north

Irene shuts down New York

August 28, 2011

(MENAFN – Gulf Times) From the Carolinas to Maine, tens of millions of people were in the path of the giant 830km wide storm that dumped more than 43cm of rain on parts of coastal North Carolina …

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Medvedev reportedly in for summit with Kim Jong Il

August 24, 2011

(MENAFN – Khaleej Times) Russian President Dmitry Medvedev reportedly arrived Wednesday in remote eastern Siberia for a summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il expected to focus on energy deals, …

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EADS North America Names Michael Cosentino as Senior Vice President, Strategy and Development

May 31, 2011

ARLINGTON, VA–(Marketwire – May 31, 2011) – EADS North America has appointed Michael Cosentino to be Senior Vice President and Head of Strategy and Development. He will be responsible for overseeing the company’s future strategy for growth, as well as leading the mergers, acquisitions, and business development functions at EADS North America.

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Honda’s North America production to reach 100%

May 28, 2011

Honda’s North America production to reach 100%

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Atlantis Computing Expands Executive Team With Key Hires From VMware and Citrix

May 24, 2011

Joel Davis and David Cumberworth Join Atlantis to Lead North America and European Sales Efforts to Address Demand for Its VDI Storage and Performance Optimization Solutions

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Chyron Names Brian Spiers Senior National Account Executive

May 23, 2011

MELVILLE, NY–(Marketwire – May 23, 2011) – Chyron today announced the appointment of Brian Spiers as senior national account executive within the company’s North American sales team. Spiers brings a diverse enterprise sales background to his new role, having earlier held sales management positions with Tektronix, Grass Valley, and Digital Broadcast.

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Xradia Strengthens Global Sales & Support for 3D X-Ray Microscope Solutions

May 20, 2011

New Leadership With 3 Key Hires in Europe, Asia and North America

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Former Staples Executive Joins Vistaprint as Chief Marketing Officer for North American Business Unit

May 20, 2011

Don LeBlanc Will Lead Company’s North American Marketing Department

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MEC North America Poised for Success

May 19, 2011

As Second Half of 2011 Approaches, North American Office Has Right Mix of Star Talent, Capabilities and Resources

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Larry Miller Named President of North Dallas Bank

May 18, 2011

DALLAS, TX–(Marketwire – May 18, 2011) – On April 19, 2011, the North Dallas Bank & Trust Co. ( OTCBB : NODB ) Board of Directors announced the election of Larry Miller to President and Director.

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37,000 Jobless Lose Benefits In North Carolina Standoff

May 13, 2011

WASHINGTON — A standoff between Republicans in the North Carolina General Assembly and Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue has halted unemployment insurance for 37,000 jobless in the state. Both sides keep saying they want to restore the benefits, but no apparent progress has been made since Perdue vetoed a Republican bill because it attached the preservation of benefits to double-digit budget cuts. The legislature is set to adjourn early in June. Charlotte’s John Allison, 37, told HuffPost the stalemate reminds him of a game of chicken, except “the person controlling the car’s not even in it.” “It’s a remote control game of chicken and I’m tied in the seat,” he said. Allison said he lost his job as a landscaping consultant in July 2009 and has been surviving thanks to $281 a week in unemployment insurance. The checks stopped after April 16, when the federal Extended Benefits program expired in the state. Lawmakers had failed to change an eligibility trigger that activates extended benefits only if the jobless rate has risen in the past two years. The rate in North Carolina hasn’t risen, but it hasn’t fallen precipitously, either; it currently stands at 9.7 percent. In December, when Congress reauthorized federal benefits through 2011, lawmakers invited states to modify their EB triggers so they could remain eligible for the benefits, but several states have unexpectedly failed to do so. The EB program provides the final 20 weeks of benefits for long-term jobless who’ve exhausted 79 weeks of combined state and federal assistance. Allison said he’d previously expected his benefits to continue until August. All of a sudden, he says, he has no way to make his rent: “If [EB] doesn’t go through by the end of the month, I’ll probably have to move back home,” he said. State Senate leader Phil Berger (R) has said Republicans are waiting for Perdue to propose a compromise. Perdue, for her part, has said she’s waiting for the legislature to send over a clean bill. Allison said he doesn’t like the all-or-nothing strategy on display. “To me that’s not what democracy is,” he said. For his part, Allison said he’s had some success in his job search since he started compromising and applying for retail jobs that pay $8 an hour. “I’ve just now started getting really positive responses back … now that I’m applying for a lot less high paying jobs,” he said. Yet he hopes the benefits are restored in case he doesn’t find work before the next month’s rent is due. He’s been emailing lawmakers and said one responded to say there would be a renewed effort to pass legislation next week. “I am hoping that will be a legitimate effort and not just a ‘Well, we tried’ kind of thing,” Allison said.

