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(MENAFN) Facebook Inc. said that Mark Zuckerberg, CEO and founder of the social network, may sell about USD1.67 billion of shares to cover taxes he will owe when he exercises options to buy 120 …

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Facebook’s Zuckerberg may sell USD1.67b shares

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(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) Facebook estimates that it benefits the UK to the tune of more than 2 billion pound a year, including the development of an almost 500 million pound “app economy” that …

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Facebook Adds 2 Billion Pound to UK Economy

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Apple Reports Massive iPhone Sales

January 24, 2012

NEW YORK — After uncharacteristically tepid sales in the July-to-September quarter, Apple came back with a vengeance in last three months of 2011, vastly exceeding analyst estimates and setting new records. Apple Inc. on Tuesday said it sold 37 million iPhones in the quarter, double the figure of the previous quarter and more than twice as many as it sold in last year’s holiday quarter. The result may make Apple the world’s largest maker of smartphones. Samsung Electronics, which held that position for most of last year, has said it expects to report shipping about 35 million smartphones in the October to December quarter. October saw the launch of the iPhone 4S, and the addition of Sprint Nextel Corp. as an iPhone carrier in the U.S. Apple said net income in the fiscal first quarter was $13.06 billion, or $13.87 per share. That was up 118 percent from $6 billion, or $6.43 per share, a year ago. Analysts polled by FactSet were expecting earnings of $10.04 per share for the latest quarter, Apple’s fiscal first. Revenue was $46.33 billion, up 73 percent from a year ago. Analysts were expecting $38.9 billion. The Cupertino, Calif., company shipped 15.4 million iPads in the quarter, again more than doubling sales over the same quarter last year. Apple shares rose $33.03, or 7.9 percent, to $453.53 in extended trading, after the release of the results. Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer said the company expects earnings of $8.50 per share in the current quarter, and sales of $32.5 billion. Both figures are above the average estimate of analysts polled by FactSet, even though Apple usually low-balls its estimates. Apple ended the quarter with a cash balance of a staggering $97.6 billion. For years, investors have been frustrated with Apple’s unwillingness to put the cash to use. Complaints have been muted as Apple continues to generate record-breaking results and as the stock price keeps rising. Apple executives have said the cash hoard gives the company flexibility to make acquisitions and long-term supply deals. If the stock rally in extended trading survives into regular trading Wednesday, Apple will retake the position of most valuable company in the world from Exxon Mobil Corp. Apple first unseated Exxon last summer, and the two have been trading places since then.

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Mitt Romney Releases Tax Returns

January 24, 2012

By Steve Holland and Kim Dixon TAMPA, Fla./WASHINGTON, Jan 24 (Reuters) – Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney released tax records on Tuesday indicating he will pay $6.2 million in taxes on a total of $42.5 million in income over the years 2010 and 2011. Bowing to increasing political pressure to provide more detail about his vast wealth, the former private equity executive released tax returns indicating he and his wife, Ann, paid an effective tax rate of 13.9 percent in 2010. They expect to pay a 15.4 percent rate when they file their returns for 2011. Romney’s tax rate is below that of most wage-earning Americans because most of his income, as outlined in more than 500 pages of tax documents, flows from capital gains on investments. Under the U.S. tax code, capital gains are taxed at 15 percent, compared with a top tax rate of 35 percent for wage earners. Romney released the tax returns after a week in which his chief rival for the Republican presidential nomination, former House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich, questioned whether Romney was hiding information about his finances and cast him as being out of touch with most Americans. Gingrich’s attacks on Romney helped him upset the former Massachusetts governor in the South Carolina primary on Saturday. Since then, Romney has vowed to be more aggressive in returning fire. He has launched a series of attacks questioning Gingrich’s character, judgment and lucrative work as a Washington consultant, and released his tax returns to try to nullify Gingrich’s criticisms on that front. The tax rates Romney reported paying could add fuel to a national debate over the fairness of the tax code, and coincides with broader concerns about income inequality symbolized by the Occupy Wall Street movement. Romney’s campaign officials stressed that his tax rate is based mostly on income from investments that are held in a blind trust. Romney’s holdings include an undisclosed amount in funds based in the Grand Cayman Islands and other overseas entities. Romney advisers stressed that the holdings in the Caymans – along with those in a Swiss bank account that was closed in 2010 after an investment adviser decided it could be politically embarrassing to Romney – were reported on tax returns and were not vehicles to avoid taxes. They also stressed that Romney, whose holdings are in three blind trusts, makes no decisions as to how his money is invested. Regardless, the emerging picture was of a man of great means who contributes mightily to charity. The documents showed he and his wife contributed $7 million in charity over the two years, much of it going to his Mormon church. That represents more than 15 percent of the Romneys’ income for those years. Romney, whose estimated net worth is $190 million to $250 million, is among the wealthiest Americans ever to seek the presidency. Top campaign officials and the director of Romney’s blind trust, Brad Malt, briefed Reuters on the details ahead of a more general release of the information Tuesday morning. Campaign counsel Ben Ginsberg, asked why Romney was not releasing tax records for the years in the 1980s and 1990s in which Romney made his fortune at private equity firm Bain Capital, said the two years covered by the tax returns should give a broad picture of Romney’s financial situation. “We’re not going to get into the game of once you give them something, they demand more,” Ginsberg said. “This is a fulsome release and we’re proud of it.” The tax issue may have been a factor in Romney’s loss to Gingrich in South Carolina. It became a distraction to Romney’s campaign, and Romney’s fuzzy answers on when and if he would release his records aggravated the problem. First he said he might release them, or might not. When the questions kept coming, he said he would put them out in April, after his 2011 forms were completed. Only after he was defeated in South Carolina did his aides say he would release them this week. Gingrich has released his returns for 2010, but has not released an estimate for last year, as Romney did. Long considered the front-runner for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, Romney was staggered by Gingrich’s lopsided win in South Carolina, and is looking to regain enough momentum to defeat Gingrich in Florida, which votes on Jan. 31. (Editing by David Lindsey and Paul Simao) Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Noelle Bell: Getting Fan Scaling Right for Your Business

January 17, 2012

What is fan scaling? It’s the process of building up the number of your fans for your fan page. Can it get too big? Can it get too small? Yes, it can, and what ultimately matters is the comfort level you have with the number of fans you have for your fan page. Take a look at your business and your fan page. Is your business local? Is it a national business with thousands of employees, or just a small amount of employees? Do you sell products? Do you market services locally? The number of fans you have depends on what kind of a fan page you have. If you’re just strictly a local business such as a restaurant, professional services, or a food truck, then there’s no need to spend thousands of dollars of advertising in Facebook to get thousands of fans all over the country. That would be wasted money with a ROI that really doesn’t reflect the local goals of your business. What you should be aiming for are at least a thousand fans or more if your business is located in a mid-sized city with a population of at least half a million people. You can do that for simply just a few hundred bucks in advertising on Facebook. However, if you’re a business with the goals of selling lots of products to a wider customer base, then it makes sense to invest in large-scale online marketing to get a wider number of fans for your fan page. So that way your brand gets a competitive advantage over other business brands with similar lines of products. The number of fans you have on your fan page also forces you to think in creative ways about your brand, and how you can best interact with your fans to get them talking about your business. Also, you can’t simply be content with just posting occasionally to market your products and your business. Think outside the box. What will engage your fans the best? A boring wall post with a simple status update about an event, or a wall post that links to a news article or your blog with a photo about the event? Your own Facebook Insights will likely have shown that rich media such as photos, rich content (i.e. link to relevant news articles, blog posts, or video), get a higher fan engagement than just simple wall posts. It’s because Facebook’s EdgeRanker algorithm tool tends to rank wall posts that contain rich media as having a higher engagement rate than simple wall posts. If you have under a thousand fans and you’re in a small city, creative content on your Facebook fan page will keep your fans engaged. Fan engagement is important, not just for keeping your fan numbers the way they are, but for the organic nature of what they do with your fan page. Your fans will share your wall posts, “like” your links, rich media posts, and custom tabs on their News Feeds. It means their friends, who aren’t fans of your page, will get to see the content from your page on that News Feed. It’s organic growth, and it’s the best one because it’s all based on word-of-mouth about your fan page. You don’t have to pay anything for that. It helps keep your fan base easily manageable because you’re not advertising nationally, but locally, and your fans are from your city, so there’s a natural ceiling for them to reach. On the other hand, if you’re a business looking to do national outreach about your brand because you want to get as many clients as you can for your products, you will need help to accomplish the number of fans you want for that goal. Large-scale online advertising is recommended in this scenario. One great way to keep your advertising content interesting is to simply advertise your wall posts as “sponsored story” ads so they appear as an unique way for people to interact with your fan page. Don’t post boring ads, just as you wouldn’t post boring content on your wall. Make them stand out. And once you start your ad run, and you’ve optimized for the best ad content, you’ll see your fans grow for your fan page. When the ad run ends, the fans still grow largely by word-of-mouth at this point. But there’s the usual drop-off in the gains of fans for your page, and that’s fine. What it just means is that you’ve reached a normal plateau in your fans for your page. Now is the time to engage with your fans, and continue that organic growth through creative content such as custom tabs, rich media, and links to relevant news articles mentioning a product of yours or your business or what’s happening in your industry. Don’t also be afraid to reply back to your fans. They love that! There’s nothing worse than a hit-and-run wall post where the fans respond, but no one responds back to them. Why should they put the time on your fan page when you’re not putting your time in replying back to them? It all comes back to customer service, and that’s what fan scaling the right way is about. Serve your customers (fans) well through creative content, smart advertising, and you will see the benefit of that investment back.

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Robert F. Brands: 2012 Innovation Resolution: Turning Ideas Into Money

January 17, 2012

Innovation is an indispensable force that turns ideas into money. It is the lifeblood of any organization. In order to implement sustainable innovation in 2012, you need to define innovation in a manner that makes strategic sense for your organization, and have the know-how to properly construct and use a process, plus the will to keep the process on course. The task may seem daunting at first, but it’s possible to develop a disciplined strategy that delivers Innovation time and time again for sustained long-term profitability. Make developing that strategy your 2012 New Year’s resolution. ” Robert’s Rules of Innovation ” outlines specific steps to implement Innovation. Here are some tips: 1. Define your organization’s needs. What type of innovation are you trying to achieve? An incremental innovation that introduces a new process or feature? Or a transformative breakthrough that completely changes the marketplace? The latter is more difficult to achieve but holds the greatest potential. Choosing the path that makes the most sense for your organization will help in the Innovation process. 2. Formulate a new product development process. Each organization’s NPD process can have a different number of steps, so long as they form a structured plan. A three-stage plan may include: Stage 1 product definition, where a product is examined for its brand strategy, profit potential, and competitive analysis. If the product is a “go” then it moves to Stage 2: the qualification process where a first article product is made and tested for quality assurance. Finally, Stage 3 is Revenue where the product is launched. 3. Create a road map to success. The key elements are examining quality of projects, capability of managing them successfully, and capacity of the organization for maintaining a portfolio of well-managed projects. No matter what NPD process you decide to use, stick to the road map to ensure that each stage, and tasks within each stage, are clearly defined. 4. Some more guidelines for progress: remember to stick to your go/no-go criteria for moving forward with developments. All projects should undergo the same scrutiny, regardless of who suggested it! Also, many organizations are incorporating a “discovery phase” into the Innovation process to allow for more experimentation. This step is beneficial for making decisions based on long-term sustainable Innovation, and not on current budget restraints alone. In a world of increasing business competition, Innovation is key to a company’s survival. Creating an Innovation strategy that makes sense for your organization is entirely feasible, and an absolute must for creating profit for your company. Here’s to a New Year of innovation!

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Rabbi Steve Gutow: In Dr. King’s America the Unemployed Deserve Simple Human Dignity

January 17, 2012

As our Congress members return to Washington to resume the debate on helping the unemployed just weeks before that extension expires, I hope they find great inspiration from this week’s holiday honoring Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. Reverend King’s legacy does not belong to just one epoch. Just as the lessons of Moses have taught the generations that followed, the teachings of Martin Luther King inspire us today as they did decades ago when he delivered his holy words. The striking monument only recently unveiled on the National Mall is lined with quotes that exhort us to be driven by justice, tireless and unwavering in pursuit of a better world. They remind us that King’s calls for justice were universal, including economic justice. “I have the audacity to believe,” reads one inscription, “that peoples everywhere can have three meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds, and dignity, equality and freedom for their spirits.” For many today, as when he first spoke those words in 1964, that belief remains audacious. Despite another 200,000 new jobs created last month, unemployed applicants still outnumber job openings by about four to one. For those millions unable to find employment in jobs that do not exist, merely waiting it out is not an option. House payments are still due, food and medicine must still be purchased, and cars still need gas. For them, unemployment insurance is a lifeline. These payments help cover existing expenses while they continue to look for work. In 2010, federal and state unemployment benefits kept 3.2 million people out of poverty. Keeping so many, including about one million children, out of dire straits is success not so much regarding statistics, but success in helping our neighbors stay well-fed, healthy, and sheltered. For those who like overarching answers and statistics, unemployment insurance is intrinsic to sustaining our economy’s fragile recovery. Spending on food or clothing helps local retailers. Unemployment insurance enables the continuation of exactly the kind of local spending that encourages small business to increase inventory and make new hires. Cutting these benefits or limiting who can get them, as some suggest we do, will not create jobs. Instead, it will hurt businesses, halt the economy, and hamstring would-be workers. It is hard to find employment when, unable to afford the payments or even just gas, one has to sell his or her car. Yet in spite of all this, Congress came close to letting this basic insurance expire for almost two million Americans at the end of last year. What a tense time that was for so many who were simply seeking three square meals a day while they searched for work. The economic recovery requires confidence. Businesses that are confident they will have customers tomorrow and consumers confident that they can spend on necessities without having to choose leaving their home or putting off doctors’ visits keeps money flowing in our communities. But what we are getting from Congress is anything but confidence. Instead, those who are out of work received a temporary patch that postponed the fight until Congress returns next week. Here again, our elected officials would do well to spend some time walking around Reverend King’s memorial feeling the power of his wisdom and his character, of our potential. The unemployed and their challenges are challenges for every one of us in America. As the great Reverend King said, “Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. I can never be what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be. This is the interrelated structure of reality.” In our generation, as in past and future generations, Congress must listen to Martin Luther King. Temporary extensions or stalled battles are not solutions. We have the opportunity to help, to prevent the completely avoidable slide into poverty and hunger for those looking each day to return to work. A full one year extension to weather the slow recovery is the right thing to do for our economy, it is the right thing to do for families and individuals who should not have to ask for help, and it is the right thing to do for the pursuit of justice. How can the greatest nation in the history of the world do one iota less?

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May Day: Is Facebook IPO Set For Spring?

January 16, 2012

According to multiple sources, the long anticipated public offering of Facebook is now likely to come in the third week of May.

