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(MENAFN) The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) chief, Christine Lagarde, said that she would propose a USD36.7 billion loan for Greece under the Fund’s Extended Fund Facility (EFF), reported …

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Lagarde to recommend USD36.7b loan for Greece

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(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) Head of the International Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde has warned that the world economy was in danger and urged Europeans to speak with one voice on a debt crisis …

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IMF head warns global economy threatened

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Malaysia- New INCEIF chief outlines three key objectives

August 29, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab News) The new president and chief executive officer of the International Center for Education in Islamic Finance (INCEIF), the Islamic finance education arm of Bank Negara Malaysia …

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EU banks must increase capital: IMF Chief

August 28, 2011

(MENAFN) International Monetary Fund’s managing director, Christine Lagarde, said that in order for Europe’s debt crisis not to pass to other nations, Europe’s banks should increase capital, …

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International oil higher on supply concerns

August 25, 2011

(MENAFN – Youm7) International oil prices finished the day slightly higher because of uncertainty about global supplies. Dictator Moammar Gadhafi may be on his way out, but it’s far from clear …

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Aleris International Raises 500M

July 2, 2011

Aleris International has raised 500 million in a sale of notes to pay a dividend to its private equity owners

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The Commercial Real Estate Bubble Burst will dwarf the Real Estate …

June 4, 2011

Question by Spaced Frehley: The Commercial Real Estate Bubble Burst will dwarf the Real Estate Bubble Burst. Whi is this not in the news? This is coming and will destroy banks across America ! … International real estate investment and services firm Kennedy Wilson today announced the acquisition of Bank of Ireland Real Estate Investment Management , a business that manages commercial real estate on behalf of Bank of Ireland clients. …

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Stiglitz: IMF Chief Must ‘Continue Along The Reform Path’

June 3, 2011

NEW YORK – Sooner than expected, the International Monetary Fund will have a new managing director. For more than a decade, I have criticized the Fund’s governance, symbolized by the way its leader is chosen. By gentlemen’s agreement among the majority shareholders – the G-8 – the managing director is to be a European, with Americans in the number two post and at the head of the World Bank.

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IMF Braces For Possible Hack Attack

June 1, 2011

The International Monetary Fund is ready to be hacked. According to the Wall Street Journal , an IMF spokesperson confirms that it is taking measures to safeguard against a possible hack attack from cybervigilante group Anonymous. “We are aware of the threat, and have taken appropriate action,” an IMF spokesman told the WSJ. Anonymous posted a tweet on Wednesday urging followers to set their sights on the IMF website. “#OperationGreece: Target: http://www.imf.org,” the tweet read. The time of the attack is still ” TBA .” IMF, currently in negotiations to help stabilize Greece’s suffering economy, recently approved a $40 billion dollar loan as a part of a $140 billion bailout package. Anonymous released a missive on May 25 condemning the Greek Government and the IMF for accepting the loan without letting citizens vote on the agreement, and for subjecting the people of the country to “prolonged poverty and a dramatic decrease in their standards of living.” “The people of Greece have been left with no other option than to take to the streets in a peaceful revolution against the economic tyrants that are the IMF,” Anonymous wrote.

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Land For Sale In Texas-How To Get A Loan | Complete Commercial …

May 31, 2011

Question by Chasti R: 0000 Commercial Real Estate Loan needed ASAP!? My Partners and I are providing capital investments needed for operating capital, décor and design, however, our corporation needs 0000 financing to procure the building and … There are plenty of industrial buildings from small to large. Franklin Park is located twelve miles from the beautiful Chicago lakefront and only two miles from O'Hare International Airport. Franklin Park is in …

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Former Chairman Of Major Egypt Bank Arrested On Charges Of Sexually Abusing Hotel Maid

May 31, 2011

NEW YORK — The former chairman of one of Egypt’s major banks has been arrested on charges of sexually abusing a maid at a Manhattan hotel, just weeks after the arrest of former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn on similar allegations. Police say Mahmoud Abdel Salam Omar was arrested at the Pierre Hotel on Monday morning. The 74-year-old businessman is accused of sexually abusing the maid and holding her against her will inside his hotel room. Police say the incident happened Sunday night. Police spokesman Paul Browne says detectives found the complainant to be credible. Omar is the former chairman of Egypt’s Bank of Alexandria. Strauss-Kahn quit as the leader of the International Monetary Fund on May 18 after he was charged with sexually assaulting a maid at a different city hotel. He has denied the allegations, but is under house arrest as he awaits trial.

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Lagarde Heads To Brazil After Securing G8 Support

May 30, 2011

BRASILIA, Brazil — French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde was in Brazil on Monday to kick off a global tour promoting her candidacy to head the International Monetary Fund. Lagarde has emerged as the odds-on favorite for the job. Her appointment would make her the first woman in charge of the scandal-rocked fund but may also increase tensions with developing nations that argue countries outside of Europe should be allowed to lead the organization. Brazilian officials have not spoken out in favor or against Lagarde’s candidacy. But they previously have emphasized that the IMF’s next leader should be chosen on merits, not based on geography. The IMF is hunting for a new leader to replace former managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn, of France, who quit May 18 after he was accused of attempting to rape a New York hotel maid. He has denied the allegations. Lagarde will meet with the head of Brazil’s Central Bank and also the nation’s finance minister, Guido Mantega. In recent years, Mantega has loudly fought for reforms in the IMF, World Bank and other multilateral institutions that would take into account the growth of emerging nations such as Brazil, China and India. “We must establish meritocracy, so that the person leading the IMF is selected for their merits and not for being European,” Mantega said earlier this month. “You can have a competent European … but you can have a representative from an emerging nation who is competent as well.” Mantega also has said that whoever is chosen to replace Strauss-Kahn should only hold the job until Strauss-Kahn’s term expires at the end of 2012. That, Mantega has argued, would give IMF member nations more time to carefully choose a full-term chief. China has suggested it is time to shake things up at the IMF, with Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu saying the leadership “should be based on fairness, transparency and merit.” South African Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan spoke in stronger terms earlier this month. He said the new director should come from an emerging economy, to “bring a new perspective that will ensure that the interests of all countries, both developed and developing, are fully reflected in the operations and policies of the IMF.” French Embassy spokesman Stephane Schorderet said Lagarde will return to Paris on Monday night and plans to stump for the IMF job in China next week. She also plans to visit other influential developing nations to convince them that if given the job, she will not exclusively focus on Europe, where the fund is closely involved in a half-dozen bailout deals. According to France’s foreign minister, Lagarde has already won the backing of the Group of Eight rich nations. Interviewed Sunday on French television channel Canal+, Alain Juppe said there was unanimous support for Lagarde among the eight leaders at their annual summit in Deauville, France, last week. The U.S., whose vote will be crucial for Lagarde’s nomination, has not officially endorsed a candidate.

