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Japan’s current-account surplus narrowed in December on strength as result for the unceasing yen’s appreciation, which is weakening the global demand for the Japanese products and increasing …

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Japan’s current-account surplus narrows in December

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(MENAFN) China’s Commerce Minister, Chen Deming, said that in order to meet challenges caused by the global slowdown, in 2012, the country would increase consumption, reported Bloomberg. Deming …

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China to increase consumption in 2012

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China to increase consumption in 2012

January 8, 2012

(MENAFN) China’s Commerce Minister, Chen Deming, said that in order to meet challenges caused by the global slowdown, in 2012, the country would increase consumption, reported Bloomberg. Deming …

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Oil Above $85 in Asia

August 30, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) Global oil prices withstood threat from Irene hurricane as US oil prices edged up while Brent crude eased below $111 a barrel in London. WTI crude for October …

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Obama, Merkel consult on global economic crisis

August 28, 2011

(MENAFN – Kuwait News Agency (KUNA)) President Barack Obama spoke with German Chancellor Angela Merkel late Saturday for consultations over the global economic crisis, the White House said late …

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Gold prices plunge as economic fears ease, for now

August 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) Gold prices are plunging as investors grow more confident about the global economy, according to AP. Gold fell $104, or 5.6 percent, to settle at $1,757 an ounce …

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Bank of America Announces New Energy Efficiency Finance Program

June 4, 2011

Bank of America ?s Global Corporate and Investment Banking segment provides commercial and corporate bank loans, indirect consumer loans, real estate lending products, and leasing and asset-based lending products for …

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Bank of America to Present at the Sanford C. Bernstein 27th Annual …

June 4, 2011

Bank of America ?s Global Corporate and Investment Banking segment provides commercial and corporate bank loans, indirect consumer loans, real estate lending products, and leasing and asset-based lending products for …

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AbTech Industries Appoints Industry Expert Skip Short as Director of Global Stormwater Sales

June 2, 2011

SCOTTSDALE, AZ–(Marketwire – Jun 2, 2011) – AbTech Holdings, Inc . ( OTCBB : ABHD ) is pleased to announce the appointment of Skip Short to the newly created position of Director of Global Stormwater. Mr. Short will be responsible for leading the company’s environmental technologies sales in the growing stormwater industry sector.

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Vyatta Adds Industry Veteran Sheen Khoury as Senior Vice President of Worldwide Sales and Field Operations

June 1, 2011

Seasoned Executive to Leverage Networking and Cloud Management Experience to Expand Vyatta’s Global Leadership

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McDonald’s Names Bridget Coffing as Senior Vice President of Corporate Relations

May 31, 2011

OAK BROOK, IL–(Marketwire – May 31, 2011) – McDonald’s Corporation ( NYSE : MCD ) announced today that Bridget Coffing, currently Vice President of Global External Communications, has been promoted to Senior Vice President of McDonald’s Corporate Relations.

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Global housing markets take a turn for the worse

May 27, 2011

We present the latest Global Property Guide survey of global house prices for the year ending Q1 2011.

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IMG Reorganizes Global Golf Business

May 24, 2011

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwire – May 24, 2011) – IMG Worldwide, the global sports, fashion and media company, announced today the reorganization of its global golf business.

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Certona Hires Veteran Ecommerce and Analytics Sales Executive

May 24, 2011

New Senior Vice President of Global Sales Looks to Leverage His Extensive Online Retail Experience to Help Expand Certona’s Leadership Internationally

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Mike Carr Is Appointed to the LeoNovus Advisory Board

May 24, 2011

Former British Telecom’s Chief Science Officer Lends Expertise to Company’s Global Initiatives

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Michelle Chen: In Asia, Raising the Wage Floor Toward Global Labor Justice