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LEGO Friends Petition: Parents, Women And Girls Ask Toy Companies To Stop Gender-Based Marketing

January 15, 2012

Debate over gender-based toy marketing has reached a fever pitch. In December, LEGO — a brand that previously could do no wrong — came out with a girlified version of their beloved blocks called LEGO Friends, and the marketers behind this switch were greeted with a bellowing, albeit virtual, “Why?” Now, a pair of 22-year-old activists for girls, Bailey Shoemaker Richards and Stephanie Cole, have launched a petition to shut down the new line . The de facto spokeswoman for this campaign, as well as anyone who has ever protested so-called princess culture, seems to be 4-year-old Riley Maida . Her one-minute and 11 second rant about toy marketing took the Internet by storm in December. “Some girls like superheroes, some girls like princesses, some boys like superheroes, some boys like princesses. So why do all the girls have to buy pink stuff and all the boys have to buy different color stuff?” she asked. Sarah Maida, Riley’s mom, told The Huffington Post that this video was actually shot in May of 2011. She and her husband Dennis had shared it with a few friends, who responded positively to Riley’s message. But, after Sarah heard about LEGO Friends — shapely mini-figures that lock into pink, purple and pastel green settings, such as a dream house, a splash pool and a beauty shop — she posted the video on Facebook fan pages for Princess Free Zone and Pigtail Pals , companies that sell only gender-neutral products and stand up for girl’s rights. (Princess Free’s tagline is “Come as you are,” and they sell apparel featuring designs like a dinosaur on a scooter or a skateboarding octopus.) “I posted it because both sites were having a conversation about the new toys. I thought what Riley had to say was so perfect and relevant,” she said. According to the LEGO Group, their new line was designed based on four years of research into the ways in which boys and girls play. Bradley Wieners, executive editor at Bloomberg Businessweek, investigated why LEGO was trying to attract more girls at all . On the surface, he discovered they were responding directly to parents like Peggy Orenstein, author of “Cinderella Ate My Daughter” and poster-mom for equal-opportunity play. He quoted Orenstein saying, “The last time I was in a Lego store, there was this little pink ghetto over in one corner. And I thought, really? This is the best you can do?” The goal was to give little girls another option when they reach the “princess phase,” at around four-years-old, the time when boys their age enter their “LEGO-phase.” Because, as BusinessWeek reported, “Unlike tiaras and pink chiffon, Lego play develops spatial, mathematical, and fine motor skills, and lets kids build almost anything they can imagine, often leading to hours of quiet, independent play.” But, Wieners foresaw backlash to LEGO Friends. “They’re definitely running a risk here of reinforcing some stereotypes, even as they try to break down the ones about girls building,” he told NPR’s Morning Edition . And, within a few weeks of Wiener’s article running and the new LEGOs being announced, a 1981 LEGO ad surfaced — a photo of an adorable little redheaded girl (pictured below). She is wearing overalls and sneakers. She is holding an elaborate LEGO creation. The ad copy: “What it is is beautiful.” Parents and childless adults alike connected with the image, clicked their Like buttons and sent it flying around Facebook. For places like Princess Free Zone and moms like Sarah Maida, the ad was a perfect foil to LEGO’s newer, glossier, “sexier” girl-focused ads. “It would be easy to assume that this is just about LEGO, but [it] is part of a much larger marketing environment that puts the interests of girls and boys into … limiting boxes,” said Cole, one of the women behind the new petition agains LEGO Friends. Indeed, other classic brands including Rainbow Brite, Strawberry Shortcake, My Little Pony — and even Troll dolls — have been transformed. The characters are much more slender, many look like they’ve gotten hair extensions, the Trolls carry purses. Sociological Images found nine examples which can be seen below. Still, LEGO Friends touched a nerve that these other brands didn’t. More than 45,000 people have signed Cole and Richards’ petition, and parents are taking to Twitter, helping to spread word about the campaign with their hashtag #LiberateLEGOs . My daughter & I saw the new “Lego for girls” & were both disgusted. Seems others are too. #LiberateLEGOs chn.ge/A7f5Ob — Andrew Stroehlein (@astroehlein) January 13, 2012 To drive their message home, SPARK , the organization Cole and Richards are a part of, and Powered by Girl produced a video including footage of young girls today playing with traditional primary colored LEGO sets; they’re building houses, stadiums and “trucker hide-outs.” One little girl, wearing a princess dress, says, “I can build anything!” And, Riley Maida herself makes an appearance. She shares her favorite thing about LEGOs: “You can do whatever you want [with them].” For parents who are concerned about the potential negative impact of gendered marketing, the best solution may be encouraging this kind of creativity at home — and discussing issues around the dinner table. As Sarah Maida said: “I have no problem with them making pink LEGOs, but I really hate the message they send. [Riley] doesn’t need to be building a hot tub and serving drinks. I want her to build whatever she wants. We want her to be herself.” Click through to see LEGO Friends and other brands that have been updated in recent years to be more “girly” (via Sociological Images )

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Warren Buffet Definitely Not Keeping Up With The Kardashians

January 13, 2012

Warren Buffett is definitely not keeping up with the Kardashians. When asked by Time Magazine if he was versed in the storied exploits of reality star Kim Kardashian, the billionaire businessman/philanthropist said, “I’ve seen her name, but I wouldn’t be able to tell what she does but put her name in the paper.” He may want to do some research; investing in her star could actually help his latest social justice campaign. Buffet has been leading the charge to pressure Congress to increase tax rates on America’s richest citizens , insisting that it is the responsibility of those with the most to help rebuild the nation for the less affluent and working classes. His effort coincides with the efforts of California’s Courage Campaign, which has publicly called on Kardashian , who made $12 million in 2010, to endorse a millionaire’s tax that would put her in a higher bracket; currently, the campaign says she pays just 1% more than middle class Californians. For his part, Buffett has been concentrating on the incomes of the richest members of Congress. Republicans in the Senate proposed an option be added on tax forms that would allow people to pay more than required, a shot at Buffett and those calling for higher rates. On Thursday, Buffett said he was calling their bluff , and would match all extra tax donations made by Republican lawmakers, including a 3-to-1 match on anything Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell donated.

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Tech Leader Joins Google Board

January 12, 2012

By Alexei Oreskovic SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Google Inc appointed Diane Greene, a co-founder of technology company VMware Inc, to its board of directors on Thursday. Greene, 56, will also serve on Google board’s audit committee, the company said. Greene will become the 10th member of Google’s board, filling a spot left vacant when former Genentech CEO Arthur Levinson resigned in 2009. Levinson, who is also a director at Apple Inc, resigned after federal regulators began looking into the “interlocking directorates” between the two companies. Greene, who co-founded VMware in 1998, served as the company’s CEO from 1998 to 2008. She also is a member of Intuit’s board of directors. Shares of Google, the world’s No.1 Internet search engine, were off 52 cents at $629.12 in after hours trading on Thursday after closing the regular session up $3.68. (Reporting By Alexei Oreskovic; Editing by Bernard Orr)

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Zimbabwe Halts Used Underwear

January 10, 2012

Zimbabwe may have an 80% unemployment rate, but one thing the country absolutely won’t stand for is its impoverished citizens wearing used undergarments. According to the Zimbabwe Mail , the country’s finance minister Tendai Biti recently announced a total ban on the importation and sale of secondhand underwear . “If you are a husband and you see your wife buying underwear from the flea market, you would have failed. If I was your in-law, I would take my daughter and urge you to first put your house in order if you still want her back,” Biti told the paper. The law went into effect on Dec. 30, 2011 calling for the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority to charge 40 percent duty, 15 percent value added tax and a $3 penalty for every kilogram (2.2 lbs) of imported underwear , according to The Guardian . It is believed the ban will help address health concerns as well as work to protect the country’s domestic textile industry. Zimbabwe ranks among the poorest countries in the world, according to International Monetary Fund data . The Daily Mail explains that Zimbabwe is not the first African country to outlaw the sale of pre-owned underwear. In 1994, Ghana also took a similar measure .

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PayPal Testing Out New In-Store Payment System

January 7, 2012

By Alistair Barr (Reuters) – EBay Inc’s PayPal unit is testing in-store payments with Home Depot, one of the largest retailers in the United States, as the online payments provider moves to expand into the physical world of brick and mortar. A pilot program for PayPal’s new point-of-sale, or POS, technologies is being run in five Home Depot stores and involves a “small number” of PayPal employees, PayPal spokesman Anuj Nayar said. PayPal is a dominant player in online payments, with over 100 million users. But the business is trying to expand into offline payments, a much larger market. The move pits the eBay unit against payments giants, including Visa Inc, MasterCard Inc and American Express Co. In September, PayPal pitched its new in-store payments system to about 120 retailers, including Sports Authority, at an event in Los Angeles. EBay Chief Executive John Donahoe spoke about the initiative several times last year, but the company had not disclosed which retailers agreed to test it first. While the Home Depot trial is small, Wall Street analysts are excited about the potential. “We believe a full Home Depot roll out would increase PayPal’s addressable market by more than 35 percent overnight,” Gil Luria, an analyst at Wedbush, wrote in a note to investors on Friday. “Although penetration would start at zero, we believe that by adding value to consumers and merchants, PayPal may eventually approach penetration rates comparable to its online presence.” (Reporting by Alistair Barr; editing by Carol Bishopric and Andre Grenon)

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New Gym Only Welcomes Overweight Clients, Skinny Uninvited

January 6, 2012

The fitness industry has long featured toned and perfect figures effortlessly gliding on a elliptical machine or treadmill. But at Downsize Fitness , skinny people aren’t welcome. Instead, eligible clients must be at least 50 lbs overweight, according to the company’s website . When members reach their goal, they “graduate” from the gym. With locations in Chicago and Las Vegas, the gym first opened its doors last fall with the goal of creating a non-intimidating environment where members can focus on working out, Headline News reported . Though some 42 million Americans joined health clubs in 2011 , according to a report by IBISWorld, the Chicago Tribune notes gyms are guilty of alienating obese members who most need the fitness industry’s help. So far, the gym’s members are happy with the atmosphere the club provides. Club member Tara Lawton told the Tribune she’s lost 20 pounds since joining in October. “I want to cry sometimes at how it changed my life,” Tara Lawton, 42, said in an interview with the paper . “My body is responding positively to being pushed.”

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Kanye’s Epic Twitter Rant: Wants To Be New Steve Jobs, Change The World

January 5, 2012

Forget album sales and glitzy awards. Kanye West’s new goal is nothing short of changing the entire world. The mad scientist tastemaker of hip hop went on an epic Twitter rant on Wednesday night, discussing his new clothing line, his musical plans and, most significantly, his new company, which he says will “pick up where Steve Jobs left off.” Called Donda, after his late mother, West revealed that its goal will be to “make products and experiences that people want and can afford,” “to help simplify and aesthetically improve everything we see hear, touch, taste and feel,” and ” dream of, create , advertise and produce products driven equally by emotional want and utilitarian need.. To marry our wants and needs.” It will be comprised, West tweeted, of over 22 divisions staffed by “architects, graphic designers, directors musicians, producers, AnRs, writers, publicist, social media experts, app guys, managers, car designers, clothing designers, DJs, video game designers, publishers, tech guys, lawyers, bankers, nutritionists, doctors, scientists and teachers.” Specifically, West wrote that one of Donda’s “projects to be released this year [is] called 2016 OLYMPIC’s … It’s a semi sic-fi since 2016 is only 4 years away,” which presumably means that it will be a movie. West also disclosed that he was in talks to become the creative director of the “Jetsons” movie, and wants to design the MTV Awards, which probably means the VMAs. In addition, West wrote that he wants to help reshape the American school system, which he says was “designed to turn people into factory workers.” That includes starting a summer school with director Spike Jonze. “There are so many broken systems from the economy to school systems jail systems… we need experts for this,” he later said , promising that his creativity and ability to bring experts together would be of service in the effort to solve intractable problems.

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Keith Olbermann Back On Current TV, But Will It Last?

January 5, 2012

Is there trouble brewing between Keith Olbermann and Current TV? Fans of his show, “Countdown With Keith Olbermann” are certainly wondering. When one viewer asked Olbermann if “Countdown” would air during the Iowa caucuses earlier this week, he tweeted that his show was not going to be broadcast. Although he didn’t explain why the program had been preempted, Olbermann did encourage unhappy viewers to contact the network and its co-founders, including former vice president and Current TV chairman, Al Gore. According to a Current TV spokesperson, the brash commentator was offered the opportunity to be the sole anchor and executive producer of the network’s primary and caucus coverage, but “unfortunately, he declined.” On Wednesday, Olbermann addressed his absence during coverage of the Iowa caucuses in a statement to The Hollywood Reporter . “I was not given a legitimate opportunity to host under acceptable conditions,” he stated. Olbermann did not provide details on the exact nature of those conditions. However, in recent weeks, his show has suffered from numerous technical difficulties, including satellite feed disruption and lighting issues, The New York Times reported . The tempestuous host left MSNBC last year, just weeks after the liberal cable news channel suspended him for making donations to political candidates. Since migrating to Current TV, “Countdown” has become the network’s top-rated program. Olbermann returned to the airwaves on Wednesday night, but it’s unclear if the rift with his bosses has been mended. No word yet on whether Olbermann will cover the New Hampshire primary next Tuesday, either.

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Shelly Palmer: The Attack of the Pridefully Ignorant

January 3, 2012

I had to take a one-day trip to Boca Raton, FL this week to attend a family event. During my trip, I met several people (of a certain age) who feigned interest in my profession. I was drawn into conversation after conversation where I had to defend the existential necessity of digital literacy. Would it be a cliché if I told you how many of these individuals had flip phones? Would it be stereotypical to describe the number of doctors, lawyers and retired investors who have their secretaries print out their emails? Would it be hackneyed to recount the pridefully ignorant way that each individual espoused the reasons they lead an unconnected life? Perhaps. But, based upon the hundreds of emails I received requesting a follow-up to last week’s article, ” Are You Employable In 2012? ,” I’m going to give it a shot. An attorney, who has a remarkably successful practice in South Florida, told me that he doesn’t see any reason to follow the industry trend of hiring electronic discovery experts. He boasted to me that remaining antiquated protected his practice from modern invasive electronic discovery techniques. He went on to tell me how he knew all about this “tech stuff,” but it just wasn’t important enough for him to invest in it. I pointed out that we were in the Information Age and that practically everyone who communicated did so using digital tools. About five seconds into my response, I just changed the subject; I am not prepared to argue with the pridefully ignorant. I have about ten other examples of this kind of insanity, but I’m sure you get the point. So, if you are willing to think about overcoming the digital divide in 2012, let’s go over a few key points. First, and foremost, inject yourself in the process. If you want to become more digitally literate as a means of enhancing your ability to transfer the value of your intellectual property into wealth, you must dive in. How? Start by listening. Do you have a Facebook profile? If not, go sign up now. It is extraordinarily easy. If you are daunted by the task, screw your courage to the sticking place and click this link  www.facebook.com . Follow the instructions. If you can read, you can get this done in less than 10 minutes. Don’t worry about your privacy settings right now. You’re not going to do anything on Facebook today that will compromise your privacy, or open you up to identity theft. I promise. Once you have a Facebook profile, start sending friend requests to your actual friends. Resist all temptation to make it a popularity contest — just invite people you know well. And, only friend people you know well. Once you’ve got a bunch of Facebook friends, start listening. Forget about your wall and your profile page, just watch the news feed. It will only take a few days for you to start understanding what Facebook should (and should not) be used for in your community. Want to get more into social media? Join some groups. There are Facebook groups on almost every subject you can think of. Join, and just listen. There’s no need to post anything until you are ready. Next, do exactly the same thing with Twitter. Set up a profile page, start following people you know and people you want to know and work with and just listen. It is the fastest way to become digitally literate in the world of social media. If you want to interact with people on Twitter, consider replying to their Tweets instead of just Tweeting stuff out. It changes the dynamic of Twitter and will make you an instant part of the community. The world is bifurcated. There are only two types of people and two types of devices: connected and not connected. The mantra of the pridefully ignorant is: “Digital is for kids!” If you wish to be pridefully ignorant, keep saying it. You will soon fade into complete unemployability and communicative irrelevance. To lead a connected life, you need to be connected. This means having a smartphone and learning to use it. If you really don’t want a smartphone, get a tablet (like an iPad) or a high-end color e-reader (like the Kindle Fire) and carry it with you everywhere. You will need a device to be connected to the Internet — you can’t connect without a device, get one! Not a smartphone, nor a tablet person? Tough! You need to be. So get with the program. The only way to make this leap is to make it. How will you know what gear to buy? It doesn’t matter what you get as long as you get something. iPhone, Android — I don’t care. You won’t care either, at least not now. There will come a time when you will care, at that point you will make another purchase and you won’t need anyone’s advice about what it will be. Lastly, make a New Year’s resolution to learn how to use some keyboard shortcuts and some digital productivity tools. It could be as simple as forcing yourself to use all of the Microsoft Word keyboard shortcuts for formatting, or as adventurous as installing Text Expander (Mac) or Phrase Express (PC) to enhance your word processing efficacy. Like I said, the only way to become digitally literate is to inject yourself in the process — enhanced productivity is a big step towards that commitment. Although I was brutally attacked by a horde of pridefully ignorant technophobes in Boca Raton, I escaped. I hope you will too. Are you employable in 2012? Check out my previous article about what skills you need to make yourself an asset in today’s job market.