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NAFTA Cost U.S. 700k Jobs, Report Says

May 12, 2011

When the North American Free Trade Agreement was first signed in 1994, proponents said it would eventually create jobs for the U.S. economy. 17 years later, a new report estimates, the American worker only has hundreds of thousands of job losses to show for it. According to a report by Economic Policy Institute economist Robert Scott, entitled “Heading South: U.S.-Mexico trade and job displacement after NAFTA,” an estimated 682,900 U.S. jobs have been “lost or displaced” because of the agreement and the resulting trade deficit. The historic agreement, signed just three years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, tore down trade barriers between the U.S., Canada and Mexico, making trade and investment easier for businesses without allowing for the cross-border movement of labor. Despite the agreement being considered a boon for Mexico, the country’s economy grew only 1.6 percent per capita on average between 1992 and 2007, The New York Times reported in 2009. The EPI’s calculation of 682,900 jobs lost to NAFTA takes into account jobs created as a result, too. Last year, for example, U.S. exports to Mexico supported 791,900 jobs. It’s just that those jobs created pale in comparison to the 1.47 million U.S. jobs that would be necessary without the imports resulting from NAFTA, the report found. Still, the number of jobs lost to NAFTA looks minimal when placed against the havoc freaked by the financial crisis. Only in 2008, at the height of the crisis, the U.S. economy hemorrhaged 2.6 million jobs, according to CNNMoney . The U.S. is currently considering a similar trade agreement with South Korea, called U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement (KORUS FTA). KORUS, like NAFTA, could similarly displace American jobs, EPI warns. Perhaps the most drastic switch post-NAFTA has been in the two country’s trade deficit. In 1993, before the signing of NAFTA, the U.S. held a $1.6 billion trade surplus over their neighbor to the south, which supported 29,400 jobs. By 1997, the tides had turned, and Mexico laid claim to a much larger surplus of $16.6 billion. As of 2010, it’s not even close. Mexico’s trade surplus now hovers around $97.2 billion. Jobs continue to be lost to NAFTA today. In the years 2007-2010, the U.S. economy has lost 116,400 as a result of the trade deficit created by NAFTA. And last year, the growth of Mexican auto exports to the United States alone created more Mexican jobs — 30,400 — than the entire U.S. auto industry. It’s the U.S. manufacturing sector that has suffered most mightily from NAFTA, alone accounting for 60.8 percent — 415,000 total — of the jobs lost to the agreement. Specifically, those making computer of electronic parts have accounted for 22 percent of all job losses, and motor vehicle and parts workers accounted for 15 percent of job losses. Job losses haven’t been limited to certain geographic regions, either, as all fifty states have lost jobs as a result. And while the states with the largest total number of job losses, California and Texas, do hug the southern border, it’s actually manufacturing-heavy states to the north, such as Michigan, Indiana and Kentucky, that have lost the largest share of jobs to Mexico. The below chart tracks jobs displaced as share of total state employment:

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Sage North America Executive Team Expands Customer Focus

May 9, 2011

IRVINE, CA–(Marketwire – May 9, 2011) – Sage North America announced today an update to its executive team, introducing broader business unit representation designed to further improve customer focus, enhance cross-business collaboration and streamline decision-making within customer markets.

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BP To Pay $25 Million Penalty For Alaska Oil Spill

May 3, 2011

WASHINGTON – BP has agreed to pay a $25 million civil penalty plus interest to settle a federal investigation into a 2006 pipeline oil spill on Alaska’s North Slope, according to court papers filed on Tuesday. The oil spill in Alaska is one of several environmental and safety problems has beset BP in the United States in recent years, including a deadly explosion at an oil refinery in Texas that killed 15 workers and most recently last year’s historic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. To address the oil spill in Alaska, the company has “started implementation and operation of some corrective measures, including replacement of the Prudhoe Bay oil transit lines, improved leak detection on the oil transit lines, and improved operation and maintenance of the Pipeline System,” the proposed consent decree said. U.S. officials are expected to announce the settlement later on Tuesday. BP’s stock was down about 1 percent in both New York and London. The fine is small by oil industry standards at just $25 million. The penalty is the result of BP violating the Clean Water Act when it spilled crude oil in waters on the North Slope of Alaska in the spring and summer of 2006. The government said the company also violated the Clean Air Act when it improperly removed asbestos-containing materials from its pipelines during the same period. BP also failed to perform certain corrective actions on its pipelines as ordered by the federal pipeline safety agency. (Reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky and James Vicini; additional reporting by Tom Doggett; Editing by David Gregorio and Lisa Shumaker) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Innovation Group Strengthens North America Software Team

April 28, 2011

Chester Gladkowski and Ray Dowling Join Innovation Group’s North America Software Sales Team Focusing on Innovation Insurer Software

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Dylan Howard Named North Park University’s Men’s Basketball Coach

April 25, 2011

CHICAGO, IL–(Marketwire – Apr 25, 2011) – After reviewing 139 applicants and interviewing five finalists in a national search, North Park University introduced Dylan Howard as its new head men’s basketball coach this week.