May 23, 2011

Garment factories have been fleeing from the American industrial landscape for decades now, and their destination is no mystery: faraway communities where the impoverished will work longer, for less, under worse conditions. The workers left behind can do little but watch in distress as the global labor system continues to spiral downward. But awaiting those factories today are labor advocates in Asia who are determined to draw the line on the race to the bottom by pushing up the floor. A group of workers’ advocates came together in 2009 to launch the Asia Floor Wage Alliance , an unprecedented effort to do what free-trade agreements have done for global capital: establish an economic baseline that transcends national boundaries. But while multinationals have prowled the planet to exploit the cheapest workforces they can find, advocates call for a common living wage standard to ensure that workers from Shenzhen to Sri Lanka aren’t working themselves deeper into poverty. The Great Recession offers an opportunity to begin reconfiguring the profit structure. The Wage Floor campaign presents itself as “an effort to formulate a different way to think about developing a global industry and rebuilding the global economy, by raising wages at the bottom and reducing inequality.” This month, the Asia Floor Wage Alliance (AFW) has stepped up pressure on the garment industry, including household names like Gap and Adidas, by issuing guidelines on the living wage in the countries it campaigns in. The projected monthly living wage figures for 2011 are: Bangladesh: 12248 BDT Cambodia: 692903 Riel India: 7967 Rupees Indonesia: 2132202 Rupiah Sri Lanka: 19077 Rupees China: 1842 RMB (Convert to U.S. dollars here .) In Asia as in America , low-wage workers, especially women , suffer a vast discrepancy between the legal minimum wage and what it actually takes to support a household. According to the AFW Alliance, “Currently, the gap between the minimum wage and Asia Floor Wage is almost 1:2, in the best case scenario.” The issue is especially acute for China, where rising inflation and U.S. pressure over Beijing’s currency policy could impact purchasing power and labor costs both in China and all the markets that its factories feed. In the long run, across the region, there is the tumult of soaring food prices, climate change, migration into dense urban areas and a drive for higher living standards. The very least governments and employers could do is work with civil society to align workers’ base incomes with economic security and, by extension, social stability . Of course, the AFW initiative will meet resistance from the industry. Executives may grumble that higher wages will translate into job losses or higher prices for Americans. True, rising labor costs may have unpredictable ripple effects on workers and consumers in developed and developing economies. But volatility is already endemic in global trade. A coordinated movement to establish a firm wage floor, in consultation with workers, unions and employers , lays the foundation for a more rational the production chain, in which fair wages and fair prices are in harmony, and the bosses on top finally get squeezed to pay their fair share. Continue reading at In These Times.

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Sony To Post Huge Loss For The Year

May 23, 2011

TOKYO (By Isabel Reynolds) – Sony Corp said it expected to post a $3.2 billion net loss for the year that ended on March 31 due to a write off on tax credits, the latest in a string of grim headlines for the consumer electronics giant. The maker of PlayStation video games, Vaio computers and Bravia TVs has been battling to recover from the devastating Japan earthquake in March, and more recently, a series of computing hacking attacks that affected more than 100 million user accounts. “I have been skeptical about Sony for a long time. Sony has been overtaken by Apple and other companies,” said Yuuki Sakurai, CEO and president of Fukoku Capital Management in Tokyo. “The management is not able to show shareholders the future of the company.” Sony, once a symbol of Japan’s electronic and manufacturing excellence, has found itself outmaneuvered by Apple in portable music and Samsung Electronics in flat-screen TVs and is facing a tough fight in video games with Nintendo and Microsoft. Sony said it now expected a net loss of 260 billion yen ($3.2 billion) versus a previous forecast for a profit of 70 billion yen due to a “non-cash charge” of around 360 billion yen related to Japanese tax credits. It is due to announce its full-year earnings on Thursday. The net loss would be Sony’s biggest since 1995 and its second-largest ever. The company stuck with its earlier forecast, issued before the March 11 earthquake, for an annual operating profit of 200 billion yen, which is broadly in line with consensus forecasts. CLEAN SLATE Sony said it expected sales to rise this year and forecast a net profit. Some investors saw the revisions as a way for Sony to put the slew of bad news behind it and start with something of a clean slate. “Sony sharply revised down its net forecast to a big loss to show that the impact of the earthquake has been largely factored-in during the previous financial year, while the impact would be limited for the current year,” said Mitsushige Akino, chief fund manager at Ichiyoshi Investment Management. “Probably the company is expecting the global economy to recover during the second half of the year. Maybe this perception could be a bit optimistic, but we still have to wait and see.” In its first estimate for the year to March 2012, Sony said its operating profit would also be around 200 billion yen. The devastating earthquake and tsunami in March damaged Sony plants in northeastern Japan, snarled the global supply chain in several industries and triggered a plunge in domestic consumption. Sony estimated the impact of the quake in the current year at 150 billion yen at the operating level. Many rival corporations, including Panasonic Corp, have yet to issue forecasts for the current financial year to March 2012, due to uncertainty following the disaster. Sony last month disclosed that it had been a victim of one of the biggest cyber-attacks in history. It shut down its PlayStation Network across the globe in mid-April and has slowly started to restore access, starting in the United States. The company is still working with Japanese government authorities to restore access in that country. Sony said “known costs” were estimated at 14 billion yen. Sony is targeting the end of May for fully restoring the affected networks. Shares in Sony ended down 0.5 percent in a Tokyo market down 1.5 percent. It shares though have fallen 24 percent so far this year, compared with a 7 percent fall in the Nikkei average. ($1=81.71 yen) (Additional reporting by Tim Kelly and Chikafumi Hodo; Writing by Lincoln Feast; Editing by) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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GlobalLogic Appoints Accomplished Technology Executive Mike DeVries as Chief Marketing Officer

