks …

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USD/CHF Classical Technical Report 11.21

November 21, 2011

USD/CHF: The pair looks like it is in the process of carving a major base ahead of some significant upside over the coming weeks and months. The latest rally seems to be gaining momentum, and we …

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GBP/USD Classical Technical Report 11.21

November 21, 2011

GBP/USD: The latest daily close below 1.5870 confirms our bearish outlook and should now open the door for a bearish resumption back towards the key October lows at 1.5270 over the coming days. …

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USD/JPY Classical Technical Report 11.21

November 21, 2011

USD/JPY:Although the market has come back under pressure following the recent surge to 79.55, we retain a constructive outlook with the price still holding above the daily Ichimoku cloud on a …

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EUR/USD Classical Technical Report 11.21

November 21, 2011

EUR/USD: The latest break below 1.3480 should now open a fresh downside extension which ultimately exposes a retest of the key lows from October at 1.3145. Look for any rallies to be well capped …

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H1 FDI in Latin America surges 54% to USD82b

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN) The United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean’s (ECLAC) director, Daniel Titelman, said that in the year’s first half, foreign direct investment (FDI) in Latin …

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Greek PM heads for Brussels to try to secure cash

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) Greece’s new prime minister headed to Brussels on Sunday to fight for the aid Athens needs to avoid bankruptcy, even as one of his coalition backers refused to give a …

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Romanians use gift cards to turn donuts into dollars

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) Two Romanians put a new twist on the American expression “dollars to donuts” when they recoded Dunkin’ Donut gift cards with stolen bank account details and used them to …

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Dollar to Find Support in US Budget Deadlock, Euro Debt Crisis

November 21, 2011

Major Currencies vs. US Dollar (% change) 14 Nov 2011 – 18 Nov 2011 Talking Points EUR: Role of ECB in Debt Crisis Containment in Focus GBP: Bank of England Minutes to Reinforce Case …

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Police say would-be teen burglar got stuck in chimney

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) The person found in a suburban Atlanta home’s chimney on Tuesday was not Santa Claus arriving early. He was a 17-year-old alleged burglar who got stuck, police said. …

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Texting mistake lands would-be drug buyer in jail

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) Text messages about buying drugs mistakenly sent to a Nebraska state trooper led to the arrest of a 23-year-old man on marijuana possession and other drug charges, police …

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Maine couple, ages 88 and 87, get married

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) A Maine couple have proved that true love knows no age limits. Eighty-eight-year-old Paul Walker married his longtime sweetheart, 87-year-old Ann Thayer, in a Lewiston …

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Alaska man charged in axe attack on snowplough

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) Alaska State Troopers say a man apparently angry that a snow berm was blocking his car is accused of attacking a snowplough with an axe. Snowplough driver James Ross told …

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Airline passengers asked for extra cash for fuel

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) Airlines used to provide free refreshments. Now at least one wants passengers to cough up extra cash for fuel. That’s what happened to angry passengers travelling from …

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PHOTOS: Free Franklin Protesters Removed From Historic Building

November 21, 2011

WASHINGTON — Eleven protesters who call their group “Free Franklin” were arrested Saturday night inside the vacant Franklin School building in downtown D.C. The demonstrators had entered the school during the afternoon to protest the closure by then-Mayor Adrian Fenty of Franklin Shelter, which provided services for the homeless until September 2008. The city is now considering selling the vacant space. Free Franklin is supported by members of Occupy DC, though it claims independence from that movement. Occupy DC plans to discuss whether or not to support Free Franklin, and the nature of that support if provided, at a General Assembly meeting Sunday evening. A press release being distributed on the scene Saturday elaborated on the protesters’ motives. “The Franklin building is a public building that belongs to the people of DC and must be put to use for the benefit of the community to meet the greatest community need,” it read in part. “We demand that Franklin be put to more productive use and a genuinely participatory process for DC communities to determine what is most needed.” At about 6:00 p.m., protesters and police lined both ends of the alley behind the building. Police entered the building and handcuffed some of the protesters before asking a member of Occupy DC’s legal committee to relay a message to the group: back away from the alley and get behind the line of police tape some 30 yards away, or be subject to arrest. “This is a public sidewalk,” an observer on the legal team commented to HuffPost. “I’m not sure what harm there is in being here.” A minute later, the officers’ concern became clear. A protester shouted to the rest of the group, “Does anyone have any plans to prevent the police from arresting the people inside the building?” The group discussed whether its “solidarity sitters,” positioned at the alley’s entrance, needed to leave. Protesters and police quickly reached a compromise. Commander Sund of the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department’s special operations unit politely asked the sitters to scoot over. They obliged. The arrested protesters left the building one at a time, carried by officers, one holding each limb. Two were placed in the back of each police van, separated by a wall of plexiglass running down the middle of the vehicles. The first pair loaded up banged on the inside of the van and shook it back and forth. The crowd cheered. Lifted into another van, a handcuffed female protester calmly yelled to the crowd, “Does legal know there are 11 of us?” The first group of vans pulled away around 7:00 p.m. On the other side of the police tape, some protesters attempted to block the vans from leaving. Police quickly pulled them from the vehicles’ path, holding two people briefly before allowing them back into the crowd. Officers loaded up the other suspects and drove away without event. Three officers carried the suspects’ backpacks from the building and placed them in another van. A couple of protesters picked up trash and scraps of police tape. At 7:30, a chant of “just walk away” picked up briefly before the crowd dispersed and protesters walked the few blocks back to the Occupy DC encampment in McPherson Square. PHOTOS from the night’s events:

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Turkey capitalizes on participation banking ties

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab News) Perhaps it is not surprising that the 9th Annual Summit of the Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB) will be hosted by the Central Bank of Turkey (CBT) on May 16-17, 2012 in …