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Evidence Links Fracking To Ohio Earthquakes

January 3, 2012

CLEVELAND — A northeast Ohio well used to dispose of wastewater from oil and gas drilling almost certainly caused a series of 11 minor quakes in the Youngstown area since last spring, a seismologist investigating the quakes said Monday. Research is continuing on the now-shuttered injection well at Youngstown and seismic activity, but it might take a year for the wastewater-related rumblings in the earth to dissipate, said John Armbruster of Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in Palisades, N.Y. Brine wastewater dumped in wells comes from drilling operations, including the so-called fracking process to extract gas from underground shale that has been a source of concern among environmental groups and some property owners. Injection wells have also been suspected in quakes in Ashtabula in far northeast Ohio, and in Arkansas, Colorado, and Oklahoma, Armbruster said. Thousands of gallons of brine were injected daily into the Youngstown well that opened in 2010 until its owner, Northstar Disposal Services LLC, agreed Friday to stop injecting the waste into the earth as a precaution while authorities assessed any potential links to the quakes. After the latest and largest quake Saturday at 4.0 magnitude, state officials announced their beliefs that injecting wastewater near a fault line had created enough pressure to cause seismic activity. They said four inactive wells within a five-mile radius of the Youngstown well would remain closed. But they also stressed that injection wells are different from drilling wells that employ fracking. Armbruster said Monday he expects more quakes will occur despite the shutdown of the Youngstown well. “The earthquakes will trickle on as a kind of a cascading process once you’ve caused them to occur,” he said. “This one year of pumping is a pulse that has been pushed into the ground, and it’s going to be spreading out for at least a year.” The quakes began last March with the most recent on Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve each occurring within 100 meters of the injection well. The Saturday quake in McDonald, outside of Youngstown, caused no serious injuries or property damage. Youngstown Democrat Rep. Robert Hagan on Monday renewed his call for a moratorium on fracking and well injection disposal to allow a review of safety issues. “If it’s safe, I want to do it,” he said in a telephone interview. “If it’s not, I don’t want to be part and parcel to destruction of the environment and the fake promise of jobs.” He said a moratorium “really is what we should be doing, mostly toward the injection wells, but we should be asking questions on drilling itself.” A spokesman for Gov. John Kasich, an outspoken supporter of the growing oil and natural gas industry in Ohio, said the shale industry shouldn’t be punished for a fracking byproduct. “That would be the equivalent of shutting down the auto industry because a scrap tire dump caught fire somewhere,” said Kasich spokesman Rob Nichols. He said 177 deep injection wells have operated without incident in Ohio for decades and the Youngstown well was closed within 24 hours of a study detailing how close a Christmas Eve quake was to the well. The industry-supported Ohio Oil and Gas Association said the rash of quakes was “a rare and isolated event that should not cast doubt about the effectiveness” of injection wells. Such wells “have been used safely and reliably as a disposal method for wastewater from oil and gas operations in the U.S. since the 1930s,” the association’s executive vice president, Thomas E. Stewart, said in a statement Monday. Environmentalists are critical of the hydraulic fracturing process, called fracking, which utilizes chemical-laced water and sand to blast deep into the ground and free the shale gas. Critics fear the process itself or the drilling liquid, which can contain carcinogens, could contaminate water supplies, either below ground, by spills, or in disposed wastewater. Permits allowing hydraulic fracturing in Ohio’s portion of the Marcellus and the deeper Utica Shale formations rose from one in 2006 to at least 32 in 2011.

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Lynn Parramore: Vampire Squid Watch: 4 Scary Economic Trends for 2012

January 2, 2012

Having been seen to twitch – ever so slightly – in the 2011 tidal wave of global protests, the vampire squid is stirring in its evil lair. Reports of sucking noises and new tentacles sprouting in every direction tell us that the global financial monster is poised to steal yet more wealth and resources from the public in the coming year. Top economic thinkers have shared their forecasts, and the focus is clear: 2012 will be a year of continued – and escalating – predation by financiers. Their influence over political, financial, and economic activity is likely to grow – along with potential for harm. 1. Back-door Bailout of the Eurozone Would you like more of your hard-earned money to flow to fatcats? Wish granted! Attorney Walker Todd, who spent two decades in the legal departments of the Federal Reserve Banks of New York and Cleveland, names the back-door bailout of the eurozone banking system by our very own Federal Reserve as the top economic story of the upcoming year – or, at least one of the most outrageous. In a nutshell, the Fed is helping European banks by opening up the short-term ‘emergency’ lending pipeline, which means that U.S. taxpayers are indirectly bailing out private European capitalists. This is being done through a bit of financial hocus pocus called “swaps” – essentially the trading of dollars for euros. Such a maneuver allows the Fed to prop up European banks while claiming that it is not ‘technically’ directly lending. In other words, swaps are an attempt to hide the truth from the public. As Gerald O’Driscoll put it in the Wall Street Journal: “This Byzantine financial arrangement could hardly be better designed to confuse observers, and it has largely succeeded on this side of the Atlantic, where press coverage has been light.” O’Driscoll observes that the Fed has no authority to bail out European banks and warns of what economists call “moral hazard” – the nasty habit of banks to engage in even riskier behavior when they get bailed out. Why is this happening? Well, because the squid is strangling morality, democracy, and the rule of law. We pay, they play. “This is an attempt by our own governing elites to maintain a false vision of how the world works, or how ‘we’ think it should work,” Todd explained. “This comes at the expense of many people who never will go to Europe, who know no European bankers, and who have no European bank accounts.” You may not know a European banker, but you can be sure that one is just now raising a glass of bubbly in your honor. After all, you paid for it. 2. Record-breaking Political Finance What does corporate dough buy? Newspapers and elections and presidents, oh my! Thomas Ferguson of the University of Massachusetts, Boston and the Institute for New Economic Thinking suggested that next year’s very biggest stories could well be about corporate money influencing politics. He told me he saw a real possibility that a serious third party candidate for president might emerge; if one does, it will be bankrolled from the right while promoted in public as representing the political “center.” And it will also be designed to give corporate America many of the policies it has long sought, such a trimming Social Security and eviscerating the social safety net. “People are going to be astonished at how lethal the combination of secret money and corporate mass media will be to the public’s interest,” said Ferguson. Ferguson was confident that the 2012 elections would break all records for political finance, but he did add a sobering qualification. He thought there was an outside chance that the world economic slowdown would provoke really serious unrest in China or Europe on a scale that would put American developments in the shade. 3. Executive Pay Explosion Since the Great Recession of 2008-2009, the prime beneficiaries of the sluggish recovery have been…you guessed it!….top corporate executives. And it looks like the good times will keep rolling – for them. William Lazonick, professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell, predicts an escalation of the harmful practice of corporate stock buybacks, which produces the explosion in executive pay. As Lazonick explained, corporate honchos have enjoyed a windfall as they have cashed in their stock options in a generally rising stock market. This kind of thing does absolutely zilch for the economy. But here’s what it does do: spending on buybacks makes executives rich and results in manipulative boosts to stock prices in the short-term at the cost of investments in innovation and job creation. “Look for buybacks to continue to increase in 2012, perhaps surpassing the record $600 billion done by S&P 500 companies in 2007,” predicted Lazonick. What to do? Maybe it’s time for Congress to confront the reality of that predatory monster, the financialized business corporation. Lazonick suggests that a ban on buybacks (which is already in the purview of the Securities Exchange Act) would be a good start. Unfortunately this idea is at odds with prediction #2. 4. Pathological Corporate Leadership Jamie Dimon never seems to seize an opportunity to keep his mouth shut. JP Morgan’s CEO, who happens to be the highest-paid chief executive officer among the six biggest U.S. banks, has consequently regaled us with his worldview, in which bank regulations are “anti-American” and ordinary folks have no right to be mad at rich people. He has become the poster-boy for Wall Street greed and has earned the especial ire of the Occupy movement, which recently marched to his digs on Park Avenue to offer to help him pack his bags and go wreak havoc somewhere else. In his universe, defrauding investors, spreading lies to manipulate markets, and foreclosing on military families are all part of a good day’s work. Dimon is a particularly nasty customer, but he is part of a new breed of sociopathic financiers. And his kind of distorted ‘vision’ has harmed the country’s prospects and created a gap in America between the richest and the poorest that puts us in close range of Rwanda and Serbia. When those at the top of the corporate pyramid are this tone-deaf and lacking in any sense of public responsibility, we are in treacherous waters. “The biggest danger to America is that the people in the financial sector and corporate leadership convey no awareness of what is needed to create a coherent and prosperous society,” economist Rob Johnson, head of the Institute for New Economic Thinking, told AlterNet. “Leadership is not simply about how much money one makes.” Many dollars. Very little sense. Ultimately, hoarding everything at the top is not sustainable, and bankers like Dimon will end up destroying the very society that makes their enormous wealth possible. If we let them. And that, Reader, is what’s on the horizon. As a friend of mine is fond of saying, if you want a happy ending, see a Disney movie. *Cross-posted from AlterNet .

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Eurozone Factory Sector Will Likely Cut Back In Early 2012

January 2, 2012

* Euro zone factory sector shrinks for 5th month in Dec * Manufacturing PMI rises slightly from November * Output, orders fall in all euro zone countries, PMIs show By Andy Bruce LONDON, Jan 2 (Reuters) – Euro zone manufacturing activity declined for a fifth consecutive month in December, although at a slightly slower rate than November’s 28-month record low, a survey showed on Monday, suggesting the decline would continue in the early months of 2012. Markit’s Eurozone Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose slightly in December to 46.9 from November’s 46.4, but marked its fifth month below the 50 mark that divides growth from contraction. It was unchanged from an earlier preliminary reading. Survey compiler Markit said levels of production and new orders fell in all of the euro zone countries covered by the survey for the second month running. “Despite the rate of decline easing slightly in December, production appears to have been collapsing across the single currency area at a quarterly rate of approximately 1.5 percent in the final quarter of 2011,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit. “The survey also points to a strong likelihood of further declines in the first quarter of the new year, with producers cutting back headcounts, inventories and purchasing.” The euro zone economy is already stuck in a recession that will last until the second quarter of 2012, Reuters polls of economists suggested last month. They forecast the economy will proably see no growth this year. Business and consumer confidence in the currency bloc has been eroded by a weakening global economy and by euro zone policymakers’ failure to make progress on resolving the euro zone debt crisis. Austerity measures imposed to try and cut high debt levels in the currency bloc risk further undermining euro zone economies this year, analysts say. The new orders component of the December PMI survey also picked up slightly, to 43.5 in December from 42.4 the previous month, but it remained weak and Markit warned of a persistent and worrying divergence in order levels and output. “Worryingly, new orders are falling at a far faster rate than manufacturers have been cutting output, meaning firms have been reliant on orders placed earlier in the year to sustain current production levels,” said Williamson. “This is particularly evident in Germany, and suggests that operating capacity will be slashed in coming months unless demand revives.” The manufacturing jobs market was virtually stagnant in December compared with November. The euro zone unemployment rate edged up to 10.3 percent in October, a figure that encompasses very high levels of joblessness in peripheral countries such as Spain and Greece with relatively firm labour markets in France and Germany. (Editing by Susan Fenton)

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Jared Bernstein: Happy New Year! Now, Here Are a Few Things to Worry About

January 1, 2012

Look, I don’t want to raise your anxiety level, especially as you’re nursing that headache from last night’s revelry. But I figure you’d want me to give it to you straight, starting out the new year by cataloging a few of the risk factors in play, economically speaking. Europe: As the countries of the Eurozone continue to slowly and bumbly work through their debt problems, contagion remains on everyone’s list of things to worry about. The contagion channel is mostly through financial markets, though the fact that the EU is the recipient of about 20 percent of our exports means that an export-dampening recession will hurt too. How much hurt? The researchers at Goldman-Sachs provide the figure below. Europe could subtract around a point from real GDP growth next year. That’s half-a-point higher unemployment, hundreds of thousand fewer jobs, etc… and those are some headwinds we really don’t need right about now. But what’s noticeable in the figure below is the wide-and-getting-wider error margin around their best guess. So, which way might this bounce? I wouldn’t be surprised if the right answer is the less-bad part of the shaded area in the figure. One key to the resolution here has been the ECB accepting their role as lender of last resort, ramping up the loans to member banks, who can then buy sovereign debt, leading to lower yields, and ultimately, the ability of the troubled countries to service and rollover their debts without cracking up. What changed? That summit a few weeks back, which many said didn’t deliver much, actually appears to have moved the ECB. By agreeing to put restrictive fiscal measures in their individual constitutions, as opposed to the over-arching — and ignorable — rules of the Maastricht Treaty (fiscal rules that Eurozone members were supposed to adhere to, though virtually none did so), the central bank appears to have been mollified. I’m not saying that’s good policy — such rules can lead to damaging, austere macroeconomics, though of course it’s not clear the new rules will work any better than Maastricht. But what matters now is that they’ve helped get the ECB back in the game, so mark this one down as a real risk factor, for sure, but one with perhaps less downside risk than the conventional wisdom would suggest. Oil: On the other hand, you don’t hear enough about this one. Global supplies are tightening, and under those conditions, it doesn’t take much at all to generate a price spike. The GS folks have a figure on that too, showing global production catching up to global capacity. My gut is that there’s downside risk here. Most people’s paychecks are already lagging inflation — i.e., falling in real terms (see penultimate graph here ) — and faster inflation due to a spike in oil won’t help. Labor Force Participation: This one’s a sleeper and much less discussed. It’s a mixed bag, but here’s the concern. One reason the unemployment rate has fallen as much as it has — and it hasn’t fallen enough — is because fewer people are in the job market looking for work (remember, you’re not counted as unemployed if you’re not actively looking). If the pace of job growth begins to improve, that’s likely to draw these sideliners back into the game, and that puts upward pressure of the unemployment rate. Like I said, it’s mixed, because the scenario I’m describing includes faster job growth (good) but higher unemployment (bad). I’ve crunched some numbers on this — I’ll post the analysis later, maybe — and I found that if the pace of recent job growth continues, around 130K per month over past six months, the rate of labor force participation might stop falling, but would probably remain flat. But if we start hittin’ it in the 230K range, it should start to grow, making it tougher, even with extra job growth, to bring down the unemployment rate. I’ve left off the biggest threat of all — irresponsible policy makers ignoring all of the above, and failing to do their jobs on the economy, either because they’d rather hurt the President than help working families, or because they simply don’t get the need for more temporary stimulus…or because they do get it, but irrationally fear budget deficits. As I’ve said ad nauseam, it’s not the temporary stuff that hurts you on the deficit. Of course, there’s the possibility that during the holiday break, the scales have fallen from their eyes and they now understand the Keynesian imperative of the moment. For odds on that possibility, see here .