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China Hikes Power Prices In Attempt To Counter Threatening Shortage

May 30, 2011

BEIJING (Jim Bai and Tom Miles) – China has raised power prices for industrial, commercial and agricultural users in some regions by about 3 percent in an attempt to ease what threatens to be the worse power shortage in seven years in the world’s second-largest economy. The power price rise, which excludes residential users, will add to inflationary pressures but revive profit margins at power producers. That should prompt an increase in electricity supplies from loss-making power plants that had failed to keep up with rising demand. Higher prices should also discourage excess power consumption. “This is obviously good for the power shortages and it was very much expected – the only way the problems can be solved is by adjusting prices,” said Lin Boqiang, director of the Center for Chinese Energy Economics Research. “The other problems – like the power grid or the transportation of coal – are long-term and can only be solved after several years. There was just no other way. This is clearly going to have some sort of impact on industry but the impact of actually having no power is much bigger. Most businesses will be more willing to accept higher prices than power cuts.” China looks set for the worst summer power shortages since at least 2004 as demand growth remains strong while coal-fired power plants, which generate 80 percent of national electricity output, have restricted production due to operating losses resulting from high coal costs. At the same time, hydropower has been hit by a drought in central China, including Hubei province, home of the Three Gorges Dam, the world’s biggest hydropower project. The government raised the prices that grid firms charge industrial consumers by 0.0167 yuan per kilowatt hour , Chinese state media said after a briefing by the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s top economic planning body. Lin said the price rises would add about 0.5 percentage points to inflation, but the impact would be much more if the shortages were allowed to continue unchecked. The increase, ranging from 0.004 yuan/kWh to 0.024 yuan/kwh in 15 Chinese provinces including Shanxi, Qinghai, Gansu, Jiangxi, Hainan, Shaanxi, Shandong, Hunan, Chongqing, Anhui, Hubei, Sichuan, Hebei and Guizhou. The price rise came earlier than some analysts had expected. Several had said China would first raise on-grid power tariffs, the prices at which power generating firms sell to grid operators, and then hike prices for end-users once inflationary pressure had subsided. “The move aims to ease power shortages, this will add to inflationary pressures but the impact will be limited and it will take some time for upstream price rises to trickle down to downstream,” said Wang Jun, an economist at CCIEE, a government think-tank. The increase was the first since November 2009 and follows on-grid tariff hikes in 12 provinces on April 10, with three more provinces following suit on June 1, the NDRC was quoted as saying. The average price rise offered to power producers was 0.02 yuan per kWh, slightly more than the hike for end-users. Jianguang Shen, chief economist at Mizuho in Hong Kong, said he expected the price of coal would jump in response to the price hike, wiping out the margin gain for power producers and adding to Chinese coal imports. To prevent that, the government would order state-owned coal producers to hold down their own prices, he said. The previous on-grid price hike had no significant impact on the power shortages because of a concomitant coal prices rise, said Want Wei, a senior analyst Guotai Junan Securities. “Coal imports could rise after the power rise hike as coal producers and trading companies are likely to raise coal prices, triggering more coal imports,” he said. “Every 0.01 yuan rise in power price could offset an increase of 50 yuan in coal prices.” China has already cut power supplies to some industrial users in eastern, southern and central regions as pent-up demand rebounded after local governments ordered power cuts in late 2010 for the purpose of achieving energy saving goals. In addition, power generating firms curbed their output levels because rising coal prices undermined their operating margin. The National Development and Reform Commission, China Electricity Council and some industry analysts have all warned of the possibility of worse shortfalls in summer when demand peaks. The State Grid of China, the country’s dominant power distributor, said it would cut supplies to more industrial users in summer to shortfalls expand. China’s five state-owned power generating groups lost more than 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) on their thermal power operations in the first four months of the year, an official with the council said on Tuesday. The five groups, parents of China Power International Development Ltd (2380.HK), Datang International Power Generation Co Ltd (0991.HK) (601991.SS), Huadian Power International Corp Ltd (1071.HK) (600027.SS) and Huaneng Power International Inc (0902.HK) (600011.SS), had racked up more than 60 billion yuan in losses in past three years, according to the State Electricity Regulatory Commission. (Additional reporting by Judy Hua, Kevin Yao and David Stanway; Editing by Ken Wills and Simon Webb) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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EU Rushing To Complete Greece’s Second Bailout Package

May 30, 2011

BRUSSELS/ATHENS (Jan Strupczewzki and Harry Papachristou) – The European Union is working on a second bailout package for Greece in a race to release vital loans next month and avert the risk of the euro zone country defaulting, EU officials said on Monday. Greece’s conservative opposition meanwhile demanded lower taxes as a condition for reaching a political consensus with the Socialist government on further austerity measures, which Brussels says is needed to secure any further assistance. Moves to plug a looming funding gap for 2012 and 2013 were accelerated after the International Monetary Fund said last week it would withhold the next tranche of aid due on June 29 unless the EU guarantees to meet Athens’ funding needs for next year. Senior EU officials held unannounced emergency talks with the Greek government over the weekend, an EU source said. Greece took a 110 billion euros ($158 billion) rescue package from the EU and IMF last May but has since fallen short of its deficit reduction commitments, raising the risk of a default on its 327 billion euro debt — equivalent to 150 percent of its economic output. The tax cuts sought by conservative New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras could aggravate the revenue shortfall, but he argues they are essential to revive economic growth. EU officials said a new 65 billion euro package could involve a mixture of collateralized loans from the EU and IMF, and additional revenue measures, with unprecedented intrusive external supervision of Greece’s privatisation program. “It would require collateral for new loans and EU technical assistance — EU involvement in the privatisation process,” one senior EU official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Extra funding for Greece faces fierce political resistance from fiscal conservatives and nationalists in key north European creditor countries — Germany, the Netherlands and Finland — complicating EU governments’ task. Greek daily Kathimerini said finance ministers of the 17-nation single currency area may hold a special meeting next Monday on a new package. European Commission spokesman Amadeu Altafaj dismissed the report as “unfounded rumours, once again.” The next scheduled meeting of euro zone finance ministers is on June 20 in Luxembourg, having been pushed back a week from its original date. It will be followed three days later by a summit of EU leaders to assess the 18-month-long debt crisis. MARKETS RATTLED Mass unemployment and wage and benefit cuts due to the EU/IMF austerity plan have triggered spontaneous youth protests in Greece as well as a series of one-day strikes by powerful trade unions. Weekend comments by an Irish minister that Dublin too may need a second rescue package may also fuel opposition to further bailouts among lawmakers in Berlin, the Hague and Helsinki. Transport Minister Leo Varadkar told The Sunday Times newspaper that Ireland was unlikely to be able to return to capital markets next year as foreseen in its EU/IMF program. “It would mean a second program (of emergency loans),” he was quoted as saying. Irish central bank governor Patrick Honohan acknowledged at a news conference on Monday that debt market conditions were worse now than when Ireland took an 85 billion euro bailout last November but said they would improve. Uncertainty over whether Greece will receive the next 12 billion euro aid tranche required to meet 13.4 billion euros in funding needs in July continued to rattle financial markets. The Greek 10-year bond spread over safe haven German Bunds rose by 20 basis points to 1,387. Two-year yields were up 58 bps to 26.23 percent. The European Central Bank maintained a drumbeat of pressure against any attempt by EU politicians to restructure Greece’s debt mountain, even by asking investors to accept a voluntary extension of bond maturities. ECB board member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi said in an interview published on Monday the idea that debt restructuring could be carried out in an orderly way was a “fairytale,” saying it was the equivalent of the death penalty. “If you look at financial markets, every time there is mention of a word like ‘restructuring’ or ‘soft restructuring’ they go crazy — which proves that this could not happen in an orderly way, in this environment at least,” Bini Smaghi told the Financial Times. He also warned against a debt ‘reprofiling’, or voluntary extension of Greek bond maturities, saying it would be hard to get investors to agree to such a deal without the use of force. Euro zone governments are actively studying options for changing the maturities on Greek debt, officials say, although German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble acknowledged in an interview last week that it was very high risk. “The Eurogroup is doing research for reprofiling — what can you do on reprofiling? Is it possible without a credit event?” Dutch Finance Minister Jan Kees De Jager told reporters on Saturday in Cyprus. “It’s an investigation, and we have to wait for the outcome of it. EU officials contend that Greece could do much more to help itself by selling off a treasure trove of state assets. ECB executive board member Juergen Stark told Welt am Sonntag newspaper that Athens could raise as much as 300 billion euros from privatising state property. Greece currently aims to raise 50 billion euros from privatisations by 2015 to help stave off a fiscal meltdown, but the country lacks a proper land registry and ownership of many potentially lucrative assets is legally uncertain. Athens is setting up a sovereign wealth fund to pool real estate assets and state stakes in companies such as telecom company OTE, Post Savings Bank and ports. Top EU officials have asked Greece to step up privatisations urgently and suggested creating a trustee institution to help the process similar to the body that privatised East German firms after the fall of communism. (Additional reporting by Angeliki Koutantou and Ingrid Melander in Athens, Marius Zaharia in London, Luke Baker in Brussels; writing by Paul Taylor, editing by Mike Peacock) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Video: Momani Says U.S. Is `Swing Voter’ in IMF Chief Selection