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Japan’s Oct exports drop 3.7% to USD71.7b

November 21, 2011

(MENAFN) Japan’s finance ministry said that last month, the country’s exports dropped 3.7 percent from 2010, to USD71.7 billion, recording the first decline in 3 months, reported AP. The ministry …

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Randall Kempner: Africa’s Entrepreneurial Hot-Spot

November 20, 2011

I’m writing from the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos, Nigeria. I’ve just spent the last two days participating in events related to Global Entrepreneurship Week hosted by ANDE members Pan-African University-Enterprise Development Centre (EDC), Alitheia Capital, and the International Finance Corporation (IFC).   Now, the first thing many Westerners think of when they think of Nigeria is the spam email that offers an inheritance from deposed Nigerian royalty. Indeed, Nigeria is a world center for Internet fraud. It’s gotten to the point where many credit card processing firms will not accept cards issued in the country, and airline reservation sites will not allow you to ticket flights initiating in Lagos. The chaos extends to its major streets where vendors risk life and limb to offer all sorts of edible products, kitchen appliances, and even small furniture to motorists that are stuck in colossal traffic jams. Economically, Nigeria is blessed with major oil reserves, and a petrochemical industry drives the economy. However, the overall business environment is considered highly inhospitable to private sector business: t he World Bank ranks Nigeria 133rd out of 183 economies . Successive military governments have been unable to turn the wealth generated by natural resources into a diverse or equitable economy. Even with all that oil, more than 50 percent of Nigerians live below the international poverty line of $2 a day. In rural areas, it’s closer to 70 or 80 percent. Despite this environment (and indeed, in part because of it), Lagos is an entrepreneurial hotspot. For years, it’s been reported by Gallup that Nigerians have a proclivity to be business owners: nearly 70 percent expressed a desire to start a business. And this group came out in full force for Global Entrepreneurship Week.  On Tuesday at the EDC, nearly 500 students participated in an event designed to explore entrepreneurial career opportunities. On Wednesday, I was fortunate to participate in an IFC-sponsored conference on leveraging technology to support small and medium enterprise development. The event was so overbooked that 270-plus attendees were playing musical chairs to find seats.  The interplay between business people and technologists was exactly the kind of discussion one would expect (and want) to have, with savvy business people pushing IT consultants about the true value of social networking tools to bottom-line business results. I enjoyed the conference, but for me, the best part of the day was visiting the offices of two local entrepreneurs who have built successful firms in this difficult ecosystem.    One entrepreneur I met is Patricia Ojora, who runs PromoPrint Ventures Limited , a company that specializes in designing and manufacturing corporate and personal gifts. After practicing as a Nigerian lawyer, Patricia realized her true calling to be an entrepreneur and opened PromoPrint.  I had a chance to visit her printing facility in the neighborhood of Ebute Metta.  Operating out of an old house, Ojora has built the premier shirt printing business in Lagos. Starting with small orders from friends and old business contacts, she now focuses on serving major corporate clients. (If you see anyone wearing a Guinness® Beer T-shirt in Nigeria, Patricia’s team likely printed it.)   Despite the fact that Promoprint, like most firms in Lagos, has to generate its own electricity and supply its own water, Patricia has been able to build a thriving firm. In the past year, Ojora’s firm has experienced nearly 100 percent revenue growth, and she is now considering another location to support future expansion. Patricia says she had little business experience when she started. She credits her participation in the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Women Initiative, an effort to provide 10,000 women around the world with a business and management education (EDC is the local partner), as a major factor in her success.   ( Click here to see a brief interview about the program with Centre Director Nneka Okekearu .) After visiting Patricia, I went to the dry cleaners. Not because I needed my clothes laundered, but to meet Adebayo Eniibukun, who runs a successful professional clothes care business in Lagos. IBK, as he is known, is passionate about clean clothes.  Even as a child, he actively sought the opportunity to iron his father’s shirts, and because his finishing was so fine, he got to the point where all of his father’s friends were asking him to launder their shirts as well.  IBK shared, with a chuckle, that ultimately his father sent him to boarding school so he would focus his time on education instead of his lucrative side career.   After launching a dry cleaning business with his cousin, IBK decided to build his own firm, CleanAce , based on a vision of growing both the size and quality of the dry cleaning industry.  As his business has expanded to nine locations in greater Lagos, IBK has increasingly focused on upgrading the professionalism of his staff and even that of his competitors.  He’s in the process of developing a new training institute for the profession and has helped dozens of other firms launch dry cleaning operations in Nigeria and beyond. Lagos is an incredibly tough place to grow a business. The power goes out all the time, the government regulations stifle start-ups, the educational infrastructure is highly insufficient, and the traffic insane. But the entrepreneurial streak runs strong in the Nigerian people–and barriers that would paralyze a typical Western entrepreneur are not enough to stop Nigerians. Sometimes their entrepreneurial instinct and perseverance lead them to send annoying email — but sometimes, as in the case of Patricia and IBK, it’s downright inspirational.

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Stars Stand With Occupy Wall Street After AMAs

November 20, 2011

Music, at its best, has given voice to protesters and provided the soundtrack for change. On Sunday night, some of the biggest names in the industry will unite to show solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street movement following the national broadcast of the American Music Awards. Occupy Los Angeles announced on Sunday that an all-star lineup of musicians and activists will participate in a live discussion at the Villa Lounge in West Hollywood to discuss the entertainment industry’s relationship with the national Occupy movement. Already, music has intertwined itself with the growing movement. Stars such as Russell Simmons and Tom Morello have made their presence felt in a big way at New York’s Zuccotti Park, the birth place of the Occupy Wall Street protests, and many more have spoken out in support of the self-styled 99% and their push for economic justice. In October, folk legends Arlo Guthrie and Pete Seeger visited Occupy Wall Street , performing for protesters in a set that linked these protests to the push for justice that changed American in the 1960s. Third Eye Blind front man Stephan Jenkins just released a song dedicated to the movement.