May 20, 2011

Software Executive’s Record of Innovation to Help GlobalLogic Extend Market Leadership in Software R&D Services

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NetIQ Adds Identity, Security and Select Data Center Lines From Novell; Announces New Executive Leadership Team

May 18, 2011

Powerful Combination of Solutions, Deep Expertise and Global Support Delivers Greater Customer Value

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US- Global initiative expresses interest in cooperating with Jordanian universities

May 17, 2011

US- Global initiative expresses interest in cooperating with Jordanian universities

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El-Erian: Strauss-Kahn Scandal Could Put IMF ‘Under Huge Cloud’

May 16, 2011

This weekend’s detention of the IMF’s chief on allegations of sexual assault has implications that go well beyond the impact on Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s (or, as he is commonly known, DSK) international prestige. They could also impact the IMF, France, market uncertainty and the well-being of the global economy.

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Menlo Worldwide Logistics Names Leonard F. Berz Director of Business Development

May 16, 2011

SAN MATEO, CA–(Marketwire – May 16, 2011) – Menlo Worldwide Logistics, the global logistics subsidiary of Con-way Inc. ( NYSE : CNW ), today announced that Leonard “Lenny” F. Berz has been named director of business development.

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John Lipsky Becomes Acting IMF Head

May 15, 2011

May 15 (Reuters) – The IMF said on Sunday its No. 2 official, John Lipsky, will step in as acting managing director of the global institution in the absence of IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who is charged with sexual assault. IMF spokesman William Murray said Lipsky will meet with members of the IMF board on Sunday to inform them of developments. The board is the main overseer of the IMF’s daily operations. “In line with standard IMF procedures, John Lipsky, first deputy managing director, is acting managing director while the MD is not in DC,” Murray said in a statement. “Mr. Lipsky will chair the informal Board session today.” (Reporting by Lesley Wroughton; Editing by Eric Beech) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Marshall Auerback: The Myth That Banks Are Solvent

May 12, 2011

Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 . Banks will likely have too much cash by 2019 as a result of the Basel III global banking rules, UBS AG Chief Executive Oswald Grübel said Thursday . “In the next 10 years, at the end of 2019, we will have overly liquid, overcapitalized banks,” he said, addressing a business audience at a conference. “However this also means we won’t have a lot of growth.” Mr. Grübel was discussing changes in the global balance of power and what the possible consequences would be. The CEO has said that investment banking could shift to the U.S. and Asia if stricter capital requirements are enforced in the U.K. and Switzerland. The basic economic tenet, however, remains that “power goes where the money is,” he said. This is consistent with the fallacy that the banks are basically solvent and able and ready to extend credit if only these darn regulators would get out of the way. As James Galbraith has argued , the problem is said to be no more serious than some clogged plumbing. A bit of Draino in the form of government handouts and guarantees should be sufficient to get credit flowing again. Most major banks are not insolvent, this story goes, but rather have a temporary liquidity problem induced by malfunctioning financial markets. Time will allow market mechanisms to restore the true, higher value of “legacy” assets. Once the banks are healthy, the economy will recover. Nonsense. Private debt loads remain too high, income and employment continue to fall, and delinquencies and foreclosures continue to rise. Assets are overvalued even at current depressed prices. Many financial institutions (probably including most of the big ones) are hopelessly insolvent, holding mountains of toxic waste that will never be worth anything. So why are we busy implementing policies that simply maintain a credit-based economy? All around the world, policymakers continue to foster the fiction that all we have a temporary illiquidity problem, not a problem of excessive leverage, excessive debt, and a legacy of assets that were vastly overvalued based on economic scenarios that had no chance of coming to fruition. Given the inappropriate premises under which policymakers in the U.S., the U.K., and the euro zone have dealt with the leverage of financial institutions, it’s obvious that problems will continue to languish if the administration does not change its course of action. This will heavily constrain the global economy’s capacity to recover and will lead to multiple Japanese style “lost decades” around the globe. The whole boom of the last 25 years was predicated on financial deregulation, massive fraud, and a huge build up of private debt as a consequence of inadequate fiscal policy to generate full employment and rising incomes. Growth was based on household borrowing and the continuation of negative saving trends (that is, household deficit spending). A good place to start recovery efforts, therefore, would be to change this method of economic growth by promoting employment, rather than capitulating to the siren songs of the bankers whose recklessness got us into this mess. In a much saner world, we would be in the midst of a government-led investment push, much like the Space Race or the Manhattan Project , to drive new energy technologies forward by scaling up production and innovation, both apt to lower unit cost points. There would also be a concerted effort to establish the new infrastructure required. (After all, highways were constructed in part for national defense purposes, and railroads and canals had their share of public subsidization.) But with the ease of capture so visible , no such effort led by the government could be trusted enough to be supported, especially by a citizenry that has become one of fragmented (and anxious) consumers. Deficit austerians in government fail to understand that a budget deficit is essential for stable economic growth if the contribution of net exports (the difference between exports and imports) is not strong enough to sustain domestic demand while the private domestic sector is trying to save. We need to put an end to these ridiculous policy responses. We not only require substantially increased supervision and regulation of the financial sector, but must also put a stop to the practices that brought on the crisis in the first place. If left alone to deal with the current problems, market mechanisms will push management and owners of insolvent institutions to ramp up losses and engage in yet more fraudulent accounting, leading to an even bigger crash down the road.