May 30, 2011

May 30 (Bloomberg) — Bessma Momani, associate professor of political science at the University of Waterloo in Canada, talks about the selection process for the next head of the International Monetary Fund. Momani speaks from Ontario with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lombardi Says EU Leaders Still Divided on Greek Debt Aid

May 27, 2011

May 27 (Bloomberg) — Domenico Lombardi, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former International Monetary Fund board member, talks about the Greek debt crisis and the outlook for its resolution. Lombardi speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness with Margaret Brennan.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lipsky `Confident’ IMF Will Pick an ‘Effective’ Leader

May 27, 2011

May 27 (Bloomberg) — John Lipsky, the acting managing director of the International Monetary Fund, talks about the IMF’s talks with Greece on aid to the country and plans to replace former Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn. He speaks with Betty Liu and Michael McKee on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Korn Says IMF Should Consider `All Comers’ for Top Spot

May 27, 2011

May 27 (Bloomberg) — Thai Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij spoke with Bloomberg’s Mike Firn in Tokyo on May 25 about the selection process for the next head of the International Monetary Fund and Thailand’s economy and politics. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Retail Watch: News from ICSC’s ReCon Event in Las Vegas

May 26, 2011

The International Council of Shopping Centers’ (ICSC) annual confab of deal-making this past weekend kicked off with the surprising news of Liberty Media’s bid for bookseller Barnes & Noble. And the excitement continued from there. ReCon drew nearly 30,000 attendees and 1,000 exhibitors. CoStar compiled the following summary of major deal announcements. We’ll start with Liberty Media. The owner of such busineses as QVC, Expedia and the Atlanta…

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Angel Gurría: Déjà Vu All Over Again?

May 25, 2011

We’d like to think we’re through the worst of the biggest crisis in 70 years. And yet derivatives, a chief culprit of the financial meltdown, continue to account for 10 times world GDP and counting. A major $8.5 billion takeover has analysts speculating about a new internet bubble. Some emerging economies are showing classic signs of overheating with property prices, consumer credit and bank profits hitting all time highs. We could be forgiven for wondering if we have learned anything over the past few years. We would deserve less forgiveness if we were unwittingly preparing the ground for the next slump and no one sounded the alarm. If international institutions do their job and fulfill their purpose, we stand a good chance of avoiding the mistakes of the past. The crisis has brought the roles of organizations like the OECD into sharp focus. Like never before, we are coordinating our efforts with the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the World Trade Organization and the International Labor Organization. But much more needs to be done. The G20, governments, civil society actors and citizens around the world now have higher expectations of us. Since the OECD was founded 50 years ago, it has provided a unique forum where leaders and decision makers meet to discuss which policies work and which don’t. We have had a solid track-record freeing people from economic and social wreckage, beginning with the Marshall Plan in the aftermath of WWII. Helping governments and countries understand the interdependence of their economies and societies paved the way for an era of cooperation. In addressing the latest crisis we have delivered some concrete results: closing down tax havens worldwide so taxpayers and collectors are sure we’re all making a contribution to clear up the mess. OECD standards to fight international bribery have global reach with Russia on the brink of becoming the 40th country to sign up to them. Bribery takes money out of people’s hands, food out of people’s mouths and undermines development. In an effort to bring renewed focus on the need for robust corporate governance we have fundamentally overhauled our international Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. We continue to push for the separation of risky business investments such as derivatives from high-street banking. And we are making real efforts to address the deficit in citizens’ financial education and protection that the crisis so flagrantly revealed. We are leading G20 efforts to enforce proper consumer protection so that people are never placed in the position where they sign a mortgage document that they don’t understand. In regions like the Middle East, we can bring our experience to bear to help rebuild societies and economies, as we have done throughout Western and Eastern Europe. And we are pushing boundaries of knowledge and understanding by questioning conventional wisdom. After seven years working to better measure societal progress, the launch of Your Better Life Index is designed to respond to a pent-up demand from citizens the world over to move beyond GDP as the means of measuring well-being and gauging progress. By giving ordinary people the instrument to measure their well-being we are changing the face of public policy making, helping them help us deliver the best public policies to improve their lives. The pre-crisis system let us down. We need to restore trust and make good on what people want most — growth and jobs. The best way to do this is to start from the facts, the evidence, the numbers, to share best practices, to make an honest assessment of what works and what doesn’t. And to develop standards that can ensure the global community can benefit from the accrued wisdom of experience. Good public policy is about good ideas. There is no political monopoly on them. They should be formulated not in competing corners of the policy landscape, but rather at the nexus of where economics, government, the private sector and everyday people meet. We’re clearly not out of the woods as far as the crisis is concerned. It is all too human to indulge in wishful thinking and end up back where we started with business as usual. But it would be a temptation we could never forgive ourselves for falling into. Angel Gurria is Secretary-General of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

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Sotheby’s International Realty is Exclusive Sales, Marketing Agents for Spruce Creek Home and Airplane Hangar in Florida