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Some Bay Area Residents Are About To Get Very, Very Rich

November 20, 2011

PALO ALTO, Calif. — Everyone dreams of striking it rich – and what they would do with such a windfall. A new house? A fancy car? Maybe designer clothes selected by a personal shopper. For some in Silicon Valley, those wishes may soon come true. As restrictions on selling stock are lifted at a handful of sizzling startups, early investors and employees are preparing for big payouts. What they do with their riches is anyone’s guess, but luxury retailers and wealth managers say they’re expecting a bump in business and have been preparing for this new crop of Internet millionaires. “We anticipate more activity over the next few months,” said Richard Levinsohn, manager at Porsche of Stevens Creek in Santa Clara. “A lot of these people will have new found wealth and they’re looking for a place to spend it. We’re only too happy to help.” After a company goes public, financial regulations prohibit investors and employees who held shares before the listing to immediately cash out. That means companies that started trading on the stock market in the summer are just now emerging from the so-called “lockup” period. The first up with the most buzz? LinkedIn Corp., which went public in May. With its lockup expiring this month, the Mountain View-based social networking site announced last week that employees and early backers sold nearly 7.5 million shares at $71 apiece. In a regulatory filing Wednesday, the company listed six individuals and a group of a dozen unnamed executives and directors who sold shares. According to the filing, CEO Jeff Weiner stands to gain more than $25 million, based on the $71 share price minus fees. A handful of other stockholders and venture capital firms also sold shares for million dollar payouts. While only a wee slice of the population, these newly minted high-end spenders can make a difference in the luxury good bottom line, retailers say. They also infuse optimism in the market. “We’re definitely more confident taking on the really expensive homes now, the $3 million to $10 million range, and knowing we can move them,” said Steve Cooper, of Intero Real Estate Services. Cooper and his associate, Nicole Derner, have multimillion dollar listings in Los Gatos, Saratoga and other parts of Silicon Valley. She said some clients have been waiting for the more robust market before listing. “We are completely preparing for an active 2012, though it’s already started.” Gary Anderson, managing director at Fisker Silicon Valley/McLaren San Francisco, said the luxury car seller recently opened a location in Palo Alto because of faith in the market and its prospects for growth. He said many of the current clients are established high-tech people but “we do expect that we will see a lot more of the younger people in the industry” as the technology sector rebounds. Retailers and others are watching a handful of tech companies over the next several months since the IPO market appears to be thawing. The lockup will expire soon at Oakland-based Internet radio company, Pandora Inc. Review site Yelp Inc., headquartered in San Francisco, announced last week it plans to raise $100 million in an initial public offering. Anticipation also surrounds online game company Zynga Inc., which is expected to go public in the next few weeks. Then there’s Facebook, which is expected to dwarf them all in an offering next year. Nicole Ghilarducci is a designer at RKI Interior Design in Menlo Park. She said activity has been brewing lately with a noticeable increase in phone calls and emails inquiring about services. She said she can’t credit that to expiring lockups or buzz about IPOs, but said much of the company’s clients do come from the tech sector and activity there affects business. “We’re hopeful for 2012,” she said. “The best way to be prepared to accommodate a new influx is to never be unprepared.” More money in the market can also lead to more philanthropy. Michelle Sklar, vice president of development at the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, which helps facilitate charitable giving, said activity is up and the foundation has raised a record-breaking $360 million so far this year. She anticipates strong fundraising numbers next year. “I think there’s going to be a lot of synergy with the IPOs,” Sklar said. Sklar said the foundation regularly makes presentations at Silicon Valley companies including Cisco Systems Inc., VMWare Inc., Yahoo Inc. and AOL Inc. regarding how employees can give. In April, she said the foundation was invited to LinkedIn. Wealth windfalls following hours of hard work at a hot startup are part of the culture of Silicon Valley. Those days seemed long gone, but after months of economic volatility and a floundering IPO market, the promise of big payouts is re-emerging. San Francisco Bay area-based personal shopper Jennifer Margolin said she’s noticed that this time around, people in technology are paying more attention to style and craftsmanship, which mirrors the move in the industry to create sleek, fashionable products. And when they move to a new tax bracket, more people seek her services. “Now they’re going to black-tie galas,” she says. “They don’t have the first clue what to wear.” ___ Technology writer Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this report.

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Chevron Takes The Blame For Brazil Oil Spill