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Video: Soave Says Fiat’s Raised Chrysler Stake Part of Original Plan

April 21, 2011

April 21 (Bloomberg) — Laura Soave, head of the Fiat brand for Chrysler Group LLC, talks about Fiat SpA’s decision to increase its stake in Chrysler. Soave, speaking with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack,” also discusses Fiat’s re-entry in the North American market and the automaker’s 500 Cabrio model. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Moynihan Says BofA Credit Losses Dropping `Dramatically’

April 15, 2011

April 15 (Bloomberg) — Brian Moynihan, chief executive officer of Bank of America Corp., discusses the company’s first-quarter profit reported today. The largest U.S. lender by assets said net income fell 36 percent to $2.05 billion, or 17 cents a share, from a year earlier. Moynihan speaks from Charlotte, North Carolina, with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Coalspur Mines Limited (ASX:CPL) To Raise C$55.5 Million From North American And Strategic Investors

April 14, 2011

Coalspur Mines Limited (ASX:CPL) To Raise C$55.5 Million From North American And Strategic Investors

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Diebold to Consolidate Into $100M Headquarters in Ohio

April 12, 2011

Diebold, Inc., most recognizable as a manufacturer of ATM machines, announced plans to build a corporate campus which will serve as a $100 million expanded world headquarters in the Akron/Canton area of Ohio. The company, based in North Canton, is looking at sites for a single location where it will consolidate five existing facilities, which the company did not disclose, housing a total of 1,500 northeast Ohio employees. The company started…

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Toyota Will Begin Suspending North American Production Next Week

April 9, 2011

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Toyota Motor Corp. said Friday that it will suspend production at its North American plants in a series of one-day shutdowns this month as a result of parts shortages caused by the earthquake that hit Japan. The temporary shutdowns will affect 25,000 workers, but there will be no layoffs, the world’s No. 1 automaker said. A March 11 earthquake and tsunami damaged auto parts plants in northeastern Japan, causing shortages. All 13 of its North American plants will have down time, though the duration may vary at a few plants, Toyota spokesman Mike Goss said. For most plants, the one-day shutdowns will begin April 15 and end April 25, the company said. Toyota said future production plans will be determined later. “We’re just monitoring supplier progress on a daily basis, and we’ll make decisions as we go along,” Goss said. The North American plants have been using parts in their inventory or relying on those that were shipped before the earthquake. “We are slowing down to conserve parts yet maintain production as much as possible,” said Steve St. Angelo, executive vice president of Toyota Motor Engineering and Manufacturing North America. Toyota gets only about 15 percent of its parts from Japan for cars and trucks built in North America. Those parts include electronic and rubber components, and a paint additive, Goss said. The production shutdowns will total five days – April 15, 18, 21, 22 and 25 – at its North American vehicle plants, except at Georgetown, Ky., where production will be halted four days. The Kentucky plant makes the popular Camry, along with the Avalon and Venza vehicles. Most of the company’s North American engine and component plants will follow the same schedule, the company said. The schedule might vary for just a few of those plants, Goss said. The incremental stoppage in production is meant to “keep as much production going on a weekly basis as we possibly can so we keep vehicles flowing to our dealerships,” Goss said. Shortages of parts from Japan are also affecting manufacturers outside the country. Ford Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co. recently said that several North American plants would be closed for part of this month. Chrysler Group LLC is cutting overtime at plants in Canada and Mexico to conserve parts from Japan. Toyota said its North American plant workers will focus on training and reviewing operations when production is halted so that they can still earn a paycheck. However, they can also take vacation or unpaid time off. Meanwhile, Toyota announced Friday it will resume car production at all its plants in Japan at half capacity from April 18 to 27. The March earthquake and tsunami had forced the company to halt manufacturing due to shortages of parts and power. The company said production at the plants will then halt from April 28 to May 9, which includes a holiday period when factories would normally close.

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EADS North America Expands Space and Related Product Activities in the U.S.

April 7, 2011

Industry Veteran Joins EADS North America to Lead the Company’s Expanded Initiative

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Totoya To Shutdown North American Factories Due To Parts Shortage

April 4, 2011

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A Toyota Motor Corp. spokesman says it’s inevitable that the company will have to shut down its North American factories due to shortages of parts from Japan. Spokesman Mike Goss says the shutdowns are likely to take place later this month, affecting about 25,000 workers. But he says no layoffs are expected. He says the length of the shutdowns is unknown and depends on how fast earthquake-damaged Japanese parts factories get back in operation. Toyota gets about 15 percent of its parts from Japan for cars and trucks built in North America. The company has more than a dozen North American factories. Goss made the comments Monday before an appearance in Louisville by Toyota’s head of North American operations.