May 25, 2011

ORLANDO, FL — Stirling Sotheby’s International Realty was named exclusive sales and marketing agents for a $1.95 million luxury home and airplane hangar at Spruce Creek Fly-In in Volusia County. Roger Soderstrom, founder and owner of Stirling Sotheby’s International Realty, said luxury home specialists Rachel McGrath and Debbie Keilin (top right photo)  are representing the property and serve as principal contacts for prospective buyers. The six-bedroom, four-and-a-half bath luxury home offers 6,032 square feet of luxury living space with a separate guest house, huge courtyard, heated oasis style swimming pool and a second gated entry. The home features golf and lake views, summer kitchen, travertine floors, a ground floor master suite with spa style bath, a second floor media room and library. The 60-foot-by-68-foot tiled, air-conditioned airplane hangar was previously owned by NASCAR driver Mark Martin and features a full kitchen and a bath, conference room and private office. Visit http://tour.circlepix.com/tour/Nitro/loadingPage.htm?tourId=793509 For more information, contact Debbie Keilin, East Volusia Associate, Stirling Sotheby’s International Realty 386 451-4251 Rachel McGrath, East Volusia Associate, Stirling Sotheby’s International Realty 386 795-0911 Roger Soderstrom, Founder/Owner Stirling Sotheby’s International Realty 407-581-7890; rsoderstrom@stirlingSIR.com Larry Vershel or Beth Payan, Larry Vershel Communications 407-644-4142    Lvershelco@aol.com .    Visit www.StirlingSIR.com .

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Lagarde Set To Announce IMF Bid On Wedneday

May 24, 2011

PARIS-French finance minister Christine Lagarde is set to announce her bid to become the next managing director of the International Monetary Fund on Wednesday, according to a French government official.

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Simon Johnson: The Case For A Non-European IMF Leader

May 24, 2011

The debate over choosing the next managing director of the International Monetary Fund is ostensibly about whether its succession process is transparent and merit-based. But this is code for a more important issue -– whether the time has come for Western Europe to give up control of the IMF. There is a valid economic case that the next chief should come not from Europe, as tradition dictates, but from one of the emerging markets. India, South Africa, China, Mexico and Brazil all have strong candidates.

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Cross-Border Transactions Increase in 1Q11

May 23, 2011

Global sales of significant properties rose 23 percent year-over-year to $180.6 billion in 1Q11, maintaining YOY growth for a sixth consecutive quarter, according to

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French See Dominique Strauss-Kahn As Victim Of Plot

May 22, 2011

PARIS — Forget what the New York prosecutor says about Dominique Strauss-Kahn. The doubters in France are legion and the country is abuzz with conspiracy theories. Did Strauss-Kahn bring on his own ruin at a luxury Manhattan hotel? Or did his political enemies in France set him up in a sinister plot to undo the known womanizer who was a top contender to become France’s next president? From the moment that Strauss-Kahn’s arrest for the alleged sexual assault of a chambermaid flashed around the world, doubts emerged in France. A week later, with evidence still under wraps and the accused and the accuser silent, speculation abounds. A poll Thursday suggested that a majority of French, 57 percent, think Strauss-Kahn was the victim of a plot. In a country where low blows pepper the political culture, where people think politicians will do almost anything to keep their perks and where President Nicolas Sarkozy’s approval ratings are sinking relentlessly, a plot against the increasingly powerful IMF chief seems plausible to many. “The trap, you cannot not think of it,” Cooperation Minister Henri de Raincourt conceded on Radio France International a day after the arrest. “But we must let justice follow its course without any prior assumptions.” Strauss-Kahn himself is reported to have voiced fears of a setup involving an alleged rape victim last month with a journalist. And then there are the precedents. Former conservative Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin is now in a slander trial that grew out of accusations he had wind of a dirty tricks campaign against Sarkozy in 2004 and failed to stop it. Sarkozy has said he believes the scheme was meant to upend his 2007 presidential bid. Doubts are still raised over the 1994 suicide, in his office at the presidential Elysee Palace, of the man considered former Socialist President Francois Mitterrand’s closest counselor, Francois de Grossouvre. And there are those who wonder, nearly two decades later, who really aimed the gun in the 1993 suicide of former Prime Minister Pierre Beregovoy. Strauss-Kahn’s fall from grace on May 14 was brutal. It came minutes before his trans-Atlantic flight for a meeting, as chief of the International Monetary Fund, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. The 62-year-old Socialist who led popularity polls for next year’s presidential race insists he is innocent and has resigned from his job at the IMF to fight the charges. He was indicted by a grand jury on charges including criminal sexual abuse and attempted rape for allegedly attacking a 32-year-old maid, a West African immigrant, in his suite at the Sofitel. Strauss-Kahn is now under house arrest in Manhattan, watched by armed guards and tracked with an electronic bracelet, as he prepares his defense. The French press and Internet forums are flooded with questions from those who suspect a setup or are true believers in his innocence. _ Why would he call the hotel from the airport to recover a forgotten cell phone if he was guilty? _ Why not simply arrange for a female companion rather than assault a maid? _ Why would a maid enter Strauss-Kahn’s presidential suite unaccompanied? “At this stage of the investigation, the hypothesis of a manipulation cannot be swept aside,” sociologist Michele Fize wrote in Sunday’s Le Monde newspaper. Le Monde also quoted the director general of the top French firm handling housekeeping in luxury hotels as saying a maid could be fired for entering an occupied room alone. Luxury hotel maids know the protocol: knock, wait, announce oneself, knock again, open the door slightly, said Marie-Francoise Litaudon of the Francaise de Service Group. Socialist allies thought they saw bids to damage Strauss-Kahn’s image weeks before the arrest, when paparazzi arrived in April to photograph him getting into a flashy Porsche. It wasn’t his car, it belonged to a friend, but that elitist image won’t sit well with Socialist voters. That was followed by an allegation in the France-Soir newspaper that Strauss-Kahn wore $35,000 suits. “There is a campaign against the personality of Dominique Strauss-Kahn,” Socialist lawmaker Jean-Marie Le Guen told Europe-1 radio only hours before the Frenchman was arrested. A journalist for the left-leaning newspaper Liberation said the politician himself foresaw dirty tricks in the upcoming presidential campaign and confided in an off-the-record meeting April 28 the three obstacles he faced: “money, women and my Jewishness.” “Yes, I love women … So what?” journalist Antoine Guiral quoted him as saying. Strauss-Kahn even predicted one possible line of attack against him – “a woman raped in a parking lot who has been promised 500,000 or a million euros to invent such a story,” Guiral quoted him as saying. A poll by the CSA firm showed that 57 percent of 1,007 adults questioned at their homes believed Strauss-Kahn was “certainly” or “probably” the victim of a plot, compared to 32 who felt this was “certainly” or “probably” not true. Those polled May 16 were of all levels of education, it said. No margin of error was provided but it would be plus or minus 3 percentage points for a poll of that size. Bruno Cautres, an analyst at CEVIPOF, a think tank of the prestigious school Science Po where Strauss-Kahn taught for years, says the enormity of the affair and the wave of “this is impossible” remarks by Socialist Party figures may have colored national opinion in favor of a plot theory. “Whatever the country, there will always be those who believe in a plot (to explain) a dramatic phenomenon,” he said. “That is a natural tendency because this phenomenon seems unexplainable and we seek explanations.” Strauss-Kahn’s reputation as a successful womanizer makes an alleged sexual assault even less credible because he had ample access to willing women, doubters say. The French barely shrugged when the IMF investigated Strauss-Kahn for a 2008 affair with an employee then absolved him of wrongdoing. “We have a political culture by which we will pardon a lot of politicians for behavior in private life and not necessarily make the equation that bad behavior in private life equals bad behavior in political life,” said Cautres. Cautres himself dismissed the notion of a plot. “Who would organize it … given the risk of a leak, of a spectacular revelation?” he asked. However, Strauss-Kahn’s defense team will surely be looking for that “banana peel” that centrist politician Dominique Paille suggested may have been strategically dropped. What about that tweet on Strauss-Kahn that set off a frenzy in France from a Science Po masters student who belonged to the youth wing of Sarkozy’s conservative UMP party? “A pal in the United States just let me know that DSK was arrested by police in New York an hour ago,” Jonathan Pinet tweeted at 22:59 p.m. Paris time (2059 GMT, 4:59 p.m. EDT) on May 14. The timing would be shortly after Strauss-Kahn was escorted off on an Air France plane in New York. Rejecting any conspiracy ties, Pinet later explained his information came in a Facebook chat with a friend who has another friend who works at the Sofitel in New York – and who likely mistook the happenings there hours earlier for the actual arrest.