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Ray A. Rothrock: Venture Capital and Energy In the United States: Where To From Here

January 1, 2012

Six or seven years ago the broader venture capital community took an interest in energy as a category for venture capital investing. Storied venture capitalist like John Doerr and Vinod Khosla began to give speeches, raised lots of capital and put down some bets. Many firms were already making sizeable investments but not the headliners. The idea that energy might be “cool” began to percolate into the ethos of Silicon Valley. So why did this begin to happen, where are we today, and most importantly, where do we go from here. How did energy become a hot investment area? Hard to recall exactly what were the hot investment sectors six years ago, but for venture capital technology was not a hot investment sector. Healthcare was still hanging on as a good market for investments but not going gangbusters, either. Entrepreneurs and some VCs noticed the rising public discussion about climate change. In the news, for example, was the Kyoto Protocol adopted by the world was now in force in February 2005. The IPCC, a world-based organization founded in 1988, which few people knew or cared much about issued a report in 2007 sounding the alarm bell on climate change. This brought the concern for climate change to the world’s scientific community and the topic above the crease on the front page of every major newspaper and media outlet, and on the lips of every politician. Entrepreneurs are quick studies of hot trends and opportunities. In the Silicon Valley many successful IT entrepreneurs with VC relationships from the decade of the 1990s took an interest. They quickly concluded that a change in the American energy landscape was an opportunity in the making and thus began to team up with the scientists and engineers in energy, many from the 70s revolution in solar innovation. Together they put out business plans all along Sand Hill Road seeking capital. I recall one year Venrock saw over 80 solar investment opportunities. VCs are nothing if not recognizers of patterns. Entrepreneurs were forming up new energy companies and so the VCs quickly followed suit rationalizing there would be a big payoff because the markets were huge and new technology was emerging. What was driving the energy investment opportunity? During the 2000s, the Bush Administration mostly turned a blind eye to the discussion of climate change. After all, it was fighting a significant war that many would argue was about energy, in particular oil. Also during this decade the world watched the rise of China’s economy and its energy-consuming middle class. This new demand on energy impacted world energy prices practically over night. In 2010, China’s total energy output equaled that of the United States for the first time ever even though its economic output was still about 25 percent that of the United States. During this decade the world saw oil prices hit an all time high of $145 per barrel in July 2008. It was amazing how quickly Americans changed driving habits; some even bought Priuses as fast as these new hybrid cars could get to our shores. Of course the world economic crisis of 2008 revealed the fact that every country had too much debt. The governments of many major countries enacted emergency legislation when they realized they could not pay their debt but had to keep their countries afloat and productive. Nonetheless, the Great Recession set in. As the decade came to a close, the personal pain of high unemployment and recession unsettled most of the developed world. All of the drivers for new energy solutions — recognized climate change by the authoritative IPCC, economic prosperity and rising energy consumption of the world’s most populous country, China, and the daily reminder that the United States was in a protracted war where it gets 22 percent of its oil supply signaled that business as usual in energy was not acceptable. So where are we as 2011 closes out and 2012 begins? Here are some facts to consider. In March of 2011 the world witnessed a colossal nuclear power disaster at Fukushima, Japan resulting from nearly the worst earthquake and tsunami ever. The outcome is likely a significant delay in the nuclear renaissance in the developed world and the outright abandonment of nuclear energy in Germany. The developing world has no choice in the matter if they want to grow. They are and will continue to deploy nuclear power. Oil and gas exploration is booming since the U.S. figured out that shale gas was essentially everywhere, cheap to extract, and domestic. Rig counts are up and unemployment in O&G is at an all time low. Oil on the world market fluctuated wildly from about $70 to $120 a barrel as the Arab Spring happened this last year and has now settled at just over $100 a barrel. No one thinks it will go below that price for the foreseeable future. Most of the progressive countries in the Middle East completely depend on oil prices above $80 to support their government programs. Letting the price drop puts those governments at risk. Here in the United States the price of gasoline is 70 cents lower than its high in the spring of 2011 citing reduced demand. It appears that $3.50 to $4.50 a gallon for gasoline evokes behavior change in Americans to cut back their demand. Unfortunately a vocal minority continues to challenge climate change. They say that recent data suggests that the some glaciers are not melting quite as fast once thought and some not at all. The same data also suggests that the polar ice cap is melting enough to open shipping routes over the top of the Earth in the coming years. CO2 is a main culprit. It is both naturally produced and man-made. We must step in now with technologies to reduce the use of fossil fuels, a key contributor to CO2. Not doing something about CO2 production and risking the known dire consequences of that decision would not be a wise choice for the planet. In 2011 the world population surpassed 7 billion. General consensus is population will top at about 10 billion a few decades from now. The real impact on the planet of this growth in population is the transformation going within the societies of the world’s developing nations. For fifty years North America and Europe, with some Japan, dominated the world’s output and consumption based on their stable middle class populations. That is changing before our eyes. The OECD in 2010 estimated the world’s middle class in 2009 to be about 1.8 billion and projected it to grow to 3.2 billion in 2020 and 4.9 billion in 2030. Almost all of the growth, 85%, is projected to come from Asia. As a percentage of the total middle class, the world’s consumers from the developed world will decline and the world’s consumers from the developing world will dominate. We know from history that energy is a fundamental driver of this growth and prosperity. The result is massive increase in energy demand for the world, perhaps as much as 50 percent higher from today’s levels by 2035. In 2012 the United States will have a presidential election. All the candidates on the Republican side largely poo-poo climate change science and essentially advocate “drill baby drill” to address the United States’ energy needs for the coming decades. President Obama, who came to office with energy as one of the legs of his policy stool, seems to have abandoned energy as a platform position, yet he was so close to a national energy policy in late 2009. And then you complicate the alternative energy discussion with the spectacular California-based venture capital flameout of Solyndra, which had also been backed by the U.S. Government to the tune of $535 million. No national politician is going to go any where near alternative energy as exemplified by solar. They will all say let’s do more of what we are currently doing since it appears to be the least risky course. This all translates to “do nothing!” This is nonsense and fool hearty and is the most risky of choices. Where to from here? The forces that put the United States at a crossroads in 2005 — climate change science, economic needs for new industry, and desire for national security — are as real as ever and must be addressed by our body politic. The world will not stand still waiting for America. In the Silicon Valley and around the country, the entrepreneurial spirit of the great United States went to work over night in the last decade. It is still hard at work on these problems. In the recent past, optimistic entrepreneurs started thousands of energy companies across the spectrum of energy opportunities. These companies were backed by venture capitalist who invested billions of dollars. To date, 23 venture-backed energy companies have gone public and many more are making themselves ready. While some companies do not survive, of course, there are many spectacular examples of winners. Tesla, the electric car company, appeared out of nowhere demonstrating that in America a new car company can indeed be built. Bright Source Energy is building huge utility scale solar power plants on U.S. soil. A123 is building batteries capable of industrial and grid-scale applications. The list goes on and on. America needs to keep doing what it does so well — innovate. Innovation costs money. Venture capital must keep investing in energy startups that make economic sense. Public investors who provide the real growth capital for young companies need to come to the capital markets and buy those stocks. As a key source of innovation funding, the U.S. Government must keep putting R&D dollars into the market through its many programs including ARPA-E. It is this partnership of entrepreneurs, investors, and the U.S. Government that will keep the United States a leader in new energy technologies. My hope is that the new generation of political leaders, young entrepreneurs, and venture capitalists with long-term points of view can rally to the cause of changing America’s energy future. It’s not about being green or not being green. Such labels are deceiving and simple. It’s about being smart, making good investments and working hard. It’s about painting a vision of the future and then investing in that vision and seeing it through. Where do we go from here? My bet is up and to the right.

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Mohamed A. El-Erian: A Make or Break Year?

January 1, 2012

Lots of things are coming together to give 2012 the feel of a make or break year — a year that could well determine whether the world transitions to a better and more stable place or, instead, battles an even larger number of economic, political and social fires. The drivers in four key geographical areas will be heavily influenced by the interaction of political leadership, the strength and agility of institutions, and the newly empowered segments of society. First, there is the US where, to state the obvious, the results of the November elections will meaningfully impact the path taken by the largest economy in the world, and its only superpower. This is an election about the economy 00 past, present and future. In the next few months, we will all be bombarded by various explanations of why America lacks its traditional growth dynamism, why so many people remain un- and underemployed, and why poverty is rising to such unacceptable levels. Influenced by movements on both the left and right that are able to effectively self organize and project near and far, our votes will send important signals on what is needed to overcome our economic malaise. I suspect that, collectively, we will opt for compromise rather than corner solutions. We will challenge Washington to strike the right balance between tax and spending reforms, immediate stimulus and medium-term debt and deficit solutions, incentives for businesses and safety nets for the vulnerable segments of our population, etc. In the process, we will urge our politicians to shed legacy shackles in order to come together for the good of the nation. None of this will materialize without effective leadership. Our leaders need to quickly unite on a common vision, distill common purpose, catalyze multi-year nationwide efforts, and embrace midcourse corrections as needed (and there will be quite a few given how many unthinkables are now realities in America and in societies that we interact with closely). Europe, the second key area, no longer has room for compromise. Its “moment of truth” is in 2012 when critical decisions — taken either actively or passively — will determine whether the Eurozone breaks up or, to use the words of French President Sarkozy, is “re-founded” with a firmer foundation. Again, the interaction between popular movements, institutions, and leadership will be key. Many more people in many more European countries will be taking to the street. They will be united by a simple demand — to end the economic and financial turmoil that is killing jobs. Europe cannot afford more political bickering, misdiagnosis, and incomplete solutions. Its leaders and institutions need to urgently pivot, abandoning active inertia that has been anchored for too long by the delusion of returning to a status quo ante that, in reality, is no longer feasible. There is no going back to the old Eurozone of 17 countries. It is either fragmentation or a smaller and less imperfect union of countries with similar conditions. This brings us to the third area where, also, there is no going back to the old — the growing number of countries where dissatisfied citizens only have the streets, as opposed to also fair and free elections, to change their governments. Such popular movements are no longer limited to the Arab world. They will pop up in many other countries. The required pivots here are much harder and more complex. Most uprisings are led by leaderless grass root movements, enabled by social media and fueled by multiyear grievances. Rulers still hanging on to power often opt for fear tactics to divide citizens, thus repressing the forces of orderly change and experimentation that are an inevitable part of the political maturation process. And existing institutions are not much help, having been corrupted over many years to serve now-discredited elites rather than the newly empowered masses. So, where does all this leave us? America should be able to come together, recognize its structural challenges, and unite on multi-year efforts needed to promote economic growth, create jobs, and restore the sense that the system is fair. Europe should be able to redefine its regional underpinnings and, after the inevitable initial disruptions, regain the financial stability that underpins economic and social well-being. Newly transitioning countries should be able to pivot, albeit noisily and imperfectly, from dismantling the past to building a better future. Regrettably, in today’s world, what SHOULD happen does not easily translate into what is LIKELY to happen. Reality is far trickier, messier and, well, more uncertain. Uncertainty is the defining characteristic of the fourth and final area where it is even harder to reconcile the should and likely. I am referring here to countries that are under enormous pressure and, to use Thomas Friedman’s insightful analogy, can explode rather than implode when critically destabilized. Countries like Iran, North Korea, and Syria face a mix of destabilizing influences that could well come to a boil in 2012. Containment forces will compete with those fueling accelerated change. And here, neither institutions nor leaders and popular movements can be credible and effective stabilizers. By all counts, 2012 is shaping up to be a memorable year. In some areas, the potential clearly exists for societies to seize opportunities for change and transition to a better place. In others, stability can only follow a period of even greater uncertainty and risks. This balance is not pre-determined. Much will depend on decisions to be made, and actions to be taken. Let us all hope that they end up tipping the balance favorably. There is a lot at stake.

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Office Cleaners, Building Owners Get To Yes

December 31, 2011

New York office cleaners and building owners reached a tentative four-year labor agreement late Friday, averting a potential New Year’s Day strike. The agreement, which covers more than 22,000 New York City office cleaners represented by the Service Employees International Union Local 32BJ, will give the cleaners a nearly 6 percent wage increase over the life of the contract. Each worker will also receive cash bonuses totally $1,100. The contract, which union members must ratify, maintains employer-paid family health care coverage. “The new contract is not just an important victory for office cleaners and their families, but for our economy and our city,” said Hector Figueroa, secretary-treasurer of SEIU Local 32BJ, in a statement. “In these tough times the workers who keep New York City’s corporate offices and landmark buildings clean and well maintained have stood up for the good middle class jobs our economy and our city needs.” Building owners had sought to create a two-tier wage system under which new hires would never earn as much as current union members. They also wanted to eliminate a system of automatic employee contributions to the union’s political fund. Neither proposal is part of the union’s final agreement with building owners, said Kwame Patterson, a spokesman with SEIU Local 32BJ. Unionized building workers clean and maintain about 1,500 buildings in New York, including landmarks such as Rockefeller Center, the MetLife Building, the Empire State Building, the Chrysler Building, Grand Central Station, the Port Authority and the Time Warner Center, along with educational institutions such as New York University and The New School. New York building cleaners had threatened to establish picket lines in major cities around the country and had collected pledges from unionized cleaners elsewhere and other organized labor not to cross those picket lines. Such tactics would have expanded the effects of a potential strike beyond New York City, left thousands of buildings without needed staff and involved at least 100,000 workers. “We are pleased to have reached a tentative agreement with the union that protects workers’ wages and benefits, and provides crucial cost-savings to building owners, who have been battered in this deep recession,” said Howard Rothschild, president of the Realty Advisory Board on Labor Relations, the group negotiating on behalf of building owners with the union. In the last three months, Local 32BJ has reached new, multi-year contracts for more than 50,000 workers in Connecticut, New Jersey and Virginia. In 2012, SEIU is set to renegotiate contracts for another 155,000 cleaners across the United States. With more than 120,000 members, including 70,000 in New York state, SEIU Local 32BJ is the largest property-service workers union in the country and the largest private-sector union in the state.