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Aristocrat Names Gaming Visionary Rich Schneider Chief Product Officer

May 11, 2011

Schneider to Oversee Product Design, Portfolio Management and Global Marketing

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Dominique Desruelle: BRICs and Mortar — Building Growth in Low-Income Countries

May 9, 2011

The so-called BRIC nations–Brazil, Russia, India and China–could be a game changer for how low-income countries build their economic futures. The growing economic and financial reach of the BRICs has seen them become a new source of growth for low-income countries (LICs). LIC-BRIC ties–particularly trade, investment and development financing–have surged over the past decade. And the relationship could take on even more prominence after the global financial crisis, with stronger growth in the BRICs and their demand for LIC exports helping to buffer against sluggish demand in most advanced economies. The potential benefits from LIC-BRIC ties are enormous. But, so too are challenges and risks that must be managed if the LIC-BRIC relationship to support durable and balanced growth in LICs. Unlocking the new sources of growth and investment financing–particularly given the massive investment needs of LICs –raises a raft of other issues, including: how to finance investment without taking on too much debt; how to attract investment without sacrificing too much fiscal revenue through costly tax incentives ; and how to avoid resource dependency in the long run. Most of these challenges and risks are not new, but they deserve renewed attention. In that spirit, the IMF recently sponsored a panel discussion to explore these issues, drawing on perspectives from LIC and BRIC policymakers, and development experts. Strengthened ties have certainly boosted exports, helping to stimulate growth in LICs and contribute to their resilience during the global economic crisis. But, over the longer haul, what will matter is whether BRICs will be a positive force in making LICs more dynamic and productive through structural change–where economies shift from, say, agriculture to labor-intensive manufactures having a larger role. So, the extent to which BRICs could be the building blocks for lasting growth in LICs may still be an open question. But, we took away from the panel discussion six essential factors that will help LICs lay the groundwork to benefit from this important relationship. Current LIC-BRIC ties may pose a risk to LICs becoming too reliant on raw materials–a commodity trap–but LICs can also learn from successful BRICs. –On one hand, India and China’s competitiveness in manufacturing and their large demand for natural resources may push up the relative price of commodities undermining incentives for LICs to shift into manufacturing. –At the same time, Brazil and Russia (as well as advanced economies, such as Australia and Canada) have benefited from natural resources as a lynchpin for growth. Boosting manufacturing is central to stimulating growth. Here too there are mixed views as to whether or not BRIC development financing has helped transfer technology and improved labor skills particularly in manufacturing. Greater provision of trade preferences (including beyond commodities) could help ensure that the relationship is mutually beneficial and de-bunk the notion that BRICs are simply “looting” the LICs for their natural resources. Concessional financing can provide a good jump start, but commercial financing will be vital to sustained growth. BRIC development financing is complementary to traditional donor support, but can also have important knock-on effects. China’s experience points to two possible advantages: commercially-oriented development financing is less constrained by the size of the flows, and provides incentives for competition, efficiency and permanent interest in ensuring that the project remains viable. LICs can learn from the BRICs in how they balance these various challenges. Countries need a coherent strategy for scaling up infrastructure and development that maximizes their growth potential. China, for instance, has had tremendous success in coherent investment planning, constantly reassessing infrastructure gaps and reorienting resources. Multilateral institutions and donors can play an important role in complementing the LIC-BRIC relationship , through: analysis and policy advice to support macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability; and capacity building and facilitating improvements in the investment environment to boost LICs’ absorptive capacity. Greater transparency of BRIC financing, particularly development financing, is needed. Perhaps the biggest gap is the lack of official data on development financing by China. It would be helpful for China to publish this data. While it’s difficult to do justice to the richness of the panel discussions, we hope it can foster an ongoing dialogue about how LICs can–particularly in building their relationships with BRICs–increase the volume and quality of investment, and associated financing, in a sustainable way. From iMFdirect blog