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Greek Prime Minister: ‘Debt Restructuring Is Not Under Discussion’

May 22, 2011

ATHENS (Harry Papachristou) – Greece must avoid debt restructuring and push on with budget cuts and privatisations to overcome its debt crisis, the country’s Prime Minister George Papandreou and senior ECB officials said on Saturday. Papandreou must present a fiscal plan next week that is credible enough for the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to continue bankrolling his debt-laden country. But a large majority of Greeks reject more austerity, according to a poll published on Saturday, which also shows the ruling socialists losing their lead versus the conservative opposition for the first time since their 2009 election victory. “Debt restructuring is not under discussion,” Papandreou said in an interview in Sunday newspaper Ethnos. One year into its EU/IMF 110-billion euro bailout, Greece is struggling with weak revenues and deep recession, fuelling speculation that it will have to restructure its debt to pull itself out of the fiscal mess that triggered a euro zone crisis. The chairman of the 17-country Eurogroup Jean-Claude Juncker said on Tuesday Greece may have to move toward a “soft restructuring” of its debt. But the European Central Bank remains strongly opposed to such a move, due to fears that it would destabilise the euro. Greece has no other option but to follow through its fiscal plan, ECB governing council member Ewald Nowotny told Greek newspaper To Vima on Saturday. “For the ECB, the line is one and clear: you have to implement the commitments you have made.” In a separate interview in newspaper Kathimerini, ECB executive board member Juergen Stark said any kind of debt restructuring would thwart the country’s return to bond markets and undermine reforms. “We are at a critical juncture, what it really takes now is action,” Stark said. On Friday, Fitch became the second major ratings agency to warn that it would consider any kind of debt restructuring as a sovereign default — exactly the kind of outcome euro zone governments are trying to avoid. Asked by Ethnos if he would consider a debt “reprofiling” rather than a restructuring, Papandreou said: “We are looking after our job… We do not join the public discussion about such scenarios.” LIMITS OF AUSTERITY, PRIVATISATIONS Greece is considering deeper cuts in public sector wages and further tax increases on a range of products and professions to qualify for more aid, Greek newspapers said on Saturday. The plan may include scrapping bonuses to civil servants and employees in state-run companies, newspapers Ta Nea and Isotimia reported, without citing any sources. The government may also lower or scrap tax-free thresholds on property holdings and the self-employed, raise consumption taxes on soft drinks and certain fuel types or shift a range of products to a higher VAT-bracket, other newspapers said. Papandreou vowed on Saturday to take any measure necessary to secure more funding for his country. “Greece must convince everyone of its determination,” he said. But a large majority of Greeks say they cannot take more austerity as the country enters its third year of recession. Eighty percent of respondents told pollster MRB they refused to make any further sacrifices to get more EU/IMF aid, an MRB poll for paper Realnews showed. The same poll shows Papandreou’s ruling Socialist PASOK neck-and-neck with the opposition conservatives, with both parties scoring 21.5 percent each. In the previous MRB poll in April, PASOK had an 1.8 point-lead. But Papandreou warned that any failure to push through the plan might lead the country straight to default. “At the moment, it does not seem as if Greece can cover its 2012 borrowing needs… from the market,” he said in the interview. Papandreou pledged to speed up a 50 billion euro privatisation programme, a key part of efforts to shore up finances without a debt restructuring. However, he reiterated that the state would keep stakes in firms managing vital public goods and services, such as water and electricity utilities. In an interview with German magazine Der Spiegel, Juncker urged Greece to set up a trustee institution to help privatize state assets, similar to the body that privatised East German companies after the fall of communism. “Henceforth, the European Union will escort Greece’s privatisation programme as if we were conducting it ourselves,” he said. (Editing by Philippa Fletcher) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Video: Graham on Middle East Peace: Political Capital With Al Hunt

May 21, 2011

May 20 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham, a Republican from South Carolina, talks with Bloomberg’s Al Hunt about the outlook for a peace agreement in the Middle East, the U.S. debt ceiling and spending cuts. Bloomberg’s Julianna Goldman and Julie Davis discuss the Mideast peace process, the outlook for a deal to cut the federal deficit and U.S. ties with Pakistan. Sandrine Rastello talks about possible candidates to lead the International Monetary Fund following the resignation of Dominique Strauss-Kahn as managing director. Commentators Margaret Carlson and Kate O’Beirne discuss Newt Gingrich as a potential candidate for president in 2012, and the debate over Medicare and its impact on a special election to fill a House seat in upstate New York. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Merk Expects Greece to Delay Default, Sees Euro Strength: Video

May 20, 2011

May 20 (Bloomberg) — Axel Merk, president and chief investment officer at Merk Investments LLC, discusses the Greek fiscal crisis, the outlook for the euro and Portugal’s bailout from the International Monetary fund. He speaks with Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Merk Says IMF Loan Is `Step Along the Way’ for Portugal

May 20, 2011

May 20 (Bloomberg) — Axel Merk, president and chief investment officer at Merk Investments LLC, talks about the International Monetary Fund’s approval of a 26 billion-euro ($36.8 billion) loan to Portugal, the potential for default by Greece on its sovereign debt and the outlook for the euro. He speaks with Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Alternet Systems, Inc. (ALYI) Names Mastercard Veteran as Chief Financial Officer

May 20, 2011

MIAMI, FL–(Marketwire – May 20, 2011) – Alternet Systems, Inc. ( OTCQB : ALYI ) ( PINKSHEETS : ALYI ) today announced the appointment of Michael T. Viadero as Chief Financial Officer (CFO). Mr. Viadero brings broad experience in multiple disciplines, diverse industries and markets throughout Latin America, including fifteen years of overseas assignments. In his more than 25 years of experience, he has managed multi-functional organizations, regional departments and operations for MasterCard International, W.R. Grace and First Chicago. In his most recent role at MasterCard, as Regional Financial Officer, Mr. Viadero was responsible for all financial activities, including facilitating the transition from privately-held to public company, compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley Act, among other varied responsibilities.