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Video: Natixis’s Hailer Says Funds Moving Assets Out of Bonds

April 1, 2011

April 1 (Bloomberg) — John Hailer, chief executive officer of North America and Asia operations at Natixis Global Asset Management, talks about investment fund flows. Hailer speaks with Matt Miller and Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. Senior Economist Ellen Zentner on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Wendell Potter: Insurers’ Cynical Calculations on the Cost of Doing Business

March 31, 2011

Since you likely don’t pay as much attention to the behavior of insurance companies as I do, you probably are not aware that CIGNA, my last employer, was fined $600,000 by the North Carolina Department of Insurance earlier this week for, among other things, not charging its customers correctly. In addition to the fine CIGNA has been ordered to pay, the company will have to shell out several hundred thousand dollars in refunds to North Carolina employers whom regulators say were charged too much over a three-year period. It was the second largest fine ever levied by the state’s regulators, the largest being a $1.8 million fine in 2003 against Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina for underpaying claims for emergency care. The news about the CIGNA fine was picked up by a few media outlets in the state, but not many. And it got almost no press coverage outside of the state. That didn’t surprise me. Having served as head of PR for two of the country’s largest health insurers — CIGNA and Humana — I know from personal experience that such fines are not widely considered newsworthy. Insurers know this, and so, annoying as being charged with breaking the law might be, they largely shrug off the fines and the threat of a day’s worth of bad publicity that occasionally accompany them. They are perfectly willing to risk being caught because they long ago realized that the fines are never severe enough to make them radically change the way they do business. Such a change would involve dealing more honestly with both their customers and the doctors who provide care to the people they insure. Insurers know too that most state regulatory agencies are not sufficiently resourced to effectively monitor their behavior, although the main responsibility of state insurance departments is actually to protect the interests of consumers against predatory practices. Because of this often-inadequate oversight, insurers realize that the chances of getting caught are, in many states, pretty slim. And they consider the infrequent and inconsequential fines they have to pay when they do get caught just another cost of doing business. Considering that the five largest health insurers made a combined $11.7 billion in profits last year, the fines are little more than chump change. When I learned about the most recent fine against CIGNA, I decided to do a search of other recent actions against insurers by various state regulatory agencies — actions you probably haven’t heard about. Here’s a sampling from just the last six months: Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey was fined500,000 and ordered to pay8 million to doctors and other providers for taking too long to pay claims Humana was fined100,000 for “numerous deficiencies and violations” in its business practices in Kentucky, particularly in the way it deals with doctors and chiropractors Aetna, Anthem Blue Cross of California, Blue Shield of California, CIGNA, Health Net, Kaiser Permanente and UnitedHealthcare were collectively fined nearly5 million for late or inaccurate payment of claims to doctors and hospitals Health Net was fined375,000 by the Connecticut Department of Insurance “for failing to safeguard personal information” of policyholders Aetna was fined850,000 and UnitedHealth was fined1.9 million by New York regulators for not providing policyholders with required information and for not paying claims in a timely manner UnitedHealth was assessed nearly10 million in fines in California for paying claims incorrectly, losing documents and medical records, failing to respond to member appeals in a timely manner and failing to resolve disputes with providers These are the cases that were reported by at least one news outlet. If I had gone further back in time and gone directly to state insurance departments rather than relying on news reports, I would have found many, many more. And of course, these are just violations that regulators caught. Many states are so inadequately resourced that insurers’ misdeeds frequently go unnoticed, and many states have comparatively few regulations on the books to protect consumers in the first place. I mention this for two reasons. One is that insurers frequently complain that they are over-regulated, that as a consequence of having to comply with various state regulations designed to protect us, they have to charge us all more in premiums. The other reason is that one of the health care reform ideas favored by many Republicans — allowing insurers to sell their products across state lines — would make matters much worse for most consumers and health care providers. Here’s why: if insurers were allowed to do what the GOP proposes, they would set up operations in the states that have the fewest regulations and consumer protections and the flimsiest history of fining insurers for violating what scant regulations are on the books. It would encourage what consumer advocates call a “race to the bottom.” Regulators in the states that do pay attention to problems like insufficient claims payments or ignoring appeals for denial of care would have no jurisdiction over the plans sold in other states. The threat of fines and bad publicity insurers now face for violating regulations would essentially be a thing of the past. Yes, premiums might go down for a while, but bad behavior on the part of insurers — and the deadly consequences of that bad behavior — undoubtedly would go up. So the next time you hear a politician say that reducing regulations and allowing the sale of health insurance across state lines would go a long way toward controlling health care costs, think of the real cost of such a solution. It’s no wonder that most state insurance commissioners think it is a lousy idea. (This was also published by the Center for Public Integrity at publicintegrity.org.)