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Doug Sweeny Named President of Young & Rubicam West

May 6, 2011

Moves to Y&R From Levi’s Global Brand Marketing; Reunites With Former Creative Partner, Joe Kayser

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GM Posts Best Earnings Quarter in More Than A Decade

May 5, 2011

General Motors reported first quarter earnings of $3.2 billion, its fifth consecutive profitable quarter and its best quarter in more than a decade. The performance, combined with the impact of the earthquake in Japan last March on Toyota’s operation, should drive the company to regain the global lead in auto sales this year.

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Winston Baker Welcomes New Event Director

May 5, 2011

Janice Kovach to Join Global Event Production Team to Produce Renewable Energy Conferences Among Other Emerging Sectors

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Mindjet Looks to Expand Upon Record 2010 Success With Strategic Executive Appointments

May 4, 2011

Leading Information Visualization Provider Taps Valerie Burman as New Vice President of Corporate Development and Strategic Alliances and Promotes Abe Smith to Vice President of Sales Americas/APAC and Global CSS

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Video: Vaidya Says Toyota in Danger of Slipping Behind GM, VW

May 4, 2011

May 4 (Bloomberg) — Vivek Vaidya, automotive and transportation director at research company Frost & Sullivan, talks about the global auto industry. General Motors Co., less than two years after declaring bankruptcy, is poised to reclaim the global auto sales lead this year from Toyota Motor Corp., Japan’s automaker rattled by natural disasters and reports of slipping quality. Vaidya speaks from Singapore with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Dan Solin: Financial News Is Destroying Your Wealth