November 20, 2011

SAO PAULO — An ongoing oil spill off the Brazilian coast occurred because Chevron underestimated the pressure in an underwater reservoir, the head of the company’s Brazil operations said Sunday. George Buck, chief operating officer for the Brazilian division of the San Ramon, California-based company, told foreign journalists that Chevron “takes full responsibility for this incident,” and that “any oil on the surface of the ocean is unacceptable to Chevron.” But Buck rejected accusations the company did not notify authorities quickly enough after the leak was detected and that it did not properly manage cleanup operations. Chevron was drilling an appraisal well about 230 miles (370 kilometers) off the northeastern coast of Rio de Janeiro when the leak began Nov. 7. The drilling fluid that is pumped down the center of the drill as it works, lubricating and stabilizing the pressure of the bore hole, was not heavy enough to counter the pressure coming from the oil reservoir, Buck said. That caused crude to rush upward and eventually escape through a breach in the bore hole and leak into the surrounding seabed. The oil then made its way to the ocean floor and has since leaked through at least seven narrow fissures, all within 160 feet (50 meters) of the well head on the ocean floor, Buck said. Brazil’s National Petroleum Agency has said it’s possible more than 110,000 gallons of oil have spilled into the Atlantic Ocean. Buck would not provide an estimate on the total size of the leak, but said the agency figure was “in the ballpark.” He added that the slick currently contains about 756 gallons (2,860 liters) of oil, a figure not confirmed by Brazilian regulators, though they have said it has been significantly reduced since Chevron successfully carried out the first stage of capping the well Thursday. Buck estimated that 420 gallons to 4,200 gallons (1,590 liters to 15,900 liters) a day are still leaking from the seabed cracks. He declined to guess when the leaks would stop, saying it was hard to predict how long it would take the oil that rushed up the bore hole to make its way to the ocean floor, or even how much of it eventually would. The slick has never threatened the coastline or Rio de Janeiro’s world-famous beaches, instead floating toward the southeast, away from land. The leak is one of the first major tests of offshore drilling safety for Brazil since massive offshore oil finds that are estimated to hold at least 50 billion barrels of oil. Brazilian officials are counting on their country being one of the globe’s top oil-producing nations before this decade is out, and politicians are locked in heated battles about how to divide the future royalties. Unlike in the U.S., the offshore drilling has produced little debate over safety within Brazil, where most citizens see the oil as key to the nation’s economic future and its emergence as a global power. The government is even working on a nuclear-powered submarine, which it says it wants to use to patrol and protect the finds. But both the lead Brazilian Federal Police investigator looking into the spill and the environment minister for Rio de Janeiro state have harshly criticized Chevron, saying the company was not prepared to handle the incident. Investigator Fabio Scliar said Chevron had to be told about the leak by Brazil’s state-controlled oil company, Petrobras, which operates a rig in the area where the leak occurred. He also has accused the company of not using proper methods for cleaning up the spill. He says Chevron is putting sand on the slick to make the oil sink to the ocean floor, and that the company is not using enough manpower or boats in the cleanup. Buck, however, said Chevron has not used sand or any chemical agents on the oil slick. Instead, he said, boats are driving through the slick to break it up while others skim the ocean surface to collect oil. Eighteen boats work on a rotating basis on the slick, with a varying number of vessels working simultaneously, Buck said. He said that in the first days after the leak, a storm and ocean swells of 20 feet (6 meters) prevented the boats from safely working. Carlos Minc, the Rio de Janeiro state environment minister, said that Chevron, which is a partner with Petrobras on the well, likely faces fines of at least $5.5 million. “We’re going to show this gang that they can’t come here and create whatever environmental mess they want,” Minc was quoted by the O Globo newspaper as saying in its Sunday edition. “I want to see the CEO of Chevron swim in that oil.” The drilling contractor for the Chevron Corp. well is Transocean Ltd., the owner of the Deepwater Horizon rig that oil company BP PLC was leasing at the time of last year’s Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the largest in U.S. history and one that dwarfs this Brazilian leak. At its peak, BP’s Macondo well was spewing more than 2 million gallons (7.5 million liters) a day. Brazil itself has had bigger oil spills than this one. In 2000, crude spewed from a broken pipeline at the Reduc refinery in Rio de Janeiro’s scenic Guanabara Bay, spewing at least 344,400 gallons (1.3 million liters) into the water. Just a few months later, more than 1 million gallons (3.8 million liters) of crude burst from a pipeline operated by state-controlled oil company Petrobras into a river in southern Brazil. Brazil’s worst oil disaster was in 1975, when an oil tanker from Iraq dumped more than 8 million gallons of crude into the bay and caused Rio’s famous beaches to be closed for nearly three weeks.

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John Lundberg: A Poem That Rages Against the Machine

November 20, 2011

A number of musicians, including Rufus Wainwright, Pete Seeger and Arlo Guthrie, have performed at Occupy Wall Street, and many others, like Katy Perry and Kanye West, have stopped by to show solidarity. But Zack de la Rocha, best known as the frontman for the band Rage Against the Machine, went a different route to express his support for protestors: he decided to write a poem for the movement. De la Rocha’s poem is both a condemnation and a call to action. It first paints a bleak picture of the state of the country: our factories are “barren,” our schools “boarded,” and our fields are “rotting.” And, in what I read as a scathing portrayal of the so-called 1 percent, “gold dipped vultures pick at what is left.” De la Rocha also paints a picture of a growing insurrection. Protests spread through the city’s bloodstream, with participants “moving like the shadows/Through the alley ways.” And a buried but still smoldering fury threatens to burn down the “walls of a dying order.” In one of the poem’s best lines, he notes that, together, “All sparks are counted.” Fire is often used as a symbol of revolution in poetry. On the surface, it conveys violence, but it also carries a sense of cleansing and rebirth. Hence, de la Rocha’s flame, while unmistakably violent, is also a “bonfire of hope” that will “restore tomorrows meanings.” De la Rocha released the poem with a simple statement: “This poem is dedicated to the Occupy movement whose courage is changing the world. Stay Strong. We are winning.” Here it is in full: The beginning spills through city veins Into the arteries And under powers poison clouds We move like the shadows Through the alley ways Through nightmares bought and sold as dreams 
 Through barren factories 
 Through boarded schools 
 Through rotting fields 
 Through the burning doors of the past 
 Through imaginations exploding 
 To break the curfews in our minds Our actions awaken dreams of actions multiplied 
 A restless fury 
 Once buried like burning embers 
 Left alone to smolder 
 But together stacked under the walls of a dying order 
 All sparks are counted 
 Calloused hands raised in silence 
 Over the bonfire of hope unincorporated 
 It’s flame restores tomorrows meaning 
 Across the graveyards of hollow promises 
 As gold dipped vultures pick at what is left of our denial And the youngest among us 
 Stare at us stoned like eyes determined 
 And say 
Death for us may come early Cause dignity has no price 
 At the corner of now and nowhere 
 Anywhere 
 Everywhere 
 Tomorrow is calling 
 Tomorrow is calling Do not be afraid The poem’s incantatory ending, “Tomorrow is calling/Tomorrow is calling/Do not be afraid,” is both a call for strength and for action. And it’s a little chilling that de la Rocha prefaces this call by noting how the “youngest among us,” standing “at the corner of now and nowhere,” appear ready to give up their lives for the cause, because “dignity has no price.” It’s a powerful bit of verse, but let’s hope those lines don’t prove prophetic.