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Park Sterling Corporation Continues to Execute Its Growth Strategy Into Target Markets

March 22, 2011

CHARLOTTE, NC–(Marketwire – March 22, 2011) – Park Sterling Corporation ( NASDAQ : PSTB ), the holding company for Park Sterling Bank, announced today that it has engaged Robert (Bob) Jobe and John Lowe, two North Carolina veteran bankers, to lead the expansion into the Research Triangle market of North Carolina, one of Park Sterling’s key target markets.

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Video: Richter Says Mideast, North Africa to Emerge `Stronger’

March 21, 2011

March 21 (Bloomberg) — Sven Richter, managing director of frontier markets at Renaissance Asset Management, discusses investing in the Middle East and North Africa amid political upheaval in the region. He talks with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Sen Says Oil May Rise on `Souring’ U.S.-Saudi Relations

March 18, 2011

March 18 (Bloomberg) — Amrita Sen, a commodities analyst at Barclays Capital, discusses U.S. relations with Saudi Arabia and the outlook for oil prices amid political upheaval in the Middle East and North Africa. She speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Lack Of Parts From Japan Forces GM To Halt Production

March 17, 2011

DETROIT — A shortage of parts from Japan will force General Motors Co. to halt production at its pickup plant in Shreveport, La., next week, the company said Thursday. It’s the first time a U.S.-based automaker will stop production in North America over parts shortages caused by the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Toyota Motor Co. and Subaru have already slowed North American production to conserve parts that they normally import from that nation. GM makes two compact pickups at its Shreveport plant, the GMC Canyon and Chevrolet Colorado. Both use a five-speed manual transmission made by Japanese supplier Aisin Seiki Co, which has halted production in Japan and suspended overtime in North America. GM’s other North American plants haven’t been affected so far. GM said it will resume production as soon as possible. Meanwhile, the company has enough of the trucks in inventory that it would take more than two months to sell them all. The trucks could be at the plant, en route to showrooms or on dealer lots. Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Group LLC said their plants haven’t been affected by shortages.

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PNC Bank Expands to 116,000 SF at One N. Franklin

March 14, 2011

PNC Bank inked an extension and expansion deal at One North Franklin in Chicago. The lease extension will last until 2022. PNC currently has approximately 80,000 square feet in the tower and plans to expand to nearly 116,000 square feet. The expansion will make the bank the largest tenant in the building. One North Franklin is a 36-story, 617,000-square-foot, Class A office building in Chicago’s West Loop. The property was designed by Skidmore…

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Greenback Rally Facing First Real Test; Buck Needs Response in North America

March 9, 2011

Greenback Rally Facing First Real Test; Buck Needs Response in North America

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Video: Doha Bank’s Seetharaman Says Middle East Bonds `Cheap’

March 7, 2011

March 7 (Bloomberg) — Raghavan Seetharaman, chief executive officer of Doha Bank QSC, talks about investing in the Middle East and North Africa as Egypt’s bourse remained closed following the fall of President Hosni Mubarak. He speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: Livingston Says Dover Passing on Oil Costs to Consumers

March 7, 2011

March 7 (Bloomberg) — Robert Livingston, chief executive officer of Dover Corp., talks with Bloomberg’s Will Daley about the impact of rising oil prices on the company. ¶ Crude oil surged to a 29-month high last week on concern unrest in Libya will spread to other North African and Middle East energy exporters. Dover is a Downers Grove, Illinois-based maker of refrigerated display cases and oil-drill parts. They spoke on March 2. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Vectren Corporation Names Former Congressman as President of Its Vectren North Operations

March 3, 2011

EVANSVILLE, IN–(Marketwire – March 3, 2011) – Former Indiana Congressman Brad Ellsworth will join Vectren Corporation ( NYSE : VVC ) as the president of its Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana – North (Vectren North) gas utility effective May 1, 2011. The position, announced in a 2010 management reorganization, is designed to enhance the company’s presence with local government officials, community leaders and customers in the 49 Indiana counties served by the utility.

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Daniel M. Cofall: Dangerous Games