May 4, 2011

Almost anyone can be a financial pundit. Unlike legitimate professions, no formal training or certification is required. If you have a web cam, you can call yourself a “financial professional” and offer your opinions on a wide range of financial subjects. Unfortunately, some investors will rely on your “expert opinion”, and suffer the inevitable consequences. A recent interview with James Altucher on Yahoo’s Daily Ticker illustrates everything that is wrong with financial journalism. It’s not easy to do that in one interview. Mr. Altucher’s biography is informative. He is president and founder of Stockpickr LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of TheStreet.com and a managing partner at Formula Capital Management, LLC, an “alternative asset management firm” that runs a fund of hedge funds. According to the SEC website , Formula Capital is no longer registered with the SEC and is not required to update its Form ADV. This is an odd background for someone who makes financial predictions. There is no data indicating stock pickers are skillful rather than just lucky. Their percentage of “winners” is typically less than what you would expect from random chance. Hedge funds make no sense for anyone other than those who manage them. Hedge “fund of funds”, where the fund manager takes a cut of the fees for pretending to have the ability to pick outperforming hedge fund managers, are even more tenuous. These thin credentials did not deter Mr. Altucher from confidently predicting that the Dow is going to 20,000. He may be right or wrong, but neither Mr. Altucher or anyone else can predict the direction of the markets. Legendary investor, Benjamin Graham, who was co-author of the investment classic, Security Analysis, summarized the views of those with legitimate credentials: “If I have noticed anything over these 60 years on Wall Street, it is that people do not succeed in forecasting what’s going to happen to the stock market.” Mr. Altucher proceeded to make matters worse. Even though his crystal ball tells him the markets will continue their remarkable bull run, he advises investors to avoid stocks. Why? Because it’s “too hard.” There is “too much competition…The very best investors in the world can only consistently produce 10% to 15% annual returns, so what hope is there for the rest of us?” This is errant nonsense, which is easily contradicted by reams of data. But data can be dull and Mr. Altucher is a colorful character who does not want to get bogged down with boring details. While he makes a passing reference to buying index funds for those “really determined” to own stocks, here’s what he leaves out. Intelligent investing is really easy. Capturing the returns of the global marketplace can be done by anyone. All you need to do is purchase a globally diversified portfolio of low management fee index funds in an asset allocation suitable for you. I told investors precisely how to do this in 2006 when I wrote The Smartest Investment Book You’ll Ever Read. I recommended the purchase of only three index funds from Vanguard, Fidelity or T. Rowe Price. How difficult is this? Using this “no-brainer portfolio” and assuming you invested 100% in stocks (which is far too aggressive for most investors), your returns would have been approximately 7% annualized over the past 10 years and almost 10% over the past 20 years. Mr. Altucher’s concern about “competition” is hopelessly wide of the mark. You do not have to compete with any other investors to obtain the returns of the global marketplace. Over the past 50 years, if you bought a globally diversified portfolio of stocks and held for a ten year period, your average annualized return was over 12%, which is what Mr. Altucher wrongly states was attainable by only “the very best investors in the world.” Mr. Altucher fails to note the consequences of not investing in stocks. You will suffer the ravages of inflation and taxes, which practically insures your portfolio will lose money. Does this seem like an intelligent investment strategy? There is a logical inconsistency in Mr. Altucher’s advice. Since he is so confident of his ability to predict the Dow reaching 20,000, wouldn’t it make sense for his clients to be fully invested during this bull run? Presumably, he could tell them (and others) when to exit the markets before the next crash. The reality is neither he, nor anyone else, has this predictive ability. Mr. Altucher’s views, and those of other financial pundits, is long on musings and short on data. You may find him and his colleagues entertaining to watch, but relying on their psychic predictions and wrong-headed conclusions is harmful to your financial health. The views set forth in this blog are the opinions of the author alone and may not represent the views of any firm or entity with whom he is affiliated. The data, information, and content on this blog are for information, education, and non-commercial purposes only. Returns from index funds do not represent the performance of any investment advisory firm. The information on this blog does not involve the rendering of personalized investment advice and is limited to the dissemination of opinions on investing. No reader should construe these opinions as an offer of advisory services. Readers who require investment advice should retain the services of a competent investment professional. The information on this blog is not an offer to buy or sell, or a solicitation of any offer to buy or sell any securities or class of securities mentioned herein. Furthermore, the information on this blog should not be construed as an offer of advisory services. Please note that the author does not recommend specific securities nor is he responsible for comments made by persons posting on this blog.

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Abebe Aemro Selassie: Confessions of a Dismal Scientist — Africa’s Resilience

May 3, 2011

Like many economists, I tend to fear the worst. I have witnessed phenomenal changes for the better in sub-Saharan Africa over the past 20 odd years. Part of me still worries that this trajectory will not endure. But, the more I see of the region’s economic performance and outlook , the more I’m changing my tune. Old anxieties set aside Until my latest source for anxiety took hold a few months ago (more on this in a moment), I’d worried about the impact of the global financial crisis on sub-Saharan Africa. The crisis hit just as many countries in the region were starting to enjoy a hard-earned period of economic growth, their best since at least the 1970s. I did not want this to be derailed by the crisis. Previous global economic slowdowns were unkind to the region. While other regions tended to recover quickly, recoveries in sub-Saharan Africa tended to be more protracted, looking more U- or even L-shaped. So, in the face of the worst period for the global economy in two-generations, what chance did the still fragile economies have? However, it soon became clear that this time would be different. And in fact, my initial fears were unfounded. This time the region’s recovery has been more V-shaped. Credit for that goes, in large part, to policymakers in the region. Good macroeconomic policies in many more countries the years before the crisis put them in good stead to weather the crisis relatively well. This allowed them to adopt strong counter-cyclical monetary and fiscal policies. And, looking ahead, the recovery to pre-crisis growth rates is well underway in most countries. As we report in our latest Regional Economic Outlook , output in sub-Saharan Africa looks set to expand by around 5½ this year and 6 percent in 2012. To be sure, the crisis has caused considerable dislocation. The 1 million or so jobs lost in South Africa are a case in point. Elsewhere, progress towards the poverty reduction Millennium Development Goal has also been delayed. But it could also have been much worse. In the face of the largest shock to the global economy, many sub-Saharan African countries have shown surprising resilience. Tackling worries My latest worry is the recent sharp increase in food and fuel prices on world markets. When food prices spiked in 2008, there was a prompt and pronounced increase in local prices in most African countries. So far, this time, we have seen a more diverse picture. In a number of countries, strong harvests have helped in limiting increases in local food price. But, in many other countries, prices have started to increase sharply. This will be particularly harmful for the urban poor and landless rural households. The surge in fuel prices will also test the resilience that the region has exhibited in recent years. For the region’s 37 oil importing countries, it will imply higher oil import costs, and higher fiscal deficits where the pass-through of international price to domestic price is delayed. And, across the region, it will imply higher inflation. To help minimize the dislocation that this shock may entail, countries should consider a two-pronged policy response: Wherever food price increases are pronounced, governments should consider targeted interventions–providing the poorest families with transfers from the budget or, less directly, by subsidizing food items they consume. In the case of fuel prices, however, we recommend that local prices should adjust in line with international prices. Fuel price subsidies tend to be highly regressive–the bulk of the benefits go to the richest households–and very costly. So, once again, I might fear the worst. But, witnessing how countries handled the global financial crisis gives me hope–hope that the appropriate policies will be adopted and will be as effective this time too. And that gives this dismal scientist cause for optimism. From iMFdirect blog