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WATCH: Fox News Host Spars With Guest Over Occupy Wall Street

November 20, 2011

Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace sparred with Fox News analyst Juan Williams over Occupy Wall street. After Williams charged that Wall Street protesters made the Republican presidential candidates look like “protectors of the super rich”, Wallace dismissed the movement. “I don’t think we should talk about Occupy Wall Street as a plus anymore,” he said, adding that “most people are…getting fed up with it.” Williams then began to explain the message Occupy Wall Street, including anger about banks’ greed and income equality. Wallace cut him off, saying “there’s a limit.” “You’re not playing fair,” Williams retorted. WATCH (h/t, video courtesy of Think Progress ):

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Bill Robinson: High-Tech Startup Focus: iZettle — the New, Better Square — Coming Soon to America?

November 20, 2011

There’s a brutal, bloodbath-type clash looming. And it’s going to be held in a very big market : how people pay for things and how small business and individuals might accept charge cards on their phones. While PayPal was the progenitor for Internet-based payment processing, a new breed of high-tech startup is emerging which will likely disintermediate PayPal out of business. In the U.S., investor darlings Square receive all of the press attention and $100 million in VC funding at a $1 billion valuation. With their neat little card-swiping plug-in for smartphones, Square has created a bit of a phenomenon in that everybody with a smartphone can now be a self-contained, Visa processing merchant. Good idea; good for ‘mom & pops’ and good for small business. Twitter founder Jack Dorsey is also the diabolical mind behind Square and heavily involved in both companies; he’s CEO of Square and recently returned to Twitter to “lead product development,” whatever that means. With all of the deflating noises of Groupon and Zynga, however, is it possible Square might find themselves going the way of PayPal; downhill? This could happen, particularly if the technology that the banks and credit card companies use should shift suddenly, say from the magnetic stripe or ‘magstripe’ (the dominant card technology in the Americas) to the ‘smart chip’ used on all cards in Europe, Asia and elsewhere. But whether or not Square turns out to be the powerhouse it says it is, there’s stiff competition emanating from abroad for this payment-card, iPhone-swiping company. And it’s coming from Stockholm, Sweden. Swedes, all Europeans, really, have been using their phones to buy Cokes from vending machines and wirelessly pay parking meters for a decade or more now; they develop, launch, commercialize and take up technology faster than Americans. Witness SMS texting. And the Scandinavians seem even faster at technology adoption than their other Euro-brethren. Somewhat more quietly, but no less powerfully, iZettle , a Swedish startup has raised $11 million in funding to go after the smartphone payment processing market in Europe. Jacob de Geer is the CEO/co-founder of iZettle and a very well educated, articulate entrepreneur. As with most Swedes, his English is excellent. He spent some time with me recently talking about his background, previous startups of his and iZettle. “I went to the Stockholm School of Economics,” de Geer began wistfully, “and was thinking I’d be a banker or consultant. But then I saw Google and all these great companies starting up and I realized, I couldn’t look my kids in the eyes if I was a banker or consultant.” So in 1999, de Geer joined a Stockholm-based startup called TradeDoubler as employee number one. This first company gave de Geer a good foundation for his later company development, as it was an Internet affiliate marketing firm which went public on the Stockholm exchange in 2005. De Geer worked at TradeDoubler until 2007, giving him a good eight-year stint in a company which was marketing widely on the Internet platform. It is perhaps this experience which would most foreshadow the good things — or companies — for de Geer ahead. De Geer then started not just one but two companies in 2007: Ameibo, a “legal” movie sharing company de Geer co-founded and ran as CEO; and Tre Kronor Media a communications agency he also co-founded. Both companies were acquired in 2010; a rare double-headed success for de Geer. All of these varied learning experiences gave de Geer the unusual qualifications and springboard he needed to conceptualize and start iZettle. De Geer recalled, “After Tre Konor, I had more or less decided to get a ‘real job’ and not start something new… I promised my wife,” he said somewhat sheepishly, as we all do. “The only problem was,” he said like a man who had originally intended to fulfill his wife’s request but got sucked back in, “my wife was also an entrepreneur. She came back from a trade fair and said to me, ‘I lost out on so much business because I couldn’t take credit cards.’ So I started Googling and found Jack Dorsey and Square; I suggested she get a Square.” Here’s where things get complicated in a tech chasm way. Europe and America were originally divided by the GSM/CDMA partition on cell phones, which meant if you lived in Europe and traveled to the U.S. or Asia on business you needed a tri-band phone. And, if you were American but traveled abroad you likely needed another phone entirely which could take a sim card. The credit/debit card markets are much the same: separated. In the Americas, the more mature, out-dated magstripe cards are the dominant if not exclusive technology for swiping a payment. In Europe and Asia — virtually everywhere else, they use a smart chip technology which is a little, gold square on the front of every debit and credit card which you insert, not swipe. This is also known as “EMV” (Europay, Mastercard, Visa). The smart chip cards are a lot ‘smarter,’ carry more info, are more secure and last longer than the clunky, easily scammed and easily worn magstripe cards. There are many more millions of smart card users worldwide than magstripe users, though this doesn’t seem to have dawned on the geniuses at Square. I give iZettle a big advantage for these reasons. Theoretically, if the banks and credit card companies move to this safer and better smart card technology, as I believe they will, then Square is out of business. So the irony of de Geer’s wife’s going to Square first is dripping. When de Geer and Mrs. de Geer tried to get a Square sent over to them for trade fair use; Square denied them. “Unfortunately, you’re in the smart chip card part of the world — we only do magnetic stripes.” Really? Well, we’ll just see about that. So like any irritated and frustrated customer, de Geer set out to build a better mousetrap; in this case, one that would catch a mouse in Sweden. “Europe is a complex, multicultural environment with many languages,” de Geer said, “a comprehensive solution was required. Besides, the magstripe technology was very basic, it wasn’t encrypted and anyone could read it.” As the fundamentals of iZettle percolated inside de Geer’s entrepreneurial head, de Geer said he was pretty sure that the U.S. magstripe platform would not changeover to the EMV side. “From the U.S. perspective this is all a numbers game; why change?” Though de Geer and I disagreed about whether the U.S. would come over to smart chip technology (I believe it certainly will) I did convince him it was a distinct possibility due to the banks’ and credit card companies’ interest in fraud prevention. “This is all driven by the card networks,” de Geer observed, “all the markets are in transition.” With regard to Square, de Geer is typical diplomatic Swede, “I think we can co-exist… we’re in two different markets. Markets in Europe are so different; you have to localize your service. But Square will continue on its fantastic journey.” Hmmm… I’m not so sure; especially when the EMV cards are so much better on multiple fronts. It almost seems like a fait accompli that the U.S. will join the rest of the planet on EMV. As if to make my case, de Geer went on, “The difference between EMV and the magstripe is astronomical. The hardware security of iZettle versus Square is different worlds.” “For iZettle and Europe, the ‘user experience’ has to be amazing — that’s so important for us. In order to be successful in Europe, though, we needed a global approach.” iZettle is a fantastic development for small business and sole proprietors, who previously in Sweden had to pay about $4,000 just for the antiquated swiping terminal and the whole host of other fees that take a bite out of them. And in the area of pricing, cost to the end user, the ‘swiper’ if you will, iZettle is by far the more favorable with Square vacillating wildly recently, “waiving” some fees for customers; a sure sign of trouble, and in some instances Square “holding” merchant funds for a month or more. The holding of small businesses funds for any period of time will kill Square outright. Another big advantage of iZettle is that no sensitive financial or other data is ever stored on the device, a dynamic that I’m not sure is true of Square. The one area where I find iZettle deficient and Square superior is in the devices they can be used upon. iZettle is only iPhones and iPads for now. Square can be used on iPhones, iPads and Androids; Droids being the increasingly popular Apple alternative in America with over 50 percent of the market share of smartphone sales. According to de Geer, “The real early metrics for us were that Sweden today is 9 million people where today we have 200,000 traditional ‘acceptance terminals’ at shops, restaurants, parking meters and the like. Yet we have more than 1.5 million iPhones… that was the magnitude of opportunity, to turn those iPhones into personal ‘acceptance terminals.’” The potential was perfectly clear to me through that statement. Let’s have a little test, shall we? Have a look at the Square YouTube video and then the iZettle YouTube video. Which one would you use after watching the video alone? I know which one I would use; hands down. (Check the comments under each video.) The one wildcard in this classic struggle may prove to be Google Wallet. Some think this latest Google development will completely take over the market, especially if they can become the payee, too, and accept cards. I’m not so sure. Google has proved pretty inept at taking over any markets whatsoever since their original search triumph. I don’t know who, iZettle or Square, will win this thing or even if there will be a thing. But I bet there is a thing and a big one because just like VHS versus Betamax, there’s got to be a winner when different technologies empower different people to different things on different platforms. I’ve also sided with the underdog. I think I like the odds of a 30-employee Swedish startup with $11 million more than I like a great, big, over-hyped U.S. tech company with $100 million and an absurdly otherworldly valuation. Stay tuned. This could get messy.