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Cost Of Natural Disasters: ‘Ten Billion Dollars Would Be Conservative’

May 19, 2011

This year’s record-breaking tornadoes, floods, droughts and wildfires will cost the country tens of billions of dollars in economic losses — and these estimates are expected to climb as the Mississippi flooding and severe drought in Texas continue into the summer. Economists disagree about the precise figures — with the estimates varying by billions — but most agree that $10-15 billion in losses are conservative calculations. Severe weather in April alone — the month when record-breaking tornadoes tore through much of the Southeast and killed more than 300 people — cost the country $12 billion in economic losses, according to Steven Bowen, a meteorologist with the Impact Forecasting team of Aon Benfield, one of the world’s largest insurance brokers. The cost estimates for the flooding in Louisiana and Mississippi range from $3-9 billion, and the ongoing Texas drought, which began in November and has caused more than 10,000 wildfires across the state, has so far cost between $1.5 billion and $3 billion in crop and cattle losses. As the flooding and drought continue, government agencies say that it’s impossible to predict the long-term economic impact of the losses, which include thousands of homes and buildings destroyed by the tornadoes, casinos and ports along the Mississippi temporarily closed, millions of acres of grazing land scorched by the fires and 1 percent of the country’s cropland currently submerged in water. “It’s too early to say what effect this [the flooding] would have on the national economy,” the Department of Agriculture stated in a report on May 11. “Regardless, it probably will not be extensive given the estimated percentage of land affected.” But even as the long-term effect remains unknown, the short-term impact is clear: Individuals and small businesses are absorbing the bulk of these losses, as states, government agencies and insurance companies help foot nature’s bill. April’s tornadoes are expected to wipe thousands of mom-and-pop shops off the map. This region already had a high rate of small business failure, and before April’s disasters between 6,000 and 8,000 small businesses in Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi and Georgia were expected to go under within the year, according to a report by Dun & Bradstreet, a research company that tracks small businesses. After the tornadoes, the number jumped to at least 10,000 shops. “Small businesses are definitely going to bear the brunt of this,” Byron Vielehr, President of Global Risk and Analytics division at Dun & Bradstreet told HuffPost in a telephone interview. The businesses won’t fail immediately, said Vielehr, but when they do it could produce a spike in unemployment and a loss of about a billion dollars in sales, just from these tornado-stricken small businesses alone. The situation of small farmers and ranchers in Texas is similar. After enduring the driest seven months on record, farmers and ranchers are being forced to abandon a cycle of wheat crop and sell off herds. Texas produces 20 percent of the country’s beef, and cattle ranchers are being slammed by the combination of scorched land unable to support grazing, and high feed and hay prices, both of which were driven up by the drought and the fires. “For a rancher, at this point he’s going to be losing about 30 percent of the income he would have averaged in the past,” said Bill Hymen, executive director of the Independent Cattlemen’s Association, the second-largest coalition of ranchers in the state. “And that’s not just this year but going forward because of dwindling seed stock,” he added, referring to the process of fewer cows leading to the birth of fewer calves in the future. As is the case in all industries, when a rancher has less pocket money, that creates a ripple effect in the local economy — with Hymen noting that ranchers, who know it’s likely that the drought will continue through the summer, are buying less and will ultimately pay less in taxes next year. Along the Mississippi and Atchafalaya rivers, a portion of small businesses and farms will likely follow the same course as the businesses that fell in the tornadoes path. Closed ports and casinos, too, are losing millions of dollars each day in lost river traffic, trade and gambling. Closing the Mississippi river itself causes even more economic damage. On Tuesday, the Coast Guard closed a 15-mile stretch of the Mississippi upriver of New Orleans by Natchez Port, a decision which could lead to losses of hundreds of millions of dollars each day, said Eric M. Holthaus, researcher at the International Research Institute for Climate and Society. The Coast Guard said that this closure is expected to last only a few days, but Holthaus also imagines a nightmare scenario in which the Port of New Orleans — the seat of our country’s agricultural exports and a handful of oil refineries — has to be closed. “I would be talking about trillions of dollars at that point,” he said. As long as the Port of New Orleans stays open, which it likely will, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, commonly known as FEMA, said that right now there is plenty of money in the $2 billion emergency fund to aid the states hit hardest by the natural disasters. FEMA has already approved about $38 million in future storm and tornado rebuilding assistance, including $9.4 million to Mississippi, $80 million to Alabama, $6.6 million to Georgia, $5.9 million for Tennessee and $16 million for Arkansas. For the flooding, FEMA has so far approved more than $11 million, including $1.4 million for Tennessee, $9 million for Missouri and $785,000 for Mississippi. As the flooding continues, the FEMA contribution is expected to rise, and these figures don’t include other public assistance that the regions will receive, either from the federal or state level. Insurance companies, too, are paying out, and April alone produced hundreds of thousands of insurance claims. Still, insurance companies and federal agencies aren’t feeling the hit of $10-15 billion in losses as acutely as individuals, towns and small businesses. “If you’re a small town in western Texas that’s lost anything, that town is going to suffer regardless of how much insurance money they get in the end. Less money in the community will mean that all unrelated jobs will take a hit,” said Holthaus, who said that the same holds true for communities affected by the tornadoes or the floods. “During a recession is a bad time for a disaster to hit,” he said.

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McDonald’s CEO Defends Spokesclown, ‘Right To Choose’ Fast Food

May 19, 2011

— McDonald’s Corp. CEO Jim Skinner came out swinging Thursday when asked about Ronald McDonald and whether the burger chain hooks children with junk food. Skinner, speaking at the company’s annual shareholder meeting at McDonald’s headquarters outside Chicago, said that newspapers ads Wednesday calling for Ronald’s retirement had prompted an outpouring of support to his office, with parents and customers asking Skinner “to defend their right to choose.” A group called Corporate Accountability International paid for the ads, which said Ronald is encouraging unhealthy eating habits and contributing to childhood obesity and related diseases such as diabetes. At the meeting, shareholders defeated a proposal the group had helped craft asking McDonald’s to issue a report on its responses to childhood obesity. The proposal received 6 percent support, according to preliminary results released by the company. Nick Guroff, a spokesman for Corporate Accountability International, called it “an extreme success for a first introduction” and said the results will force McDonald’s executives “to take these concerns – as much as they diminished them at their shareholder meeting and otherwise – very seriously.” When Deborah Lapidus, an organizer with the activist group, said McDonald’s is interfering with political efforts to curb marketing unhealthy food to children, Skinner replied that “this is about choice.” “We believe in the democratic process and our government officials believe in the democratic process,” he said to applause from the audience of McDonald’s shareholders. “This is about choice, this is about personal, individual right to choose in the society we live in. That’s where we play, that’s where you play, and we have every right to do so.” Skinner also got applause when he called Ronald, the burger chain’s smiling spokesclown, “an ambassador for good” and noted that he is the face of Ronald McDonald House Charities. “He does not advertise unhealthy food to children,” Skinner said. “We provide many choices that fit with the balanced, active lifestyle. It is up to them to choose and their parents to choose, and it is their responsibility to do so.” When another shareholder said he was disappointed that Ronald wasn’t at the meeting, Skinner replied: “Ronald hasn’t been here because he’s out in the field busy doing work and fighting through the protestors.” McDonald’s has fared well throughout the recession, and Skinner started his presentation by saying that the company has turned in eight straight years of growth in stores open at least 13 months, an important measure for a restaurant chain. He also said that store remodelings and an expanded menu, including smoothies and oatmeal, will broaden the restaurant’s appeal. “It’s oatmeal, people,” he added, an apparent jab at a shareholder who said the oatmeal contains as much sugar as a Snickers bar. Shareholders re-elected all five directors on the ballot, including Skinner, with each getting at least 97 percent of the vote, the company said. Shareholders also passed a proposal, with 77 percent approval, asking the company to require that all directors be re-elected annually. The Florida State Board of Administration, which submitted the proposal, said the change would help keep directors accountable. McDonald’s had opposed the change, saying its strong financial performance should be evidence of a proper board structure.