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Bill George: Five Resolutions for Aspiring Leaders

December 31, 2011

As the New Year approaches, people will be making resolutions to eat better, exercise more, get that promotion at work or spend more time with their families. While these are worthwhile goals, we have a more important challenge for young people: Think seriously about your development as a leader. These are tough times. Many leaders of the baby boomer generation have failed in their responsibilities by placing their self-interest ahead of their organizations. In so doing, they have failed to serve society’s best interests. As a result, more young leaders from Gen X and the Millennials are being asked to take on major leadership responsibilities. To be prepared for the challenges you will face, we propose the following resolutions this New Year’s: Find a trustworthy mentor: Mentorship is a critical component of your development as a leader. A 2004 study showed that young leaders with mentors were more likely succeed professionally and experience career satisfaction. The essence of effective mentoring is developing a trusting relationship between the mentor and mentee. Identify someone with whom you have a genuine chemistry and who is committed to your development. Although many mentees do not realize it, a sound relationship is a two-way street that benefits both parties — not just the mentee. We suggest looking for mentors whom you admire for their values and character more than their success. Form a leadership development group : Most of us have little time to reflect on the values and characteristics we want to define us as leaders, the difficulties we’re facing, or the long-term impact we hope to have. Forming a leadership development group can give you the space you need to think deeply about these subjects. Leadership development groups are groups of six to eight people who meet to share their personal challenges and discuss the most important questions in their lives. Find people you can trust, and make a commitment to be one another’s confidential counselors. Meet regularly, and share openly your life stories, crucibles, passions and fears, while offering each other honest feedback. Volunteer in a civic or service organization: Have you served your community this year? In the Facebook era it’s easy to lose touch with our real-world neighbors. Long hours often cause us to avoid volunteer opportunities. Participating in local organizations — from religious organizations to civic groups — can give you early leadership experiences, provide real connection to your neighbors, and offer opportunities to serve others. It adds a dimension to your life that work can’t, and helps you develop and solidify your character while giving back to the community. You will find your time serving a community organization is highly rewarding while broadening your outlook on people and life. Work in or travel to one new country: “The world is flat,” as Tom Friedman puts it, so it has never been more important to get global experience. In the future cultural sensitivity will be a more important characteristic for leaders than pure intellectual ability. John’s survey of more than 500 top MBAs found that on average they had worked in four countries prior to entering graduate school and expect to work in five more in the next 10 years. Having a global mindset and the ability to collaborate effectively across cultures are essential qualities for aspiring leaders of global organizations. Finally, ask more questions than you answer: With the high velocity of change in the world, it is impossible to have answers to all the important questions. Much more important is a deep curiosity about the world and the ability to frame the right questions in profound ways. The world’s toughest problems cannot be solved by you or any one organization. Your role will be to bring the right people together to address the challenging issues you raise. Our research demonstrates that the biggest mistakes result from decisions made by people without deep consideration of thoughtful questions. Young leaders will soon be asked to take on major leadership responsibilities in their organizations and their communities. We believe it is essential that they take steps like these in order to be prepared for the difficult leadership challenges they will face. There’s no better time to get started than the coming year. Co-written by Bill George and John Coleman.

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Hackers Publish 75,000 Credit Card Numbers

December 30, 2011

By Jim Finkle Boston (Reuters) – Hackers affiliated with the Anonymous group published hundreds of thousands of email addresses belonging to subscribers of private intelligence analysis firm Strategic Forecasting Inc along with thousands of customer credit card numbers. The lists, which were published on the Internet late on Thursday, included information on people including former U.S. Vice President Dan Quayle, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and former CIA Director Jim Woolsey. They could not be reached for comment. The lists included information on large numbers of people working for big corporations, the U.S. military and major defense contractors – which attackers could potentially use to target them with virus-tainted emails in an approach known as “spear phishing.” The Antisec faction of Anonymous disclosed last weekend that it had hacked into the firm, which is widely known as Stratfor and is dubbed a “shadow CIA” because it gathers non-classified intelligence on international crises. The hackers had promised that the release of the stolen data would cause “mayhem.” A spokesperson for the group said via Twitter that yet-to-be-published emails from the firm would show “Stratfor is not the ‘harmless company’ it tries to paint itself as.” Antisec has not disclosed when it will release those emails, but security analysts said they could contain information that could be embarrassing for the U.S. government. “Those emails are going to be dynamite and may provide a lot of useful information to adversaries of the U.S. government,” said Jeffrey Carr, chief executive of Taia Global Inc and author of the book “Inside Cyber Warfare: Mapping the Cyber Underworld.” Stratfor issued a statement on Friday confirming that the published email addresses had been stolen from the company’s database, saying it was helping law enforcement probe the matter and conducting its own investigation. “At Stratfor, we try to foster a culture of scrutiny and analysis, and we want to assure our customers and friends that we will apply the same rigorous standards in carrying out our internal review,” the statement said. “There are thousands of email addresses here that could be used for very targeted spear phishing attacks that could compromise national security,” said John Bumgarner, chief technology officer of the U.S. Cyber Consequences Unit, a non-profit group that studies cyber threats. NO THREAT SO FAR – PENTAGON The Pentagon said it saw no threat so far. “We are not aware of any compromise to the DOD information grid,” said Lieutenant Colonel Jim Gregory, a spokesman for the Department of Defense. In a posting on the data-sharing website pastebin.com, the hackers said the list included information from about 75,000 customers of Stratfor and about 860,000 people who had registered to use its site. It said that included some 50,000 email addresses belonging to the U.S. government’s .gov and .mil domains. The list also included addresses at contractors including BAE Systems Plc, Boeing Co, Lockheed Martin Corp and several U.S. government-funded labs that conduct classified research in Oak Ridge, Tennessee; Idaho Falls, Idaho; and Sandia and Los Alamos, New Mexico. Corporations on the list included Bank of America, Exxon Mobil Corp, Goldman Sachs & Co and Thomson Reuters. The entries included scrambled versions of passwords. Some of them can be unscrambled using databases known as rainbow tables that are available for download over the Internet, according to Bumgarner. He said he randomly picked six people on the list affiliated with U.S. military and intelligence agencies to see if he could crack their passwords. He said he was able to break four of them, each in about a second, using one rainbow table. (Additional reporting by Tabassum Zakaria and Mark Hosenball in Washington; Editing by Vicki Allen and Peter Cooney)

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John Fox: 2012: Your Marketing Department’s New Look

December 30, 2011

No doubt, 2011 was the tipping point for the marketing department. Marketing automation, content marketing and analytics entered boardroom conversations. Even at the smallest of companies (for which I consult), marketing directors and channel managers find themselves in the spotlight for the very first time. So how should the CMO, marketing director and CEO respond? I think that’s the real question McKinsey & Co. attempted to answer in their July 2011 report, ” We’re all marketers now .” (FYI: this report was the #3 most read in 2011, falling in just behind articles on strategy and brainstorming. And in typical McKinsey fashion, their research involved more than 20,000 customers… talk about comprehensive research!) Here are the highlights (you may also grab my personal, marked-up version of the report here ): “Customers no longer separate marketing from the product — it is the product.” “In the era of engagement, marketing is the company.” Customers are on the hunt for a solution waaaay before you can even think about reaching out to them in traditional direct/push marketing fashion. Translation: the conversation has morphed from “a monologue to a dialogue.” “Customers thirst for objective advice” and in response, “some have built publishing divisions to feed the ever-increasing demand for content required by company.” (aka, content marketing) “The marketing organization itself needs to become the customer-engagement engine, responsible for establishing priorities and stimulating dialogue throughout the enterprise.” The firm will “require a new kind of marketing organization… that orchestrates the delivery of the end-to-end customer experience.” What’s more, “‘Marketing is going to become a much more science-driven activity,’ says Duncan Watts of Yahoo! Research.” “A premium will be placed on problem-solving and strategic-marketing skills.” How will you respond? What are your plans for your marketing department in 2012? © 2011 John M. Fox. All Rights Reserved. John Fox is the Founder and President of Venture Marketing, a B2B consulting firm that helps business owners get their sales and marketing un-stuck. For more, follow John on LinkedIn .

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Verizon Scraps Fee After Customer Uproar

December 30, 2011

Well, isn’t that convenient! After public outcry, Verizon has decided that it will not instate a $2 “convenience fee” for customers paying monthly bills with a credit or debit card via the Internet or telephone. A press release on the Verizon website announced the carrier’s change of heart and credited “customer feedback about the plan” for its decision: Verizon Wireless has decided it will not institute the fee for online or telephone single payments that was announced earlier this week. The company made the decision in response to customer feedback about the plan, which was designed to improve the efficiency of those transactions. The company continues to encourage customers to take advantage of the numerous simple and convenient payment methods it provides. It’s a quick turnaround for Verizon, which just announced the $2 “convenience fee” on its website on December 29; within 24 hours, online petitions had begun to circulate , commenters condemning Verizon’s corporate greed had made their voice heard on websites and message boards across the Internet, and even the FCC announced plans to investigate the charge. A day after introducing the so-called convenience fee, Verizon caved to public and governmental pressure and scrapped the charge. The $2 fee, which was scheduled to go into effect in the middle of January 2012, would have applied to all customers paying by credit or debit card on a per-statement basis, and would have helped to defray the cost that credit card companies charged Verizon to process its customers’ payments. Though the carrier offered seven payment alternatives to avoid the fee , including enrolling in an AutoPay program or paying via check or gift card or in person at Verizon stores, consumer outrage and mockery was so swift and vocal that Verizon appears to have been left no choice but to change its plans. “At Verizon,” said Verizon President and CEO Dan Mead as part of the press release announcing the fee cancellation, “we take great care to listen to our customers. Based on their input, we believe the best path forward is to encourage customers to take advantage of the best and most efficient options, eliminating the need to institute the fee at this time.” Can’t get enough of these embarrassing tech fails? Check out our slideshow of the 13 biggest technology oopsies of the year.

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S&P Flat For The Year

December 30, 2011

The broad S&P 500 endured wild daily swings, but a year of drama left the index on Friday pretty much where it started. Not since 1970 has the index ended a year as close to unchanged as it did this year. For Friday, the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was down 70.99 points, or 0.58 percent, at 12,216.05, based on the latest available data. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index .SPX was down 5.49 points, or 0.43 percent, at 1,257.53. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC was down 8.59 points, or 0.33 percent, at 2,605.15. (Reporting By Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

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Amazon: ‘Best Holiday Ever’

December 29, 2011

SEATTLE — Online retailer Amazon says 2011 was the best holiday ever for its Kindle-brand e-readers and tablet computers. Amazon.com Inc. said Thursday that people bought more than 1 million Kindles each week in December. The company has never released specific sales figures for the Kindle. Since the launch of the first Kindle in 2007, this franchise has grown to include several e-readers and the Kindle Fire tablet. The Kindle Fire is expected to be one of the first true competitors to Apple’s iPad. Amazon says the Fire has been the best-selling product on its site since its introduction 13 weeks ago. Even so, the iPad is still expected outsell all other tablets, including the $199 Kindle Fire and Barnes & Noble Inc.’s new $249 Nook Tablet. The iPad starts at $499.

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More Americans Charged The Holidays

December 28, 2011

In a turnaround from last year, shoppers were not afraid to pull out the plastic this holiday season. Spending on credit cards jumped 7 percent in November and was up in the first half of December, according to First Data, a company that tracks consumer payment data. The move back to credit is part of a strategy this year by credit card companies to get people spending on high-interest plastic , and also reflects buoyed consumer confidence . While the increased spending boosts a hurting economy, it also poses risks for shoppers. And it’s not just plastic that got a seasonal boost. Self-reported spending overall was up 4.1 percent for the period between Nov. 21 and Dec. 25 over last year, according to a recent data from Gallup.com . Americans spent an average of $78 per day over the five-week period. The data is based on weekly surveys of more than 3,000 adults in the United States. Robust spending in the weeks before Christmas led the National Retail Federation to revise its original holiday forecast for November and December. The organization said it expected sales to rise 3.8 percent over the last year’s expenditures for a record $469.1 billion. Even without the holiday bump in credit card spending, aggressive credit card promotions over the past year have nudged consumer credit card balances higher . At the end of November, American Express, Capital One and Discover Financial Services all reported higher balances by their card holders. U.S. card loans from all three issuers were up over 3 percent compared to November 2010, Dow Jones reported. The boost in spending helps the American economy overall, as consumption makes up nearly three-quarters of GDP. Credit card companies also get a boost, as they make money both in swipe fees from cards — typically 2 percent to 4 percent of the purchase — along with interest on carried balances. For consumers, however, spending on credit cards is a slippery slope. Even while balances may be relatively low, compared to their pre-recession heights, the high interest rate can make it difficult to completely pay down cards quickly. For example, it takes 10 months to eliminate an $1,800 balance with an APR of 15.19 percent, the current average rate, with a $200 monthly payment. Already, one credit counseling organization says it is getting post-holiday interest from consumers concerned about debt. Consolidated Credit Counseling Services, a national nonprofit credit counseling organization, reported a healthy spike in incoming phone calls seeking debt advice on the Monday after Christmas. “Traditionally we have seen bumps [in business] in mid-January until about March,” said Howard Dvorkin, founder of the Florida-based counseling agency. “Last year there was no bump because spending was so far off.” However, just because card spending is up, one credit card expert cautions it’s too early to say whether consumers will go into additional debt from holiday purchases. Bill Hardekopf, who runs the card comparison site LowCards.com, says many of the offers this year were targeted at customers who have a track record of responsible credit usage. “They are great if you are using them right and paying off entire balance on time and they can make money for you,” Hardekopf said. “But if you are not disciplined and don’t pay it off — or you charge more than you can afford — then credit cards are horrible way to pay for things.”

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Anschutz Owed More Than $94 Million In Taxes

December 28, 2011

A federal appeals court ruled against Denver billionaire Philip Anschutz Tuesday, finding he and his subsidiary company together owed more than $94 million in taxes. The Denver Business Journal explains the amount is comprised of $17.3 million from both Philip and his wife, Nancy, and $77 million from The Anschutz Co., a corporation owned entirely by Anschutz. Anschutz was made aware of the deficiencies in 2007, after which he paid the taxes and filed an appeal. The tax dispute stems from stock transactions in 2000 and 2001, which Business Week says were built to portion taxes over a period of several years. Regulators maintain the transactions were outright sales, while Anschutz says they should be qualified as pending transactions and an essential business tool for raising capital. According to court documents obtained by the LA Times , Liberty Media Corp. argues in a friend-of-the-court filing that the money was used as a loan. Money rooted in the transaction was used to save Sirius XM Radio Inc. from bankruptcy. Altogether, Anschutz made near $374 million in the transaction. The Denver Post writes some of the proceeds were also used to purchase and merge Regal Cinemas with United Artists Theatre Co. and Edwards Theatre Co., forming the largest theater chain in the U.S. “The IRS making its ruling retroactive caught us in the 2000 timeframe by surprise,” said Jim Monaghan, Anschutz’s spokesman, to the Associated Press . “The IRS took the position that this is just a tax maneuver. It’s a bona fide business procedure in which we raise capital.” No decision has been made yet whether to appeal the decision.

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Tom Gerdy: Is Our Destiny Pottersville or Bedford Falls?