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Odysseas Papadimitriou: Strategic Use of ‘Plastics’ Can Save You Hundreds This Holiday Season

November 20, 2011

Watching movies like A Christmas Story or It’s a Wonderful Life has become a holiday tradition for many families. If you’re familiar with the latter, you know that getting in on the “ground floor” of the “plastics” industry is one of the many things on which George Bailey (Jimmy Stewart) missed out in making sure the family business stayed afloat throughout tough times. Oddly enough, this particular aspect of the classic Christmas movie is applicable to this year’s holiday shopping season. You see, many of us are searching for ways to save in an uncertain economic environment, and strategically using plastics (i.e. credit cards and gift cards) could be part of the answer. More specifically, opening the right credit card could be worth up to $500, and in light of the fact that the average U.S. household has $300 in unused gift cards, unlocking their value could prove pretty darn lucrative, as well. The question of the hour is, therefore: How does one go about realizing the monetary potential of plastic this holiday season? Credit Cards Starting with credit cards, the first thing you need to know is that the Great Recession has actually resulted in particularly attractive offers for people with above-average credit. Credit card companies are competing so fiercely for the most stable consumers that they’re offering better and better initial rewards bonuses as well as longer and longer 0 percent introductory interest rates. By opening the right card, you could therefore score some extra cash to pay for presents, give yourself extra time to pay for upcoming purchases before interest becomes a factor, or lower the cost of debt remaining from last year. Even if you don’t want to open a credit card with just the holidays in mind, offers are available that can provide year-round benefit. With that being said, after comparing over 1,000 credit card offers, the following cards were chosen as the best for holiday shopping: Chase Sapphire Preferred (Best Initial Bonus) : The 50,000 bonus points this card provides after you spend $3,000 during the first three months are redeemable for a $500 check or statement credit. There is no annual fee during the first year. Capital One Venture Rewards Credit Card (Best Overall Rewards) : The mixture of a good initial bonus ($100) and lucrative rewards across all purchases (2 miles/$1 spent) makes the Venture Card a good option for the holiday season and beyond, especially since miles can be redeemed for any travel-related expenses. Citi Dividend World MasterCard (Best 0 percent Purchase APR) : Hearing that this card offers 0 percent on new purchases for 15 months should be music to the ears of the 29 percent of consumers who, according to an American Express survey, are planning to revolve balances on their credit cards in order to finance holiday gift giving this year. Add to the equation a $100 initial bonus and 5 percent cash back on purchases made at department stores, toy stores, electronics retailers, and clothing stores through the end of the year and that music starts sounding even sweeter. Citi Platinum Select MasterCard (Best Balance Transfer) : While this card does have a 3 percent balance transfer fee, the fact that it offers 0 percent on transfers for 21 months makes it a valuable tool for fighting existing debt. Gift Cards Twenty-five percent of the consumers who participated in a recent Consumer Reports Holiday Poll reported having at least one unused gift card left over from last year. If you are in such a situation, you can forget sunk costs because there are a number of ways to make use of these holiday leftovers: Re-gift : Most stores will allow you to buy new gift cards with old ones, so even if your card has accumulated some scratches during the year, the person you give it to never has to know. Sell for Cash : Online gift card exchanges allow you to turn gift cards you don’t want into cash. Turn Back the Clock on Expired Gift Cards : Many states have unclaimed property programs, through which you can recoup funds from expired gift cards. Final Thoughts Like George Bailey, you might decide that plastics aren’t for you, and that’s fine. You simply don’t want to have regrets like George, so it’s important to understand exactly how credit cards and gift cards can make the holidays more affordable. After all, the average consumer will spend $831 on gifts this year, according to Amex, and we could all use as many money-saving ideas as possible. Odysseas Papadimitriou is the founder and CEO of Card Hub, a leading credit card and gift card marketplace.

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Super Congress Failure Could Mean ‘The Worst Of All Worlds’

November 20, 2011

WASHINGTON — If the deficit-cutting supercommittee fails, Congress will face a crummy choice. Lawmakers can allow payroll tax cuts and jobless aid for millions to expire or they extend them and increase the nation’s $15 trillion debt by at least $160 billion. President Barack Obama and Democrats on the deficit panel want to use the committee’s product to carry their jobs agenda. That includes cutting in half the 6.2 percent Social Security payroll tax and extending jobless benefits for people who have been unemployed for more than six months. Also caught up in what promises to be a chaotic legislative dash for the exits next month is the need to pass legislation to prevent an almost 30 percent cut in Medicare payments to doctors. Several popular business tax breaks and relief from the alternative minimum tax also expire at year’s end. A debt plan from the supercommittee, it was hoped, would have served as a sturdy, filibuster-proof vehicle to tow all of these expiring provisions into law. But after months of negotiations, Republicans and Democrats were far apart on any possible compromise, and there was no indication of progress Saturday. Failure by the committee would leave lawmakers little time to pick up the pieces. And there’s no guarantee it all can get done, especially given the impact of those measures on the spiraling debt. Instead of cutting the deficit with a tough, bipartisan budget deal, Congress could pivot to spending enormous sums on expiring big-ticket policies. If lawmakers rebel against the cost, as is possible, they would bear responsibility for allowing policies such as the payroll tax cut, enacted a year ago to help prop up the economy, to lapse. Last year’s extensions of jobless benefits and first-ever cut in the payroll tax were accomplished with borrowed money. The 2 percent payroll tax cut expiring in December gave 121 million families a tax cut averaging $934 last year at a total cost of about $120 billion, according to the Tax Policy Center. Obama wants to cut the payroll tax by another percentage point for workers at a total cost of $179 billion and reduce the employer share of the tax in half as well for most companies, which carries a $69 billion price tag. “The notion of imposing a new payroll tax on people after Jan. 1 in the midst of this recession on working families is totally counterproductive,” said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate. Letting extended jobless assistance expire would mean that more than 6 million people would lose benefits averaging $296 a week next year, with 1.8 million cut off within a month. Economist say those jobless benefits – up to 99 weeks of them in high unemployment states – are among the most effective way to stimulate the economy because unemployed people generally spend the money right away. “We will have to address those issues,” Durbin said. Extending benefits to the long-term unemployed would cost almost $50 billion under Obama’s plan. Preventing the Medicare payment cuts to doctors for an additional 18 months to two years would in all likelihood cost $26 billion to $32 billion more. Lawmakers also had hoped to renew some tax breaks for business and prevent the alternative minimum tax from sticking more than 30 million taxpayers with higher tax bills. Those items could be addressed retroactively next year, but only increase the uncertainty among already nervous consumers and investors. This time, Obama wants them to be paid for. But a move by Democrats to try to finance jobs measures with hundreds of billions of dollars in savings from drawing down troops in Iraq and Afghanistan has gotten a cold shoulder from top Republicans. “I’ve made it pretty clear that those savings that are coming to us as a result of the wind-down of the war in Iraq and the war in Afghanistan should be banked, should not be used to offset other spending,” said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. He did not address whether war savings could be used to extend expiring tax cuts. Those savings are the natural result of national security strategies unrelated to the federal budget. Deficit hawks say tapping into them is simply an accounting gimmick. “It’s just the worst of all worlds if that were to happen,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. But without the war money at their disposal, lawmakers simply can’t pay for the payroll tax cut and jobless benefits. Liberals such as Durbin are fine with employing deficit financing, especially if the alternative is playing Scrooge just before the holidays. “Many people will hate to go home for Christmas saying to the American people, `Merry Christmas, your payroll taxes go up 2 percent Jan. 1 and unemployment benefits are cut off.’”