March 1, 2011

Just a quick show of hands… how many of you have discussed the internal conflicts in the Middle East with your friends? Now, how many of your friends have concluded that this conflict in Egypt is good because they are pro-democracy and that this will be good for equities as even more of the world opens up to free trade? I have heard this same discussion over and over but it’s just not true. To quickly bring you up to date, there are now demonstrations beginning in Oman. The Chinese Premier Wen Jaibao just pledged to punish the abuse of powers within China and to close the growing wealth gaps just as he limited any news of the Middle East protests from entering China. South Korea is dropping leaflets into North Korea telling the North Koreans of the revolts in the Middle East and suggesting that they control their own destiny and can over throw Kim Jong Il’s regime. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is reaching out to folks in Libya from various anti-Quaddafi movements and has pledged US support. Activists in Saudi Arabia are now demanding increased political rights and a movement toward a constitutional monarchy. The Tunisian Interim Prime Minister just resigned. Unions and other sympathetic organizations spread their protests across America. Did you think that only Egypt is unstable? I believe that events of this magnitude are neither random nor spontaneous. I also believe that these are not pro-democracy rallies because students of history know that democracies are not stable. And there are plenty of groups opposed to any form of republic or democracy and these forces are not sitting on the bench. If these demonstrations are the product of experimental social engineering, we must accept that we can’t know what will emerge. Promoting instability is a tricky avocation, much like a professional water balloon catcher. We assume that it is a good thing to support Libyan anti-governmental protesters but is it possible that those that have contempt for both Quaddafi and the West will ultimately see us as merely interventionists? We may be welcomed as some transitional facilitators but will continued intervention result in anything more that more Mubarak-like governments? Of even greater concern is amount of change the world can tolerate at one time. This is the reason that I have great concern that many financial assets are currently significantly over-priced. Two huge risk factors are not being priced into the markets… uncontrolled instability and inflation… neither of which is easily modeled. We do know that returns based upon historically low interest rates do not reflect inflationary realities and these low returns completely ignore the unintended consequences of waves of protests and instability. There was an interesting article by Chris Mayer last week discussing economic forecasting tools and their accuracy and relevance. He quoted the famous investor Peter Lynch as saying, “If you spend more than 13 minutes analyzing economic and market forecasts, you’ve wasted 10 minutes.” Yet, at the extremes, mal-investments are more likely to happen. Financial assets are currently priced with exceptionally large presumed growth rates, low interest rates and low inflation rates. I cannot think of a time in recent memory where there was a worse matching of risk to return. In a world of real turmoil (with no clear-cut direction or winners in sight), we blithely accept forward Price to Earning’s of 20+. We think all sectors are just about as likely to expand (OK, excluding retail). We compare actual performance to “expectations” without ever asking whose expectations are being used. We use data we know to be erroneous generated by the Treasury, the Fed and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Mayer went on to critique the use of performance statistics and their presumed accuracy. I have these discussions with folks all the time suggesting that no one can precisely measure expected returns, upon which all valuations are based, because contained within these returns are risk factor estimates, generally the product of our own governmental reporting and, yet, we must make an attempt. Erring on the side of conservatism would seem natural yet today we continue to seek justifications for higher prices and solace in low metrics and low volatility. I would say it reminds me of the tech wreck in 2000 or the real estate bubble in 2007-8 but that would be unfair, as both of those “corrections waiting to happen” were not surrounded with worldwide political uncertainties. The short answer is that you cannot truly measure inflation or unemployment month to month any more than you can put a specific risk factor on political turmoil. But you can say that these two factors are likely greater than the “official” reports and that worldwide turmoil at least deserves “a few hundred basis points” of consideration. I continue to see much more risk than the market is pricing in. If this is true, then a correction cannot be far behind.

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Daniel Dicker: Why Gasoline Costs Are Too Damn High

February 21, 2011

The U.S. is being fooled to believe that the gas prices we see on TV and in newspapers aren’t actually so bad. But they are. Relatively, they are much worse now than they were in the past, and are likely to get even worse as spring and summer approach. We watch the TV and look in the newspapers, see that crude oil is selling for $87 dollars a barrel and think: “yeah, those are high prices, but I remember when oil was over $100 dollars, even $120 and $140 dollars a barrel — this doesn’t seem so bad yet.” But you’re being fooled. You’re being fooled because the price that the newspapers and television are referring to is the price of West Texas Intermediate crude oil, traded at the New York Mercantile Exchange (where I traded for 25 years). This financial benchmark has been used to set the price for virtually all of global oil for the past 25 years — even though there are hundreds of other specific grades of crude oil in the world, extracted from ground, water and stone, and delivered in hundreds of local markets across the globe. But the market for this one local grade of sweet crude, delivered at Cushing in Oklahoma has dominated the financial world of global oil for so long, it has also come to set the physical prices for real oil virtually everywhere else — until a few weeks ago. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) has disconnected with crude markets everywhere else and no longer represents the “real” prices of crude, or in other words, the real prices that are being charged at the pump to you and me. Take a look at some other physical benchmarks and their recent prices: Dubai and Oman sour crude is trading at $99 a barrel, Mars sour — a U.S. grade from the gulf coast — has traded at $96, Brent Crude from the North Sea is at $104 and Louisiana Light Sweet, a very similar grade to WTI delivered only 700 miles south in Port Arthur has recently traded at $106! What’s fascinating is that WTI has historically been much, much more expensive than ANY one of these other grades. The reasons that WTI no longer “works” — at least temporarily — as a global benchmark is two fold: Physically, Cushing is filled to the brim with supply and because it is small and landlocked, it is difficult to ship incoming crude further south. Financially, the WTI contract has become nothing more than a trading and investing ping-pong ball of asset managers, index investors, ETF’s, energy hedge funds and individual traders, all stuck long in a market that won’t react positively to Middle East unrest and a general commodity price spike — a spike that is overtaking every other grade of crude out there. I outline the mechanisms of all of this in my upcoming book Oil’s Endless Bid , but the bottom line is this — While financial oil may be subject to the whims of big money investors and traders, the gasoline market is far more insulated — and delivered in New York Harbor where no such physical constraints exist as in Cushing. So, gas isn’t being held back by the WTI disconnect — its pricing at the pump is a solid 40 cents a gallon higher than the “advertised” price of crude oil that’s going out to the world would suggest, up to $3.18 a gallon nationally, according to the Lundberg survey. And this is just the beginning. As unrest continues to heat up in the Middle East, and as the physical and financial roadblocks to WTI clear up — as they must — the financial benchmark at the NYMEX is much more likely to again represent where the rest of global oil is currently pricing — well above $100 a barrel and indeed closer to $110. And that means more pain — much more pain — at the pump as the summer approaches.