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2011 2nd China (Qingdao) International Mining Expo And Summit Forum To Focus On International Mining Market And To Promote China Mining Industry

May 19, 2011

2011 2nd China (Qingdao) International Mining Expo And Summit Forum To Focus On International Mining Market And To Promote China Mining Industry

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Ctrip.com International’s Q1 net income USD35.8m

May 18, 2011

Ctrip.com International’s Q1 net income USD35.8m

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Simon Johnson: 7 Strong Emerging-Market Candidates For IMF Chief

May 17, 2011

Even before the shocking events of the past few days, the international policy community had been contemplating a successor to Dominique Strauss-Kahn at the International Monetary Fund.

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Antenna Welcomes Two New Members to Its Board of Directors

May 17, 2011

Graham Albutt and Gary Haroian Bring Wealth of Executive Leadership and Operational Experience at International Public Companies

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I.M.F Names Acting Managing Director

May 16, 2011

Hours after its chief, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was arrested in connection with the alleged sexual attack of a maid at a Midtown Manhattan hotel, the International Monetary Fund on Sunday named John Lipsky as acting managing director.

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Video: Stifel’s Morganlander Likes Gap, Health Care, Technology

May 13, 2011

May 13 (Bloomberg) — Chad Morganlander, a portfolio manager at Stifel Nicolaus & Co., talks about the performance of the financial markets and some of his stock picks including Gap Inc., WellPoint Inc., Humana Inc., International Business Machines Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co. Morganlander speaks with Matt Miller, Julie Hyman, Susan O’Halloran and Sheila Dharmarajan on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Devenport Says EU Is `Fertile Ground’ for New Companies

May 13, 2011

May 13 (Bloomberg) — Andrew Devenport, chief executive officer of Youth Business International, talks about the challenges facing entrepreneurs that want to start companies in Europe.¶ Rob Lewis, CEO of Omnifone, also speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “Last Word.”

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Darling International Q1 profit USD46.6m

May 13, 2011

Darling International Q1 profit USD46.6m

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Boeing Controversy At Center Of Jobs Debate

May 12, 2011

WASHINGTON — A controversial complaint recently filed by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) against the Boeing Company became the centerpiece of a passionate debate on Capitol Hill Thursday over the decline of labor unions in the U.S., the erosion of the American middle class, and the best approach to building jobs in a slow economic recovery. The hearing before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions sought to examine why the middle class is shrinking, but much of that discussion ended up focused on the complaint against Boeing, whose vice president and general counsel, J. Michael Luttig, appeared before the committee as a guest of Republicans. In his testimony, Luttig wasted little time before blasting the NLRB, calling the complaint “preposterous on its face” and “a breathtaking substitution of the [labor] board for management in the running of an American company.” In the complaint filed last month, the labor board’s acting general counsel said Boeing broke the law when it made plans to create a new production line for its 787 Dreamliner in South Carolina, rather than in Washington state, where it had an existing workforce of unionized employees. The complaint alleged that Boeing’s move was retaliation against its Washington employees affiliated with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, who had gone on strike in the past. A wide and growing group of Republicans have used the Boeing issue to paint the NLRB as pro-union and the Obama administration and Democrats as anti-business. Although he accused Republicans of overly politicizing the Boeing complaint, committee chairman Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) said that dwindling union membership and the decline of collective bargaining had a lot to do with the financial squeeze America’s middle class has felt in recent decades. Harkin even used Boeing as an example of the growing wealth disparity between workers and their management when questioning Luttig. He noted that the average Boeing worker in Washington earned $26 an hour and in South Carolina $18 an hour, while Luttig enjoyed a pay package of $3.7 million in 2009, a 34 percent increase over the previous year’s. “Why shouldn’t employees at Boeing get a 34 percent increase?” Harkin asked Luttig. “What’s going on here? … I’m just asking about fairness for workers.” Addressing the tough inquiry regarding his own salary, Luttig joked, “I have the sense that at this instance it may not be enough,” prompting a mixture of laughter and gasps. He went on, “Jobs and job growth is what we need to come out of this. Of course I share the committee’s concerns about the middle class. If we could pay [our workers] more, we would, and when we can, we will. Rallying to Boeing’s defense, ranking committee member Sen. Michael Enzi (R-Wy.) said, “This company deserves our congratulations and respect, not our demonization.” Sen. Mark Kirk (Ill.) went much further, saying that the NLRB had decided to “torture” Boeing through legal fees related to the complaint. Overall, the hearing seemed to indicate that Democrats are far less eager to make a larger political issue out of the Boeing complaint than Republicans are. Much like the NLRB, which has downplayed the scope and significance of the complaint , Democrats have tried to define it as a procedural matter being blown out of proportion. Republicans, on the other hand, have declared it an attack on corporations and “right-to-work” states like South Carolina, which prohibit agreements between unions and companies that make union membership a condition of employment. While labor groups have hailed the NLRB’s move as a victory for workers, earlier this week a group of Republican lawmakers and business interests assembled at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to declare it a dangerous precedent that would move jobs overseas. “Employers across the country have been greatly disturbed” by the complaint, Enzi said, adding that it “sounds like China, not the United States … It will create a chilling effect nationwide.” But Sarah Fox, legal counsel at the AFL-CIO and a former member of the NLRB, said before the committee that the Boeing complaint was made on solid legal footing. “There’s really nothing extraordinary about this complaint,” she testified. “What is exceptional about this case is not the novelty of the legal theory, but the size and power of the company that has been charged, and the magnitude of the decision that is at issue.” The NLRB, she added, shouldn’t make its enforcement decisions based on whether they will be “politically unpopular.” Although he wasn’t specifically addressing Boeing’s expansion with a non-union assembly line in South Carolina, former Labor Secretary Robert Reich testified that the shrinking number of union members in the American workforce has coincided with the slowing growth of wages in recent years. “The lines are diverging,” Reich said of worker wages relative to executive pay. “People know this. They feel like the game is stacked against them.”