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WATCH: Chilling Video Of Students Confronting UC Davis Chancellor

November 20, 2011

A crowd of UC Davis students confronted chancellor Linda Katehi in the wake of an incident that occurred between protesters and campus police on Friday. According to reports , police unleashed pepper spray on a group of students protesers who were part of the Occupy Wall Street movement. Video footage of the protest shows that students were sitting quietly when police began to show off a can of pepper spray before dousing the students. Katehi held a press conference on Saturday to address the incident. Students began to surround the building in protest and she reportedly refused to leave amid safety concerns. Finally, the students cleared a path for her to exit. As she walked back to her car, surrounded by students, some began to ask her questions, which she mostly brushed off “Chancellor, do you still feel threatened by the students?” someone asked. She replied, “no” and a companion said that “we’ve asked for it to be a silent, respectful exit.” Katehi will address the students directly on Monday. The officers’ behavior has sparked outrage among the Occupy Wall Street and UC Davis communities. Two involved officers have reportedly been put on administrative leave and students have even called for the chancellor’s resignation . WATCH:

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The Top 10 Trends In Tech Jobs

November 20, 2011

It used to be that the only technological expertise you needed to get a job were basic word processing and webmail skills. Times have changed. According to Indeed, a job-finding search engine, the ten fastest-growing keywords in job postings have nothing to do with punctuality or writing skills, at least not the kind of writing most of us are used to. Indeed analyzed millions of job postings and found that the top ten skills employers are looking for are all related to software development, mobile development and social media. Most of these keywords exploded in popularity in 2010 and continued their lightening fast growth this year. Although tech terms remained in the top spots, there was some notable reshuffling among the most popular keywords, according to Indeed’s recent data, collected between February and November 2011 . Twitter and Facebook fell completely off the list, and their spots were taken by several platforms used in cloud computing. See the top trends in tech job listings (below). Then, take a look at our list of the top companies that techies want to work for ( here ).

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IMF Playing Larger Role In Addressing Europe Debt Crisis

November 20, 2011

WASHINGTON (Lesley Wroughton) – The International Monetary Fund is inserting itself more forcefully into Europe’s efforts to resolve its debt crisis, hoping to stem a contagion that is spreading worldwide and threatening global growth. Uncertainty is turning into frustration and near-panic among policymakers outside Europe as larger European economies such as Italy, Spain and France come under attack by financial markets and bank funding stresses worsen. Until now, Europe has tried to navigate its way out of the two-year crisis on its own and the IMF has worked as a partner in a rescue “Troika” alongside the European Commission and European Central Bank in bailing out debt-stricken Greece. But patience, both among officials outside of Europe and in markets, is running thin with what many view as Europe’s painfully slow decision-making process. Three steps taken this week could strengthen the IMF’s role in handling the crisis. The IMF said on Thursday it would not be joined by EU or ECB officials when it conducts an in-depth review in late November of Italy’s economy and the fiscal and structural reforms needed to fend off the crisis there, a fresh step in the global lender’s approach. By going it alone, the IMF would assert its leadership role and potentially instill greater market confidence. This followed a surprise move on Wednesday when the IMF ousted Antonio Borges, its European director. It replaced him with an influential insider, Reza Moghadam, who has worked behind the scenes to reshape the IMF’s lending tools and strengthen the way it monitors economies. Borges cited personal reasons for his decision to step down immediately. Last month, he misstepped in suggesting publicly that the IMF could buy Spanish or Italian bonds alongside the euro zone’s bailout fund. He had to issue a hasty retraction to say the IMF could only lend to member countries and could not intervene in bond markets. European officials also said on Thursday there have been discussions about the European Central Bank possibly lending to the IMF, which would give the global lender enough money to bail out bigger euro zone countries. Emerging market countries such as China, Russia and Brazil have indicated privately to IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde they stand ready to help Europe, as well as other countries, but only if their funding is done through the IMF. “There is great concern about Europe,” IMF Spokesman David Hawley told a news briefing on Thursday that was dominated by questions on Italy and Greece. “Emerging market countries have expressed readiness to augment the resources of the Fund,” Hawley said. “At this stage we don’t have precise money”. The Federal Reserve, likewise, is extremely worried about Europe and does not see how the U.S. banking system can escape unscathed. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has warned that inadequate European crisis management raises the risk of “cascading default, bank runs and catastrophic risk that must be taken off the table.” European leaders had hoped they would stem the contagion by setting up a bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility. But more than three months later, it has failed to raise the 1 trillion euros it needs, and financial contagion is spreading quickly from the euro zone’s periphery to eastern and central Europe and to other vulnerable emerging countries. If Italy and Spain need rescuing, the 1 trillion euros European leaders are seeking would not be enough. The only lender left with sufficient firepower would be the IMF. Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Austerity For 2012 EU Budget

November 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) The EU’s 27 national governments and the European Parliament on Saturday agreed to limit spending to 129 billion euros in the 2012 budget, up 2% from 2011, the Polish …

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China’ s Trade Deficit May Converge to Zero in Two Years

November 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) China’s trade surplus may drop to zero, or even negative digits in next two years, said the central bank advisor on Saturday. The country’s narrowing trade surplus …

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US Chimera Investment Q3 net income drops 43%

November 20, 2011

(MENAFN) Chimera Investment Corp. said that due to a drop in the firm’s investments, third-quarter net income fell 43 percent to USD65.9 million, compared with USD116.3 million in 2010′s same …

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S Korea, China, Japan to Expand Economic Cooperation

November 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) The leaders of South Korea, China and Japan reaffirmed their commitment Saturday to working together to resolve the North Korean nuclear standoff and deepen all-round …

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