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EU studies increase of North Africa imports

February 21, 2011

EU studies increase of North Africa imports

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Video: Conrad on House Budget Cuts: Political Capital With Al Hunt

February 19, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad, a North Dakota Democrat, talks with Bloomberg’s Al Hunt about House Republicans’ budget cut demands. Bloomberg’s Julianna Goldman and Lisa Lerer discuss President Barack Obama’s budget. Haris Anwar reports on U.S.-Pakistan relations after a U.S. consulate worker was arrested for shooting dead two Pakistanis. Commentators Kate O’Beirne and Margaret Carlson talk about the possibility that New Jersey Governor Chris Christie will be the Republican Party’s nominee for president in the 2012 election. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: British Retailers Rebound in London, Retreat in North

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Olivia Sterns reports on a rise in commercial real estate vacancies in the North of England, while trade at London stores rebounds. Linzie Janis also speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Sara Ackerman: State Banks: A New, Old Idea To Increase Growth In Your Community

February 17, 2011

Every year billions of state tax dollars are taken from their respective states and deposited into the Wall Street “Too Big To Fail” banks. These same banks use municipal deposits to give loans to out-of-state big businesses, often shifting wealth from local communities; a huge loss of potential that could be better used encouraging local businesses and creating more jobs. With increased attention to where and how municipalities deposit their operating funds due in large part to the Move Your Money project, many are beginning to wonder: why can’t that money stay local? If community banks could accept public deposits, we could keep local money in the communities where it originated. Unfortunately, community banks are often unable or unwilling to accept large public deposits due to high collateral limits, making the venture unprofitable. That is where the idea of a public state bank–or partnership bank–comes into play. The movement to create a publicly owned state bank has been on the rise this year as multiple states including Washington, Hawaii, and Oregon have already introduced bills in their respective states, with more expected to follow. The idea of a state bank is not new, but rather models after the Bank of North Dakota created in 1919 which today runs at a profit and allows for the state of North Dakota to make significant investments in agriculture, economic development, and student loans- all at no cost to the state. So what has caused a resurgence of an idea nearly one hundred years old? It is in large part due to the remarkable success experienced by North Dakota as the rest of the nation suffers through the global financial crisis. After the economic downturn sent shockwaves felt throughout the world, North Dakota ran counter-cyclical, leaving many to wonder what insulated the state from all the turmoil. While most municipal governments found record deficits, North Dakota found record surpluses and while most communities grappled with high unemployment, foreclosures, and bank failures, North Dakota remarkably survived the brunt of the attack unscathed. Undoubtedly, the fact that North Dakota’s economy which is primarily based on agriculture and oil was a major contributor, but many are also pointing to North Dakota’s state-owned bank as a major impetus to their success. The Bank of North Dakota was created by a non-partisan populist movement in 1919 after farmers were fed up with out of state bankers limiting their access to credit. Farmers, whose livelihood primarily rests on factors outside of their control, revolted against their dire situation in creating the Bank of North Dakota. While the Bank of North Dakota was not an immediate success, over time the bank would serve as a tool to increase capital for local businesses and farms. A common misconception of state banks is that they compete with private banks. This however, is not the case. While the Bank of North Dakota has the legal right to accept private deposits, in practice only 1 percent of their total deposits come from individuals and businesses (many of the current proposals will potentially go one step further and outright ban the ability for state banks to accept private deposits). Rather, a public bank mainly serves as a “bankers’ bank,” allowing a small, community bank to make larger loans by sharing the risk and buying down the interest rate or buying loans from community banks which increases lending for small businesses and agriculture. Small businesses, which account for 70 percent of the nation’s workforce, have been particularly hurt by the credit crunch. In a recent survey of small business owners in Oregon, 67 percent reported problems with accessing capital to expand and 75 percent supported the creation of a state bank. Easing community banks ability to supply loans will not only increase profits for the bank but also help small businesses grow and create jobs. Additionally, a state bank could provide additional services to banks including currency exchange, check clearing, and providing liquidity. Thus, the relationship is more akin to a partnership, encouraging and strengthening community banks and allowing them to compete against the Wall Street behemoths. The benefits of state banks however, go further than just community banks. Since public banks have no shareholders to please, they have more freedom in choosing where they allocate their capital. Start-ups and small businesses that may provide long-term economic growth to a community are often passed over by Wall Street for investments that are more profitable to their immediate bottom-line. Yet a state bank would be able to leverage earned income through more lucrative activities to help subsidize economic growth in local communities. An additional plus of the state bank movement is that it could be a potential source of revenue for the state. The Bank of North Dakota was able to return over $350 million to the state’s General Fund in the last decade, which came in handy when the state faced a $40 million budget shortfall at the turn of the century. A state bank may or may not be the solution for your state, but it is an interesting experiment that some state legislators feel is worth a try. During this legislative session, it will be exciting to see which bills are successful and which fall short. Nevertheless, the creation of a state bank is a new, old idea that is worth a strong consideration.