December 28, 2011

Yearly, I take time before Christmas to watch It’s a Wonderful Life . This year was no different. As George Bailey’s brother, Harry, raises a glass to toast his brother, saying, “A toast to my big brother George, the richest man in town,” I again had to wipe away some tears. It gets me every time because I still believe that living as George makes you rich. I saw one thing in a different light this year as my wife and I watched Frank Capra’s classic tale. It centered on the scene in which George Bailey, played by Jimmy Stewart, gave the rich, greedy, old miser, Mr. Potter, a piece of his mind. Potter was trying to take over the Building and Loan, one of the few businesses he didn’t already own. Potter was talking trash about the people the Building and Loan helped buy homes. The passage is long but worth including. George said, Just remember this, Mr. Potter, that this rabble you’re talking about… they do most of the working and paying and living and dying in this community. Well, is it too much to have them work and pay and live and die in a couple of decent rooms and a bath? Anyway, my father didn’t think so. People were human beings to him. But to you, a warped, frustrated old man, they’re cattle. Well, in my book, my father died a much richer man than you’ll ever be! I have spent the working hours of my life as a carpenter and a building contractor in the blue-collar world. I have always loved creating with my hands and helping people build their homes. I have been very fortunate to earn a living for more than thirty-five years in the building trades. However, the last several years, it has been a serious struggle. I have watched tradespeople around me fall by the wayside, as the economy and the lending environment became less and less conducive to running small businesses. Many potential construction projects have been crushed, as the lending pendulum has swung from too liberal to the extreme conservative end of the spectrum, making it almost impossible to borrow money. Small businesses are now paying for the greed and dollar-worshiping of the lending and investment institutions. Sadly, those who created the problem still are awarded ridiculous bonuses, but we will address that sin another time. Small businesses have always been the backbone of the economy in America. During much of our country’s life, our leaders recognized the magnitude of small-business contributions to our growth and stability. They created a business friendly environment because our economy thrives when small business thrives. The current leaders seem to have forgotten this piece of our economic puzzle. Whenever our leaders face a revenue shortfall, small businesses seem to have a bull’s eye painted on their front doors. We are constantly the target of additional fees and taxes, making it tougher and tougher to remain afloat. At the same time small businesses are taxed out of business, huge retailers are given unimaginable tax breaks and incentives to help them set up shop. The playing field is no longer level, and the big-dollar players have taken control. As I heard George Bailey take a stand against Mr. Potter, for some reason it made me reflect on the growing chasm between the classes in our country. Recent history has made me feel like “the rabble,” or one of the cattle to which George Bailey refers. I also cannot help connecting the current Washington leadership and Mr. Potter. As greed and money controlled Mr. Potter, we are witnessing the same problem with our elected officials. The people running our country seem to have no interest in hearing what happens where we are doing our working and paying and living and dying daily. Their money and positions have made them blind and deaf to what most of us face daily. Out of touch is an understatement. It is a sad truth, but when the dollar becomes the master, the heart often files bankruptcy. I want to make one last connection between the 1946 movie and the status of our current government. At one point in the movie, George is shown what would have happened to the beautiful town of Bedford Falls if he wasn’t around to stand up to the power and greed of Mr. Potter. He takes a tour through the town that was renamed Pottersville and it isn’t a pretty sight. So now, I must ask, are you willing to stand up to protect our “Bedford Falls” or are we destined to become Pottersville?

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Can Crowdsourcing Disrupt Education?

December 28, 2011

By Deborah L. Cohen CHICAGO (Reuters) – Former teacher Alex Grodd is betting on social media to solve a big problem in education: how to tap other teachers’ hands-on experience for what works in the classroom. His startup, BetterLesson, is leveraging the popular information-sharing model known as crowdsourcing. It provides a platform for teachers in the K-12 grades to share their best lesson plans with other educators across the country. “I really struggled each night to figure out what I was going to teach and how I was going to teach it,” said Grodd, who taught with the national teacher corps Teach for America and in charter schools. “Once I actually created something neat, I had no way of sharing it.” Grodd, who launched BetterLesson in 2009, is part of a new crop of online entrepreneurs trying to shake up the entrenched U.S. education products and services market. Their foray comes amid trying times for schools: nationwide slides in student performance, teacher attrition, cash-strapped budgets and ongoing economic uncertainty. In September, BetterLesson received $1.6 million in venture backing and is signing up new teachers at a rate of $250 a day, Grodd said. The business uses a “freemium” model, offering the service at no fee to educators, while charging school districts for premium features such as custom analytics. It has signed up a smattering of charter schools around the country, including some in New York and Los Angeles. “We’re trying to disrupt the industry by creating a crowd-sourced, teacher-curated platform,” said the Boston-area entrepreneur. Pioneers such as Grodd are leveraging the popularity of social media and advances in cloud-based computing to do everything from giving teachers more control over their classrooms to providing students with money-saving alternatives to costly supplies. Slow to capture the attention of investors worried over the bureaucratic nature of the market, these ventures now appear to be gaining ground. Among the best known is Edmodo, a social learning network for teachers, students and parents that allows grades and homework to be assigned and submitted online. Launched in 2008, Edmodo now has 4.8 million users and in December secured a second round of funding totaling $15 million. “Education is a tough market, particularly on the enterprise side of the equation, with regulations, sales cycles and politics,” said Frank Bonsal, general partner with the VC firm New Markets Venture Partners, which invested in BetterLesson. “But I do think you’re going to see more and more of this because the need is there.” Entrusting power to those who teach and learn Consider ClassroomWindow, another Boston startup designed to offer teachers a dedicated channel to review the products and services they regularly use. The concept is not unlike the popular online site Yelp, where customers rate everything from restaurants to retailers, collectively sharing information about their experiences. “One of the major failings in the educational marketplace is a lack of data from end users,” said company founder and CEO Kirby Salerno, noting that the $25 billion K-12 market is dominated by major suppliers such as the publishing houses McGraw-Hill and Pearson. “This puts teachers in an incredibly powerful position.” Classroom Window, which is expected to launch in beta in early January, is free to teachers, who can choose to be anonymous when creating their reviews, eliminating worry over possibly offending administrators who hold the purse strings, Salerno said. Profit is expected to come primarily from selling their opinions, which could give suppliers valuable insight about what’s good and bad about their products. Salerno is bootstrapping development with less than $1 million in funding from friends and family. “You’ve got this sort of massive marketplace that is irrational,” said Salerno, a prior cofounder of Seattle-based startup Teach First, an online video database designed to help newer teachers that was sold in 2008. “We’re intentionally creating a very, very low barrier to entry for teachers and schools to participate.” Educators’ willingness to sign on may be helped by the proliferation of broad-reaching social media platforms such Facebook, Foursquare and Twitter, according to Kim Smith, cofounder and CEO of Bellwether Education Partners, a nonprofit group supporting educational innovation. “People are getting more and more comfortable with social media and crowdsourcing in the rest of their life,” Smith said. “You are starting to see these crowdsourcing solutions. It’s just an entirely different market than we’ve seen before.” Students at a variety of levels are likely to have an increasing role in controlling the products they do and don’t buy. At least that’s the hope of Chicago-based attorney and nascent entrepreneur Ryan Jacques. Jacques is developing a crowd-sourced platform called EditionMatch that will help law students and others avoid the cost of purchasing brand new textbooks each year. His startup will enlist students’ help to create online indexes to bridge the gaps between older and newer versions of the texts. “The impetus was personal experience,” said Jacques, who plans to launch the site early in 2012. “Law school books are extremely expensive. Previous editions of these textbooks were exponentially cheaper.”

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54 Miners Working When Drill Rig Caught Fire In Tennessee

December 28, 2011

By Tim Ghianni NASHVILLE, Tenn, Dec 28 (Reuters) – Three miners were trapped by smoke for hours on Wednesday before being brought safely to the surface at the Young zinc mine in Tennessee, authorities said. Two other miners were taken to a local hospital suffering from minor smoke inhalation after a drill rig caught fire at the mine in New Market, Tennessee, Fire Department Captain Sammy Solomon said. Fifty-four miners were in the zinc mine when the rig caught fire about 800 feet from the surface, and 51 of them were able to walk out of the mine, Solomon said. “They are on the surface, they are on the ground. They are officially out,” Solomon said just before 4 p.m. local time, adding that they appeared to be fine. A team from state-run Tennessee Mine Rescue led the trapped miners safely to the surface. The miners had been talking with authorities at the surface by phone after the fire broke out. The fire call came in about 1 p.m. Solomon, who has been a captain of the volunteer fire and rescue unit for more than 20 years, said a mine fire was almost unheard of in New Market, a town about 15 miles north of Knoxville in eastern Tennessee. “This is the first time it’s ever happened that I could ever remember,” Solomon said. The mine is located in Jefferson County, one of four counties in Tennessee with active zinc mining and milling operations that make it the nation’s second-largest zinc producer, according to state data. (Additional reporting by David Bailey; Editing by Jerry Norton)

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Chriss Street: Who Is Going to Bail Out China?

December 28, 2011

China is suffering a brutal economic “hard landing” as the payback for their massive Keynesian stimulus spending to revive economy growth after the 2008 credit crisis. China’s stimulus bought two years of economic boom, but the cost of this instant gratification was unleashing venomous runaway inflation that forced the central government to hammer the economy this year. Touted by most Wall Street analysts as the world’s engine of growth, we now learn that regional Chinese governments are so cash-strapped they are refusing to make interest and principal payments on their bond debt. Given the state integration of banks and the economy, if Chinese local governments are unable to pay their debts, who will bail out China’s economy? China Daily reported this morning: “China’s biggest provincial borrowers are deferring payment on loans just two months after the country’s regulator said some local government companies would be allowed to do so.” After the economy shrank by 8 percent during the 2008 worldwide credit crunch, Chinese authorities responded with epic spending of borrowed money. Adjusted for the differences in size of economies, the China stimulus was twice the size and happened in half the time for the U.S. stimulus programs. But now that the world’s economies have again stalled and the European sovereign debt crisis is about to spark a deflationary spiral; the cash flow of China’s heavily indebted provincial governments has evaporated. China’s Zhou Mubing, Vice-Chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, announced in October the first Chinese national audit determined local governments had $1.7 trillion in debt. Given China has one-third of the GDP as the United States, Chinese provincial government debt is twice the debt load of U.S. state and local governments. More than half this debt was issued in the last three years and Chinese state-owned banks hold 79 percent of the debt. Given the severity of provincial government cash flow deficits, Mubing announced “so-called local financing vehicles that meet collateral requirements can have a one-time extension on their loans.” According to public disclosure documents, Hunan Provincial Expressway Construction Group, China’s largest provincial debtor, delayed payments of $490.5 million in interest. Guangdong Provincial Communications Group, Gansu Provincial Highway Aviation Tourism Investment Group Co and Sichuan Railway Investment Group Co that owe $31.7 billion, plan to “defer” $5.4 billion in interest payments this year; and bond prospectuses from 55 local authorities that raised money in capital markets since the November state they too do not intend to pay $4.8 billion in interest on newly issued bonds. In the U.S., such across the board action would be called defaults! American borrowers claiming negative cash flow always have the right to try to negotiate “amend, extend, and pretend” with creditors; but this normally results in lenders gaining more collateral and operational control over the borrowers. But, for China’s state-owned banks, it would be hard to take more control from China’s state-owned enterprises. Prior to this morning’s news, the outlook for the China banking sector seemed bright. Standard & Poor’s (S&P) on Nov. 30 upgraded the credit ratings on Bank of China and China Construction Bank Corporation, while downgrading the U.S. banks, including: Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Bank of New York Mellon and Wells Fargo. The payment freeze may be legal under Chinese law, but it will seriously curb future bank lending. As Patrick Chovanec, a professor at Tsinghua University in Beijing, stated: When companies start to roll over debt they’re not retiring debt, and banks aren’t retrieving their capital, so you’re crowding out new lending… This is a problem that’s going to start to bite next year. Most Americans have no clue that China had one of history’s worst banking crises in the mid-1990s. After relaxing banking regulations in 1992 and 1993 , China state-owned banks diverted funds earmarked for agriculture and other development projects into real estate and the stock market speculation. According to the Asia Times , between 1985 and 1993 the number of state-owned-bank branches jumped from 60,785 to 143,796; total deposits expanded from $51.6 billion to $277.7 billion and total loans vaulted from $67.9 billion to $298.9 billion. Ultimately, two-thirds of China bank loans became non-performing and between one-third (by Chinese bank officials count) and one-half (by rating agencies’ count) of the loans were written off. Once again China’s banks have financed massive real estate and stock market bubbles that are imploding. The Shanghai Stock Index is down 36.5 percent this year and Beijing home prices dropped by 35 percent in November. Speculative lending shenanigans cost China’s state-owned banks hundreds of billions of dollars in the 1990s. It took world record growth and ten years to pay for the losses. China’s bank loans are ten times larger today and the speculative losses could be in the trillions of dollars. Where will China find the growth and the time to bail out these losses?

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Best And Worst G7 Economies Of 2011 (Hint: Canada Isn’t Number 1)

December 28, 2011

OTTAWA – The Bank of Montreal says Canada’s economy was the second best in the Group of Seven big industrial nations this year. The bank says in its annual report card that only Germany, with a lower unemployment rate and a current account surplus, did better than Canada. Italy, which is facing a major sovereign debt crisis, fared worst in the group. The scorecard suggests that the Harper government’s contention that Canada leads the G7 in economic performance is a bit of an exaggeration. While Canada is performing better than the G7 average, Germany scores higher in four of five major categories — jobless rate, inflation, government fiscal health and the current account balance with the rest of the world. In the fifth category — credit rating — the two countries are tied with the top AAA rating. In a separate report, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce says Canada’s economy is likely to continue to experience growth, if moderate, in 2012. It predicts Canada’s gross domestic product will rise by two per cent next year, followed by a 2.6 per cent expansion in 2013 — both numbers similar to the consensus reading of economists.

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Greek Retailers See Worst Holiday Season In Decades

December 27, 2011

ATHENS (Reuters) – Greece’s stores had their worst Christmas in decades, with retail sales dropping by 30 percent compared with the same period last year as the economic crisis shattered consumer confidence, the ESEE retail federation said on Tuesday. “Nine out of 10 Greeks are less generous, not out of choice but out of necessity,” ESEE said. “Retailers endured a Christmas gloom that chipped away any optimism they had before the holidays.” The sharp drop in sales came despite widespread discounts by retailers in the run-up to Christmas. Greeks have been suffering wage and pension cuts, rising inflation and a recession now into its fourth year, which has slashed living standards and forced them to cut spending. Clothing and footwear sales dropped 40 percent, electrical goods by 30 percent, and sales in the food and drinks sector by 15 percent compared with the same period last year, ESEE said. (Reporting by Karolina Tagaris, editing by Jane Baird) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Odysseas Papadimitriou: Card Hub’s 6 Credit Predictions for 2012 Offer Glimpse of Future for Consumers’ Wallets

December 26, 2011
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Retailers Hoping For ‘Mega Monday’ Of Huge Sales

December 26, 2011

Retailers were bracing for a busy day on Monday, as a day off for many Americans and warm, dry weather were expected to entice shoppers looking for deep discounts. Chains were also hoping that shoppers coming in to redeem the millions of gift cards given as presents might be willing to spend a bit more cash of their own. Many chains were still relying on the lure of bargains to bring in shoppers on the day after Christmas. Office Depot Inc advertised its “Ultimate After Christmas Sale,” with stores opening at 8 a.m., while Carter’s Inc , the children’s apparel retailer, promoted discounts of up to 70 percent. It was the first time in six years that the day after Christmas fell on a Monday. Some dubbed it “Mega Monday” as the day takes on more prominence for shoppers, especially those who have the day off. This year, December 26 is expected to be the third busiest day in terms of foot traffic, trailing Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, and Saturday, December 17, according to ShopperTrak, which measures retail and mall foot traffic. ShopperTrak predicted that up to 60 percent more shoppers will visit stores on December 26 than on the same day last year. Early checks at major shopping areas in Chicago and New York showed that Americans may have slept in a bit later than they did the day after Thanksgiving. Retailers lured shoppers with midnight and early morning sales on Black Friday, while store hours on “Mega Monday” were more typical of a usual day. Chicago’s Michigan Avenue was not crowded at 9 a.m. local time (10 a.m. EST). The Toys R Us store in New York’s Times Square was open on Monday morning, but at about 9:20 a.m. EST was not busy by the store’s standards. Sales people predicted it would get busier later in the day, and one said that so far, people were not doing much returning. Retailers could sell as much as $29 billion worth of merchandise on Monday, according to Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, who had predicted strong holiday sales before the season began. Sales at the $29 million level would even outpace the $27 billion in sales Johnson saw on Black Friday. Four in 10 Americans plan on hitting stores over the next few days, while 46 percent have no plans to shop, according to a poll from Consumer Reports. Of those who said they planned to shop, 82 percent said the biggest draw was post-holiday sales, 47 percent wanted to redeem gift cards, and 31 expected to return gifts. “The vast majority of Americans who will be shopping this week are predictably looking for post-holiday blowout sales,” said Tod Marks, Consumer Reports senior editor. “And those who aren’t shopping this week are predictably all shopped-out and low on money and patience.” Retailers hope that people coming in to redeem gift cards will buy merchandise at full price and spend more than the value of the cards they are using. Another Consumer Reports poll found that 113 million Americans received gift cards last holiday season, and that 62 percent of adults planned to give them as gifts this year. (Reporting by Jessica Wohl in Chicago; Additional reporting by Dena Aubin in New York and James Kelleher in Chicago; Editing by Leslie Adler) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Rival Camera Company: Too Early To Say If It Will Invest In Olympus