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Madison Ave. Media, Inc. Appoints Dr. Forrest E. Watson Chairman of Advisory Board

May 3, 2011

Legendary Texas Business Professional Brings Global Business Experience to a Leading Global Digital Media Company

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Dylan Ratigan: How Much Longer for the "Royals"?

April 28, 2011

It is the best of times, it is the worst of times. Tomorrow we will see a wedding between a Prince and a soon-to-be Princess. Polling in the US and UK shows that the public itself is largely apathetic, but we in the media can’t seem to get enough of the event. The wedding will cost over $100 million in security and ceremonial costs, and the British government is giving everyone the day off. Ordinary people will use this day ostensibly to celebrate the ceremonies of those born to privilege. But what they will probably do instead is ignore the wedding and spend time with their families. In America, we’re seeing our own version of this. According to the Business Roundtable, the confidence of American CEOs has never been higher . But 70% of the American public thinks that the country is on the wrong track. If you listen closely, you can hear a subtle creaking under the hood of the global economic system, like a car on the road that is slowly breaking down. Every day there’s a new funny noise, something that says it’s just not working right. The basic dynamic is inequality all over the world, in staggering proportions. But the interesting nugget is not the unfairness, but the increasing inability of elites to manage the increasing anger coming from the global losers. Last week, it was in China, a country with even worse inequality than our own. The largest container port in the world — Shanghai — saw a serious strike by Chinese truckers. The strike was muzzled by a combination of a media blackout, police power, and select concessions by the Chinese government to the strikers. So what does that have to do with us? Plenty. China makes what America consumes. Take, for instance, Walmart. Walmart is increasingly a Chinese company these days, orchestrating the shipping of goods made by incredibly poor Chinese workers to increasingly poor American consumers . Apple is another hybrid Chinese company, a middle-man. Steve Jobs makes billions running a design, retail, marketing, and R&D shop in the US known as Apple. His business partner Foxconn CEO Terry Guo makes his billions making iPads, iPods, and iPhones with 800,000 “iSlaves” in China. This is a system, and the strategy behind it is quite explicit. Economists have designed it, and they call it fighting inflation. Since wage gains contribute to inflation, stopping wage gains is the goal of the international trading regime. The natural end result is low wage workers in China selling to high debt consumers in America. You get an unstable system with a deeply immoral core, but hey, at least there’s no inflation. How do I know this is done on purpose? Well, the people in charge of the system say it when they think no one’s paying attention. I’m going to return to this Federal Open Market Committee transcript from 2005, which has received too little attention. Here’s Fed Dallas President Richard Fisher describing his conversations with area CEOs. Everyone I’ve talked to continues to try to figure out ways to exploit globalization. Each of them, from the IT [information technology] guys to the big box retailers to the specialty chemical firms to the service firms, wants to have offshore supply. One of the CEOs said, “We have a long way to go in exploiting China.” We’ve heard that forever. If you read the New York Times article two days ago about Shanghai’s new deep water port, you have to realize that those facilities are being built to ship goods out of China, not so much to ship goods into China… Now, this is good news on the disinflationary front. The bad news is stateside. We don’t have the capacity to absorb it. Long Beach and the Northwest harbors are constrained. Work rules, according to our interlocutors, are very slow to adjust. But there are ways to beat the bottlenecks… Wal- Mart just built a four million square foot warehouse in the Houston port, in order to shift part of the burden from Long Beach. But it is evident that the enemy is us as far as exploiting globalization, and I think that’s a long-term problem that we might want to take note of over time. Get that? Shanghai is increasingly an export-only port. Fisher’s statements were in 2005, when our country couldn’t accept enough goods because of bottlenecks at our ports. But beat the bottleneck we did, by widening the Panama Canal a few years later so China could ship to east coast ports as well. So now the American factory floor is being transferred to China at a faster and faster rate. Which brings me back to the strikes. American CEOs have exported not just our job base, but all the labor unrest that can come with it. China is running out of capacity to make our products, and commodity prices are going up for them as well. So inflation is hitting Chinese workers very hard right now — one of the causes of the trucker strike was a significant hike in fuel prices. The Chinese government quickly made concessions to the strikers, and is broadly attempting to deal with an incredible gap between the rich and the poor. But as Reuters noted , they aren’t doing this because of goodwill. Their worry is political: The Party leadership is especially jumpy about threats to its control following online calls for “Jasmine Revolution” protests inspired by anti-authoritarian uprisings across the Arab world, and has detained dozens of dissidents. Food price hikes sparked strikes in Egypt, which eventually turned into a political revolution. The Chinese government isn’t stupid, but it is trapped. Their strategy is to take American know-how by undercutting us on price, using protectionist measures that we stupidly allow. Our own corporate oligarchs are well-aware of this dynamic as well. They have been preparing for this moment for some time. Walmart (along with GE and even more surprisingly, Google) led the fight in April, 2007 to gut a new labor law proposed for Chinese workers on issues like collective bargaining, severance, etc. The American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai is using aggressive tactics to ensure that Chinese wages would remain low. Perhaps there is something ironic about aggressive lobbying tactics by multinationals being used effectively in both communist and capitalist legislatures to suppress worker rights. Or perhaps not. But you cannot suppress reality forever, and the strikes in Shanghai show that top-heavy gains eventually have consequences, even for those who make the rules. It’s not always as dramatic as Mubarak’s fall, but then again, Mubarak’s fall wasn’t the point when those first Egyptians began striking in 2007. It was the rising prices. It’s a very good time to be rich. The global trading system is benefiting those who manage huge capital flows. But unstable systems have a way of collapsing. And you can hear the creaking, even above the media circus of the royal wedding. Catch more from Dylan at DylanRatigan.com .