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Republicans Ratchet Up Attacks On Labor Board, White House Over Boeing

May 10, 2011

WASHINGTON — Gov. Nikki Haley (R-S.C.) joined a coalition of business interests and Republican lawmakers Tuesday in bashing the National Labor Relations Board for filing a controversial complaint against the Boeing Company last month. At a press conference in the U.S. Chamber of Commerce offices, Haley called the complaint “an unbelievable attack on not just right-to-work states but every state that’s attempting to put their people to work.” In the complaint that attracted Republicans’ ire, the labor board’s acting general counsel said Boeing broke the law in 2009, when it made plans to create a new production line for its 787 Dreamliner. The aerospace company chose to locate its line in South Carolina, rather than in Washington state, where it had an existing workforce of unionized employees. The NLBR’s acting general counsel said Boeing’s move was retaliation against its Washington employees with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, who had gone on strike in the past. Unions have hailed the filing as a victory for workers, while business groups have called it a case of federal meddling in corporate decision-making. The complaint has thrown the future of the South Carolina factory into limbo. Although the NLRB has downplayed the significance of the complaint, Republican senators have nonetheless decried it as an attack on free enterprise and right-to-work states like South Carolina. Right-to-work laws prohibit agreements between unions and companies that make union membership a requirement of employment. Generally favored by Republicans and corporate interests, such laws are currently on the books in 22 states, particularly ones in the South. Dan Yager, general counsel of the HR Policy Association, argued at the press conference that Boeing is being “penalized” for negotiating with the machinists union. Even though he expects Boeing to win the case, Yager claimed the filing will have a chilling effect on companies trying to move into right-to-work states. “If you’re an employer who wants to stay out of court… sort of what the general counsel says is the law,” he said. With litigation that could last well over a year, the Boeing complaint is quickly becoming a significant campaign issue leading up to the 2012 elections: Republicans are looking to paint Barack Obama administration as anti-business and in the pocket of labor unions. That was certainly the theme of the Chamber event, where a host of Republican lawmakers took to the podium to knock not only the NLRB, but the White House as well. Last week, several Republicans vowed to block President Obama’s nominees to the labor board. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who had tough words for the labor board last week, escalated his rhetoric Tuesday morning. He called the complaint “chilling” and “absurd.” “This is legal slander,” Graham added. “There has never been a case like this. … This is politics run amok.” Last week Graham and Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) said they planned on introducing a bill written expressly to nullify the April 20 Boeing complaint. On Tuesday, the lawmakers said the bill is still being tweaked, but will probably be introduced this week. Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) leveled his criticism directly at NLRB acting general counsel Lafe Solomon, who filed the complaint. “It is absurd in this country that represents free enterprise that one unaccountable, unelected, unconfirmed acting general counsel can threaten thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in investments. This is something you’d expect in a third world country,” he said. “It is thuggery at its best.” “The pandering to unions has gotten so far out of proportion, it’s difficult to accept,” DeMint added, in reference to the White House. In a statement yesterday, Solomon defended the move . “There is nothing remarkable or unprecedented about the complaint issued against the Boeing Company,” he wrote. “It was issued only after a thorough investigation in the field.” In a recent interview with the New York Times , Solomon said he filed the complaint against Boeing because of strong evidence it had tried to move the production line out of retaliation. In company documents and news interviews, Boeing executives had explicitly cited the strikes as a reason for expanding into South Carolina. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) wondered aloud whether the Boeing complaint indicated the White House had an “enemies list.” “Mr. President… is this decision based on the fact that South Carolina appears to be Republican state?” Paul asked. “That South Carolina is a right-to-work state? I find this appalling, and I respectfully ask the president to rescind this assault on businesses.” Asked whether she agreed with Paul, if she believed the White House may have an enemies list, Gov. Haley said, “Right now no one knows what the White House is doing.”

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American International Group Q1 Results

May 6, 2011

American International Group Q1 Results

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5BARz International Adds VP of Business Development

May 5, 2011

MISSION VIEJO, CA–(Marketwire – May 5, 2011) – 5BARz International Inc. ( OTCBB : BARZ ) (hereafter “5BARz” or the “Company”) is pleased to announce it has hired Mr. James Fraley as Vice President of Business Development.

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After IPO, Glencore CEO’s Stake May Be Worth Nearly $10 Billion

May 4, 2011

Glencore International AG’s initial public offering may value Chief Executive Officer Ivan Glasenberg’s stake at $9.6 billion, more than Google Inc. (GOOG) and Blackstone Group LP (BX)’s founders reaped in their IPOs.

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Video: Gunaratna Says Revenge Attacks `Likely’ After Bin Laden

May 4, 2011

May 4 (Bloomberg) — Rohan Gunaratna, head of the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore, talks about the possibility of retaliation by al-Qaeda’s followers in the aftermath of the U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden, leader of the terrorist group. Gunaratna speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Gunaratna Says Revenge Attacks `Likely’ After Bin Laden

May 4, 2011

May 4 (Bloomberg) — Rohan Gunaratna, head of the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore, talks about the possibility of retaliation by al-Qaeda’s followers in the aftermath of the U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden, leader of the terrorist group. Gunaratna speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

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EU And IMF Near Agreement On Portugal Bailout

May 3, 2011

LISBON – Portugal is close to reaching an agreement with the European Union and IMF on a bailout for the debt-laden country and there are no disagreements between the donors, the European Commission and the IMF said on Tuesday. Portugal’s caretaker Prime Minister Jose Socrates was set to make a statement at 1930 GMT, his office said. Officials from the European Commission, the International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank have been in Lisbon for almost a month to hammer out an agreement with Portugal on a bailout expected to reach about 80 billion euros ($120 billion). An agreement could come any day, officials have said, but local media have reported that it could be delayed because of disagreements between the European Commission and IMF on the terms of the loan. EC spokesman Amadeu Altafaj, who is in Lisbon, denied any rifts. “There has been progress in talks, and we can expect a deal soon. My feeling is that we are getting close to a deal … There are no divergences among members of the troika,” he said. “Discussions are currently going on and there is good progress, we are getting closer to a staff agreement and we keep a constructive dialogue with the political parties too,” he added. An IMF spokesperson also said there were no divergences between the EC, ECB and the IMF and a deal was close. Portugal became the third country in the euro zone, after Greece and Ireland, to seek a bailout after its government collapsed in late March and borrowing costs soared. Officials said the agreement would be presented to Portugal’s opposition Social Democrats and the caretaker government soon so that they can commit to the terms of the deal ahead of a snap June 5 general election. Social Democrat leader Pedro Passos Coelho said he stood ready to meet with the lenders. The deal is expected to be approved at a meeting of eurozone finance ministers in mid-May, in time for the EU rescue fund to raise money for Portugal by June 15, when the country needs to meet a bond redemption of 4.9 billion euros. Portuguese media have said the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund diverged over whether Portugal should be given more time to meet its budget deficit targets, as well as on the size of the aid package, which Brussels initially put at around 80 billion euros. Diario Economico newspaper said earlier Portugal may need over 100 billion euros in EU/IMF loans, including up to 10 billion euros for its banks, but there were doubts whether Brussels will allow the bailout to exceed its initial target. SIC television said, without citing its sources, the bailout could reach 105 billion euros. (Reporting by Andrei Khalip; Writing by Axel Bugge; Editing by Louise Ireland) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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