December 26, 2011

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s Fujifilm Holdings is watching developments at scandal-ridden Olympus Corp but it is too early to say if it will invest in the rival endoscope maker, a senior executive told Reuters in an interview on Monday. Fujifilm, a film and camera maker that has been diversifying into medical equipment and pharmaceuticals, as well as Sony Corp and Panasonic Corp were named by a newspaper last week as potential investors in Olympus. The report said Olympus was seeking to replenish its capital base by issuing $1.3 billion in preferred shares. “It’s a great business, that’s for sure,” said Kouichi Tamai, the head of Fujifilm’s medical systems unit, when asked about Olympus’s profitable endoscope division. Olympus commands 70 percent of the flexible endoscope market while the rest is held by Fujifilm and Hoya Corp. But he added: “Until we know what will happen to Olympus as a company, it would all be theoretical, so we don’t know.” Although Olympus, which has admitted to concealing investment losses with questionable M&A deals, just managed to beat a December 14 earnings report deadline and avoid an automatic delisting, it could still be delisted if the Tokyo bourse deems its past false accounting to be sufficiently serious. Tamai also said he had several acquisition targets in mind in the healthcare field, where Fujifilm has snapped up a series of firms in recent years and where it is targeting sales of 370 billion yen in fiscal 2013/2014, a 38 percent climb from the past year ended in March. It is buying out U.S.-based SonoSite Inc for $995 million including debt, a deal which it hopes will make it the world’s largest maker of portable ultrasound equipment in three years. Tamai also said he was not yet sure whether hospitals would switch away from Olympus’ endoscopes following the accounting scandal and how much Fujifilm would benefit if they did. Shares in Fujifilm, which also competes with Olympus in cameras, were up 1.6 percent in early afternoon trade, roughly in line with the Nikkei average. ($1 = 78.1000 Japanese yen) (Reporting by Isabel Reynolds; Editing by Edwina Gibbs) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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NORAD Santa Trackers Having Record Holiday

December 25, 2011

DENVER — Santa’s piling up more than presents this year. The big man’s trackers at NORAD say Santa Claus also broke records this Christmas Eve. Volunteers at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado had fielded more than 80,000 calls Saturday evening, breaking the previous record. Also, Santa’s NORAD Facebook page approached 980,000 “likes.” Last year, Santa had 716,000 “likes.” Volunteers at NORAD Tracks Santa said kids started calling at 4 a.m. Saturday to find out where Santa was. “The phones are ringing like crazy,” Lt. Cmdr. Bill Lewis said Saturday. The North American Aerospace Defense Command has been telling anxious children about Santa’s whereabouts every year since 1955. That was the year a Colorado Springs newspaper ad invited kids to call Santa on a hotline, but the number had a typo, and dozens of kids wound up talking to the Continental Aerospace Defense Command, NORAD’s predecessor. The officers on duty played along and began sharing reports on Santa’s progress. It’s now a deep-rooted tradition at NORAD, a joint U.S.-Canada command that monitors the North American skies and seas from a control center at Peterson. Santa’s first stop in the U.S. came at 9:02 p.m. MST in Atlanta, said Canadian Navy Lt. Al Blondin. NORAD’s Santa updates are blowing up on social media, too. In addition to the website and Facebook and Twitter pages, Santa this year has a new tracking app for smart phones. The app includes the Elf Toss, a game similar to Angry Birds. First lady Michelle Obama was among the volunteers for a second year in a row. She took about 10 calls from her family’s holiday vacation in Hawaii. Lewis said Obama’s voice didn’t throw any of the phoning children. “They all just asked run-of-the-mill stuff. They wanted to know about Santa,” Lewis said. ___ Online:

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Obama Campaign Returns Corzine Donations

December 24, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign and the Democratic National Committee have returned more than $70,000 in contributions from former New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine following the collapse of MF Global, Corzine’s financial firm, officials said Friday. Obama’s campaign and the DNC returned contributions of $35,800 from Corzine and his wife, Sharon Elghanayan, said Democratic officials who spoke on condition of anonymity. They were not authorized to speak publicly. Corzine was among Obama’s top fundraisers, raising at least $500,000 for Obama’s re-election campaign since April, according to records released by the campaign. The former Goldman Sachs chief held a fundraiser for the president last April and was considered a main Obama emissary to Wall Street. One of the Democratic officials said the campaign and DNC would evaluate whether to return donations from other MF Global employees on a case-by-case basis. A spokesman for Corzine declined to comment. MF Global filed for bankruptcy protection on Oct. 31 after a disastrous bet on European debt sparked fear among investors and trading partners. It was the eighth-largest U.S. bankruptcy and the largest on Wall Street since the 2008 collapse of Lehman Bros. About $1.2 billion was found to be missing from client accounts when the securities firm failed, with much of the missing money belonging to farmers, ranchers and other business owners who used MF Global to reduce their risks from fluctuating prices of commodities such as corn and wheat. The FBI and federal regulators are investigating MF Global. Corzine, who also is a former U.S. senator, told congressional panels earlier this month that he didn’t know any customer money was missing until the day before MF Global collapsed. Bloomberg News was first to report the returned campaign contributions.

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Christopher Mitchell: Louis C.K. Takes the Internet Seriously

December 22, 2011

Louis C.K., the comedian responsible for the FX show Louie and for making people laugh at his brutally candid assessment of how much his young daughter’s opinion about anything matters, has bypassed the major studios, channels, and cable distribution systems to sell one of his concerts directly to his fans . For $5, they can easily download it and then put it on any medium they choose. Some have put it up on pirate sites so others can use it without paying. But more than enough have paid to make it well worth his while — as explored by the New York Times media critic, David Carr : While I was talking with him on the phone Thursday night, he checked his Web site and about 175,000 people had bought his special through PayPal. He expected 200,000 total downloads by the weekend, which meant he would have grossed $1 million. After covering costs of about $250,000 for the live production and the Web site, that’s a $750,000 profit. And he owns the rights, and the long tail of buyers, in perpetuity. The transparency of the enterprise, including its cost in relation to how many people bought in, was the subject of media coverage all last week. … “O.K., so NBC is this huge company and they have all these studios and these satellites to beam stuff out,” he said, “but on the Web, both NBC.com and LouisCK.com have the same amount of bandwidth. We are equals and there are things you can do with that. This has been a fun little experiment.” His “fun little experiment” demonstrates the threat posed by the Internet to the old business models of cable companies and content owners like Viacom and Disney. And this is why Comcast’s purchase of NBC is worrisome . Comcast is still fighting for the authority to prioritize some sites over others — it wants to violate the historic principle of network neutrality that prevents a service provider from interfering with what sites a subscriber visits. If Comcast had its way, it would require a taste of the action from Louis C.K. or could throttle the connections of those users watching his content. In short, this success story illustrates the threat to the cable business model. Cable has long been the gatekeeper to content — Comcast decides what channels I can choose from. But right now on the Internet, I choose what content I can choose from. Community networks, which put the public good above maximizing potential profits, are far less likely to interfere in the way that big companies like AT&T have admitted they would like to. It ultimately comes down to whether one views access to the Internet as just another product in the market or as an infrastruture or platform for everything else. While the FCC should ensure that service providers cannot prioritize some content over similar content (CNN video over Bloomberg video, for instance), communities are smart to establish networks that are locally accountable — as hundreds of communities already have . Depending on the FCC to police distant corporations is a poor strategy.

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Richard (RJ) Eskow: That $335 Million BofA Settlement: The Good, the Bad, and the Very Ugly

December 22, 2011

The Obama administration announced a $335 million settlement deal with Bank of America to settle charges of discriminatory lending practices. Here is, in ascending order of importance, the good, the bad, and the ugly. The Justice Department deserves praise for responding to illegal bank behavior more aggressively than it’s done in the past. So does the Occupy movement, and so do the many Americans who have expressed their outrage over the lack of prosecutions and sweetheart bank deals. Without them it’s unlikely we’d be seeing a deal like this at all. But while the Justice Department has taken a first step, the proposed agreement seems designed to do only the bare minimum its framers hoped would be needed to quell public outrage. While it will be sold as bold and decisive, it’s not. In fact, this deal perpetuates some of the worst failings of past settlements the government’s made with big banks. As we said, it has good features. But where it’s ugly, it’s very ugly indeed. Hopefully the judge who reviews it will bear that in mind. The Good First, let’s offer some positive reinforcement for our leaders in Washington: The agreement is meant to settle charges that Countrywide, which is now owned by Bank of America, systematically discriminated against African American and Latino homeowners in issuing loans. Discriminatory lending is endemic in the banking industry and can take a variety of forms, including charging higher interest rates for minorities, pressuring borrowers to exclude their spouses from mortgages and predatory lending practices which target minority communities. As the Justice Department noted in its announcement , this is the largest fair lending agreement in history. Ideally, that should have a discouraging effect on future discriminatory banking practices. The money is to be used to compensate victims of bank discrimination. Banks are too rarely required to compensate their victims by returning unjustly earned profits. It also requires the bank to hire a third party Settlement Administrator, rather than rely on the banks themselves. Banks were permitted to administer the Administration’s HAMP program, and the results were brutal, cruel, manipulative and self-serving. Bank self-administration turned what was intended as a homeowner-help program into an “extend and pretend” program of systematic deception that bilked homeowners of millions more in mortgage payments by giving them false hopes of more favorable loan terms, before foreclosing on them anyway. So a third-party administrator seems like an improvement over past practice. The Bad Unfortunately it will be the bank itself, not the government, that selects and oversees the administrator. While the program will be subject to the government’s oversight and review, its track record on performing those functions has been extremely poor under both President Bush and President Obama. The banks’ “extend and pretend” manipulation was carried out under the permissive eye of the Treasury Department, which didn’t seem troubled by their behavior at all. So another debacle is all too possible. What’s more, the figure of $335 million sounds large. But without more publicly available information on the scope and nature of the fraud that was committed, we have no way of knowing whether the perps are giving back all the money they made illegally — or whether they’ll still able to keep a big chunk for themselves. For perspective, Countrywide issued millions of loans during the period under review. Even if the average discriminatory loan “only” robbed the borrower of $10,000 in excessive charges, $335 million would compensate fewer than 35,000 homeowners. The real numbers could be much higher than that. But the settlement would end the process of public investigation and disclosure, so we may never know if it’s passed. The Ugly When this deal is bad, it’s very very bad. It has four very ugly flaws: Banks can still settle without admitting wrongdoing. The government has finally heard the 99 percent’s outrage over the “neither admit nor deny wrongdoing” language in past settlements. So they’ve gotten tough bank this time around and have forcefully insisted on … rephrasing that language. It says the same thing, but uses different words. The settlement says that “There has been no factual finding or adjudication with respect to any matter alleged by the United States. The parties have entered into this… in order to avoid the risks, expense, and burden of litigation and in order to resolve voluntarily the claims made in United States’ claims…” Worse, it even says this: “Defendants deny all the actions and claims of a pattern or practice of discrimination.” Even the settlement administrator language repeatedly refers to “allegedly aggrieved” persons who are “alleged” victims of the bank’s discriminatory practices. That’s unacceptable and disgraceful. If they didn’t do anything wrong, why would there be a settlement? Once again, bankers have bought their way out of being investigated without even acknowledging their wrongdoing. Justice isn’t served when that happens. And as Judge Rakoff noted last month in the Citigroup case, the public interest isn’t served when the truth is shielded from the public. It goes after a bank that no longer exists. One of the main reasons to pursue bank criminality is for the deterrent effect. But there’s much less of that in place when the bank in question no longer exists as an independent entity. Here’s how the proposed agreement reads: “The settlement requires Countrywide to implement policies and practices to prevent discrimination if it returns to the lending business during the next four years. Countrywide currently operates as a subsidiary of Bank of America but does not originate new loans.” In other words, they’ve finally gotten one bank to stop discriminating — but it’s one that doesn’t write loans anymore, anyway. Why aren’t they suing banks that are still writing loans, and who have engaged in a series of shady practices? They could start with Countrywide’s parent, Bank of America. There’s considerable evidence that BofA is one of the country’s dirtiest banks when it comes to foreclosure fraud — and there’s stiff competition for that title. It’s been sued for a number of other shady practices, too. (There’s more here .) Besides, isn’t discrimination always illegal? Is the government telling Countrywide, “You can break anti-discrimination laws, but not for four years”? That’s easy to work around: Just put all loans through BofA until 2016 — discrimination allowed there! — then go back to using Countrywide paper to discriminate, too. Stop the Revolution! The masses have been served. Not . It addresses one form of bank wrongdoing — but not more widespread ones involving prosecutable criminal activity. Banking discrimination is morally repugnant and vile. But there is a massive stockpile of evidence suggesting overtly criminal behavior in need of prosecution. These include filing false court documents to pursue foreclosures — perjury; defrauding investors by making false statements about a bank’s fiscal condition; defrauding investors in mortgage-backed securities (MBS); and a number of other violations great and small. There still hasn’t been a single prosecution for these crimes, in contrast to the more than 1,000 criminal convictions obtained under that radical socialist President Ronald Reagan after the much smaller savings and loan scandal of the 1980s. These are the kinds of crimes that brought down the economy. They’re the kinds of crimes that should lead to handcuffs and perp walks. They’re the kinds of crimes the government still won’t pursue. It would rather push a sweetheart deal with the banks instead. Good thing some state Attorneys General haven’t let them. It’s peanuts to Bank of America : BofA took $45 billion in TARP funds and another $91 billion in secret Fed loans, which the landmark Bloomberg report shows gave it a government-granted ‘gift profit’ of $1.5 billion. In other words, the government has ‘gifted’ BofA nearly five times as much as it’s asking in this settlement agreement. The wrongdoers are still too big to fail — or prosecute : Even on today’s Wall Street, Bank of America’s executives stand out for their moral laxity and lack of professional competence, from CEO Brian Moynihan on down. Moynihan’s a lawyer, not a financial person, which means he’s earned his money negotiating this deal. But he still shouldn’t be running a bank, and neither should his senior team. The U.S. has at least six too-big-to-fail banks, each of which constitute a threat to the global economy. But BofA’s the worst of the worst. As Mary Bottari has pointed out , it “claims $2.2 trillion in assets equivalent to 15 percent of our entire economy, yet it is trading for $5 a share… (and) is trying to move $22 trillion in derivatives out of its Merrill Lynch subsidiary and put them into its FDIC-insured bank” — which would leave you and me on the hook once again for bad bets and shady deals made this bank and its Gang That Couldn’t Bank Straight management. The Administration should be moving aggressively to break up BofA, along with Citigroup — for starters. (Mary’s organization has a petition asking the Administration to break up Bank of America .) This settlement will need to be approved by a judge. Presumably California Attorney General Kamala Harris will also have a say, since Countrywide operated in her jurisdiction. Harris has been one of the courageous state AGs willing to buck the Administration’s foreclosure fraud settlement, and we look forward to hearing from her about this proposal. And we hope the judge will find some of the more outrageous aspects of this settlement unacceptable. We applaud The Good, but there will need to be a lot less of The Bad — and major fixes for The Ugly — before anyone can claim that the economy is secure or that justice has been served.