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Web Analytics Association Announces 2011 – 2012 Board of Directors

April 28, 2011

WAKEFIELD, MA–(Marketwire – Apr 28, 2011) – The WAA (Web Analytics Association), the global advocate for the online marketing analytics profession, today announced its 2011 – 2012 Board of Directors after a nearly record-breaking number of votes from its membership.

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Clarizen Closes $12M in Growth Funding, Adds Opus Capital’s Dan Avida to Board of Directors

April 28, 2011

Investment Will Fuel Further Global Expansion and Drive Demand for Work Execution Software Beyond Traditional Project Management

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CRE Professionals See Income Gains In Frothy Deal Market

April 28, 2011

With deal activity up sharply, real estate professionals have heightened expectations of increased pay-outs for commissions, bonuses and base salaries, following years of static or declining average compensation levels during the downturn. A recent survey by corporate real estate and CRE services trade group CoreNet Global, in conjunction with FPL Associates, a Chicago-based compensation consulting firm, found that nearly two-thirds, or 64% of…

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Your Trading Room Appoints Richard H. Waryn to Serve as New Global CEO and Chairman of the Board

April 27, 2011

SANTA MONICA, CA–(Marketwire – Apr 27, 2011) – Your Trading Room (YTR), a Global leading provider of online foreign exchange (Forex) education and proprietary trading, today announced that its shareholders & Board have named Richard H. Waryn to serve as the company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board.

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Battelle Appoints Experienced R&D Leader as President of New Energy, Environment and Material Sciences Global Business at Battelle

April 25, 2011

COLUMBUS, OH–(Marketwire – Apr 25, 2011) – Battelle’s President and CEO Jeff Wadsworth has named Battelle veteran Martin Toomajian as President of Battelle’s newly formed Energy, Environment and Material Sciences Global Business.

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Economists: Fed’s Stimulus Has Been A Disappointment

April 24, 2011

But most Americans are not feeling the difference, in part because those benefits have been surprisingly small. The latest estimates from economists, in fact, suggest that the pace of recovery from the global financial crisis has flagged since November, when the Fed started buying $600 billion in Treasury securities to push private dollars into investments that create jobs.

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EEOC sues Global Horizons for human trafficking

April 21, 2011

EEOC sues Global Horizons for human trafficking

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kgbdeals Names Daniel Smith Chief Marketing Officer

April 20, 2011

Smith Moves Into Lead Marketing Role as kgbdeals Continues on Global Growth Path

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