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Americans May Be Forced To Scale Back If Payroll Tax Cut Expires

December 21, 2011

WASHINGTON — Some say they’ll spend less on groceries. Others expect to cut back on travel. For many, there would be fewer meals out. Across the country, Americans are bracing for another financial hardship: smaller paychecks starting in January, if Congress doesn’t break a deadlock and renew a Social Security tax cut. The tax cut, which took effect this year, benefits 160 million Americans – $1,000 a year, or nearly $20 a week, for someone making $50,000, as much as $4,272 or $82 a week for a household with two high-paid workers. The tax cut is set to expire Jan. 1. If lawmakers don’t renew it for 2012, analysts say the economy would slow as individuals and families looked for ways to spend less. “Of course, it changes my plans,” said Craig Duffy, an information-technology worker from Philadelphia and new father of twins. Duffy said his family already has tightened spending, so “we’ll have to find a way to cut back.” That might mean canceling a planned trip to visit the twins’ grandparents in Wisconsin, Duffy said. The tax cut is part of legislation that would also renew benefits for the long-term unemployed. If the unemployment benefits aren’t renewed, starting in January nearly 6 million people would lose weekly checks averaging about $300 – the main source of income for most of them. House Republicans have rejected a Senate-passed bill that would extend the payroll tax cut for two months and let the long-term unemployed continue to receive benefits during that time. That plan would give lawmakers time to work on a yearlong extension. But most lawmakers have left Washington, and no negotiations are scheduled before the year ends. If Congress doesn’t renew the two measures for 2012, analysts say the economy’s growth would slow by as much as 1 percentage point. Less money in paychecks means less consumer spending, which powers the U.S. economy. Many people who say they already depend on each paycheck for living expenses say they can’t cut spending deeply. Instead, they’ll trim at the edges, wherever they can. “It will limit my spending from week to week,” said Jennifer Stempel, an office manager from Denver. Stempel said that could mean making fewer impulse buys at the grocery store, packing her lunch each day and rejoining a carpool she quit after gas prices declined this year. “I was starting to relax about (travel expenses), but now I don’t know,” Stempel said. Michael Allara of Raleigh, N.C., said a higher tax would further pressure his family, which includes three small children. “I’m already trying to save as much as I can to pay for college,” Allara said. “I don’t know where the money would come from.” The tax cut lowered the Social Security tax on incomes of up to $106,800 from 6.2 percent to 4.2 percent. It’s meant a maximum savings of $2,136 for an individual. Without a deal, Americans would begin 2012 facing a tax increase just as an election year begins. Smaller paychecks and reduced spending would coincide with a still-vulnerable period for the U.S. economy. Though growth has strengthened in the final months of 2011, some analysts say the gains might be hard to sustain. Workers’ pay isn’t rising much. And Europe may be on the verge of a recession that would undermine the American economy. “A failure to extend the payroll tax holiday and the extended unemployment benefits would be a serious hit to the economy,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “The risk of a recession would rise and be uncomfortably high, particularly early next year, when the fallout from Europe’s troubles will be the greatest.” Zandi predicts that the U.S. economy will grow 2.6 percent in 2012 – if Congress renews the tax cut and long-term unemployment benefits. Otherwise, he foresees 1.7 percent growth. He estimates the higher Social Security tax would reduce growth by 0.6 percentage point, and the loss of extended unemployment aid would subtract an additional 0.3 percentage point. Other economists have made similar estimates. Many noted that the Social Security tax cut helped the economy avoid a recession in 2011, after high gasoline prices squeezed households, Japan’s earthquake reduced supplies to U.S. factories and budget cuts by state and local governments and a stalemate in Washington slowed growth. The extension of unemployment benefits helped, too. Most states provide up to 26 weeks of benefits. The program that’s set to expire extended those benefits for up to 99 weeks in states with the highest unemployment rates. A proposal approved by the House last week would extend benefits for up to 79 weeks. Unless the long-term benefits are renewed, 2.2 million people will lose benefits by mid-February, and that number will rise to 3.6 million by the end of March. Analysts note that Americans of all income levels would be hurt by the loss of the payroll tax cut. Higher-income Americans receive the biggest share of tax breaks, so the end of the tax cut would reduce their pay most. Economists note that the highest-earning 20 percent of Americans contribute nearly 40 percent of consumer spending. And for 2012, the Social Security tax will apply to the first $110,100 of wages, up from $106,800 in 2011. Still, lower- and moderate-income taxpayers tend to spend more of any extra pay they receive. So the loss of a tax benefit tends to reduce their spending most sharply. Shana Albright, a fundraiser for a nonprofit health care company in St. Louis, said she would have to cut back on dining out and shopping. If she didn’t have the tax break this month, she would have cut back on holiday gift buying, she said. “It’s definitely my spending money,” Albright said. Some analysts say they think election-minded lawmakers will renew the tax cut and long-term unemployed benefits sometime in 2012. If they did, they could also make the tax cut retroactive to Jan. 1. That might cause headaches for company payroll departments. But it would be a boon for struggling Americans. “After all the arguments, Congress will extend the two programs,” said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight. “I can’t imagine that lawmakers will want to be blamed for the economy being even weaker than it is now. They would be committing political suicide.” ___ AP Business Writers Daniel Wagner in Washington, Christopher Leonard in St. Louis and Bree Fowler in New York contributed to this report.

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Cities With The Most Money To Spend On Christmas Gifts

December 21, 2011

Looking for an expensive Christmas gift? Track down family and friends living in the Washington, D.C. metro area. D.C. tops the list of cities with the most money to spend on Christmas gifts, according to an index developed by Richard Florida and the Martin Property Institute, cited by The Atlantic . The top 20 list also includes New York, San Francisco and other large metro areas. The cities in Florida’s list may be where shoppers are spending the most on gifts, but consumers everywhere are likely to spend more on Christmas presents this year. The National Retail Federation upped its holiday sales forecast earlier this week to a 3.8 percent boost or a record-breaking total of $469 billion. In response to the demand, some stores are offering extended hours to give consumers ample time to shop. Toys ‘R Us is staying open for 112 hours straight in the lead up to Christmas, CNNMoney reports and 14 Macy’s stores will stay open from Wednesday to Saturday — or 83 hours straight, — according to the Chicago Tribune . And if Black Friday is any indication, the extended hours may help boost retailers. After stores like Target, Best Buy, Macy’s and Walmart opened earlier on Black Friday — or even on Thanksgiving day — sales on the largest shopping day of the year were up 9.1 percent, according to the NRF . But some weren’t happy with the earlier openings. Workers at Target and Best Buy started petitions aimed at convincing their employers not to open at midnight on Black Friday because it would limit the amount of time they could spend with family on Thanksgiving day. These are the cities with the most money to spend on Christmas shopping, according to Richard Florida and the Martin Property Institute:

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Mike Green: Angel Investing in Startups Stimulates Job Growth

December 21, 2011

Will the next Mark Zuckerberg please stand up? What are the odds that another young student at a prestigious university will develop an Internet social platform to solve a campus problem, which will ultimately scale to become a national phenomenon? Ari Winkleman may have done exactly that. The Drexel University senior is the Founder and CEO of Involvio, a new social management platform that empowers students to know what’s going on across campus anytime, anywhere. Winkleman is just one of thousands of new high-growth entrepreneurs pitching their ideas to angel investors and venture capitalists at events across America designed to connect entrepreneurs and investors. Winkleman’s pitch impressed judges at the Early Stage East pitch competition in Baltimore, Md., on Dec. 14, where Daymond John (ABC’s “Shark Tank” and founder of FUBU) served as moderator. Nearly 30 entrepreneurs were given an opportunity to make their pitch for seed and early stage capital ranging from a couple hundred thousand dollars up to $2.5 million. In the fast-paced world of innovation, angel investors and VCs are starting to team up to fuel seed and early stage companies that have the capacity to generate significant revenues in a very short period of time. The result of such speed is job growth. According to the Kauffman Foundation, all net new jobs in America since 1980 are the result of companies five years old and younger. The fuel driving the engine of innovation is angel investing. In the first half of 2011, angel investors alone, without venture capital, poured nearly $9 billion into U.S. companies. About 39 percent of it targeted seed and early stage ventures produced by high-growth entrepreneurs, up 26 percent from the same time period in 2010, according to the Wall Street Journal . The inherent outcome of such investment is job growth. Job growth is a major issue in Black America, which ironically is severely under-represented in tech entrepreneurship and angel investing, the dynamic duo that produces jobs and wealth across America. Tim Reese is a co-founder of the Minority Angel Investor Network and was present at the Early Stage East competition. He told Black Enterprise magazine he’s optimistic about opportunities for startup companies seeking investment in 2012. “There was a lot of money on the sidelines because investors have been selective the last three years,” Reese said. “That money is now in play. This is an active time for venture capital for early stage companies, though it is not at the same level as in 1999. Individual angel investors and institutional angel groups are collaborating with venture capitalists.” A historic event seeking to galvanize the power of Black angel capital that’s still sitting on the sidelines was produced in mid-November. A ” Gathering of Angels ” took place at Rutgers Business School, where more than 100 business leaders, investors and entrepreneurs came together to discuss the challenges in attracting Black high net worth individuals into the active angel space. The “gathering,” produced by the collaboration of The America21 Project and The Center for Urban Entrepreneurship & Economic Development (CUEED) , also featured 13 high-growth minority entrepreneurs pitching to a panel of judges and investors. The showcase of quality deal flow was compelling enough to attract immediate engagement between investors and eight of the startups that pitched, including four female-led companies. Andres Montgomery was one of the minority startup founders pitching at Rutgers. He is the CEO of Dreem Digital , an award-winning digital education company in Salem, Ore. Montgomery was recruited after his pitch by Early Stage East principal Marc Mathis , who invited him to the ESE showcase in Baltimore. Montgomery, a former Microsoft employee seeking $2.5 million to scale his company, credits The America21 Project for connecting him to a variety of potential investors across the country with which he is currently in negotiations. Despite explosive growth in the numbers of incubators, accelerators and tech entrepreneurs, along with billions of dollars invested each year to support innovation, this activity is virtually missing across the board in economically disconnected Black and urban sectors of society. Since angel investing is largely geographic, due to investors getting personally involved with companies to help them grow (the mantra is “angel money doesn’t travel”), tech entrepreneurs living in communities where high net worth individuals elect not to engage in the angel space are forced to spend their time and money developing relationships and seeking access to capital elsewhere. The typical result is jobs are created where funding is found. For Black America, that equation equals zero job growth. The nation received some good news recently as unemployment figures dipped . But, America’s collective sigh of relief wasn’t being heard in Black and urban America, where high unemployment remains a constant plague. Apparently, the angelic investment remedy that’s catching on like wildfire across the nation has yet to see many Black high net worth individuals get involved in the funding of high-growth startups. Additionally, entrepreneurship as an active part of campus culture at universities like Stanford, Harvard, MIT and others, hasn’t caught on with the vast majority of HBCUs (Historically Black Colleges and Universities). The next Mark Zuckerberg will likely emerge from environments that foster, nurture and invest in the innovative spirit of its talented entrepreneurs. It is incumbent upon every community to ensure it plants the seeds of entrepreneurship, along with concerned angels investing in nourishing the crop of talented innovators to grow the jobs we desperately need.

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WSJ vs. GOP

December 21, 2011

The Wall Street Journal editorial page attacked congressional Republicans Wednesday for possibly losing the payroll tax cut standoff to President Barack Obama. The editorial begins : GOP Senate leader Mitch McConnell famously said a year ago that his main task in the 112th Congress was to make sure that President Obama would not be re-elected. Given how he and House Speaker John Boehner have handled the payroll tax debate, we wonder if they might end up re-electing the President before the 2012 campaign even begins in earnest. House Republicans killed a two-month extension of the payroll tax cut, unemployment benefits and a provision avoiding Medicare payment cuts to to doctors Tuesday by a 229-193 vote. The Senate voted Saturday by an 89-10 margin to extend all three for two months. All three provisions expire on Jan. 1. House Republicans want the Senate to return and negotiate over a compromise plan. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said he won’t negotiate until the House approves the Senate’s package. The conservative editorial board wrote that the Republicans have “thoroughly botched the politics.” The board also added that Obama is in a “stronger re-election position today than he was a year ago.” If Congress does nothing, then the payroll tax paid by workers will rise from 4.2 percent to 6.2 percent, long-term unemployment benefits will expire and doctors will face a 27 percent cut in Medicare reimbursements on Jan. 1.

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State, Local Government Revenues Rose Signaling Hope For Recovery

December 21, 2011

Tax revenues of U.S. state and local governments rose in the third quarter, the U.S. Census said on Tuesday, marking the eighth straight quarter of growth and heralding the promise of continued economic recovery in areas where revenues collapsed during the recent recession. Revenues totaled $292 billion, rising 4.1 percent over the third quarter of 2010 to their highest third quarter level on record. They were primarily bolstered by a 10.9 percent surge in individual income taxes, which reached $66.7 billion in the third quarter. “State and local finances are gradually improving, but neither states nor localities are out of the woods yet,” said Gregory Daco, principal U.S. Economist at IHS Global Insight, in a note on the data. “The current fiscal year will be one of many challenges. State and local governments will have to manage still-high demand for public services while relying less on federal assistance, and without the boost to revenues from temporary tax increases and fees,” he added. Most states begin their fiscal year in July. State tax revenues alone rose 5.6 percent, to $178.2 billion, from the third quarter of 2010. States had experienced a slight time lag between the recession’s beginning in 2007 when the fall in employment, housing prices and consumption hit the wider economy and state revenue collection. Despite the onset of the recession, their revenues reached a record high in 2008 before the recession’s impact was felt and revenues plummeted. I n much the same way, states are only now beginning to register the recession’s end, officially in June 2009, and are eager for revenues to return to the 2008 peaks. And while revenues have been improving steadily, the European debt crisis, stock market declines, and other economic troubles on the national level have states worried revenue growth will not last. In Tennessee, individual income tax receipts plummeted 42.2 percent in the third quarter from the same period in 2010, the only state where those tax revenues dropped, Census data showed. On the other hand, they rose 139.6 percent in Hawaii and 81.8 percent in Illinois. All property taxes increased a much smaller 1 percent to $87.4 billion in the quarter. Those collected by local governments, $84.4 billion, were up 1.5 percent from the same quarter a year before. Sales tax revenues made much heartier gains, rising 3.3 percent to $73.3 billion, but corporate income taxes dropped for the first time in a year, by 2.9 percent to $9.1 billion. Sales tax collections dropped in six states and the District of Columbia. They rose the most, 40.8 percent, in North Dakota, and were up 25.1 percent in Nevada. Five states do not collect sales taxes. The Census data showed that other taxes, primarily those charged on oil and mineral extractions, surged 75.5 percent to $3.7 billion. Only a handful of states levy severance taxes, such as oil-rich Alaska, where they leapt more than 200 percent. At the start of the recession, state and local governments temporarily increased taxes and fees to tide them over. Those measures are ending now, just as the extraordinary assistance from the 2009 federal economic stimulus plan draws to a close. That has left fewer places to tap revenues, especially as states’ voters and leaders such as Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell slam the door on the possibility of future tax increases. The only tax increase on a state ballot in November, in Colorado, failed. Meanwhile, the U.S. Congress is fighting over any spending increases, which means that the federal government will likely send fewer dollars to the states, which are likewise cutting local aid. (Reporting By Lisa Lambert; Additional reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Theodore d’Afflisio) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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