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Sihayo Gold Limited (ASX:SIH) Drilling Recommences At Tambang Tinggi Gold Prospect, North Sumatra, Indonesia

February 15, 2011

Sihayo Gold Limited (ASX:SIH) Drilling Recommences At Tambang Tinggi Gold Prospect, North Sumatra, Indonesia

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Currencies Looking to Extend Gains in North American Trade

February 15, 2011

Currencies Looking to Extend Gains in North American Trade

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Scott Gerber: How To Bridge Cash Flow Gaps

February 10, 2011

Q: While my company generates great total annual revenues, we often find ourselves in month-to-month cash flow crunches. What tools and strategies can I employ to bridge cash flow gaps and create a more steady cash flow? –Laura, North Dakota The following answers are provided by the Young Entrepreneur Council , an advocacy group founded by serial entrepreneur Scott Gerber that works to take action against youth unemployment by teaching young people how to build successful companies. The council’s members include Generation Y entrepreneurs and experts in a variety of fields. A: Offer Discounts For Pre-Payment The fact that you have “great total annual revenues” but sometimes struggle with monthly cash flow leads me to believe your fiscal priorities may need to be reexamined. Perhaps you are simply spending too aggressively and trying to grow too fast. Identify your overall trends (there should be some consistency) and challenge your greatest expenses to see what you can outsource on a need-to basis. –Kent Healy ( @Kent_Healy ), founder of DontGetBurnedBlog.com A: Focus on Revenue Generating Activities If you’ve been in business for a while and are growing revenue year over year, then ask your bank for a line of credit. This can be an effective way of bridging your cash flow in cyclical businesses, or businesses where there is large short-term investment happening. You’ll be surprised how easy getting a line of credit can be–if your business is a few years old and has been growing. –Eric Bahn ( @beatthegmat ), founder of Beat The GMAT A: Create a Continuity Program If you can’t get a line of credit (need 2 years tax returns with profits) from the bank to allow you to dip and pay back when times are good, you must have a month to month budget based on forecasting revenue vs expenses by using past numbers to form the budget. In the good times, you must put away more money instead of distributing it as profits. This will be used during the bad months and take away cash flow problems. –Michael Sinensky ( @msinensky ), co-founder of Fun Bars A: 0% Interest Is Your Best Friend

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Bank Watch: First Credit Union Closure of 2011 Among Latest Financial Institution Failures

February 10, 2011

Four more financial institutions joined the list of failures this past week including two in Georgia and one each in California and Illinois. In Georgia, Renasant Bank in Tupelo, MS, acquired all of the deposits and substantially all of the assets of American Trust Bank in Roswell, GA, in a Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) assisted transaction. The acquisition gives Renasant Bank three new locations in North Georgia with branches in Roswell…

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Lease Down: Atlas Copco Closing Three Facilities in Move to Houston

February 9, 2011

Stockholm-based Atlas Copco Compressors LLC plans to consolidate three of its U.S.-based facilities into one new common facility in Houston. 125 people are currently employed at the three locations. The objective is to increase competitiveness by creating a competence center for these products. The new factory will produce a wide range of custom designed products and complete packaged solutions for customers across North and South America. It…

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Insider Trading Accusations Describe Network Of Hedge Fund Corruption

February 8, 2011

In the latest charges to be brought against Wall Street financiers, Federal authorities depict insider trading in dramatic detail. Two hedge fund managers — Samir Barai and Donald Longueuil — were arrested Tuesday morning on charges of insider trading, Bloomberg reports. Two others — portfolio manager Noah Freeman and analyst Jason Pflaum — pleaded guilty. The charges are the latest example of a Federal crackdown on insider trading that the Wall Street Journal detailed in November. In a pair of documents, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Bureau of Investigation describe an illegal exchange of information, which allegedly allowed hedge funds to reap $30 million in profits. According to the Federal complaints, employees at publicly traded technology companies sold secret information about those companies to workers at hedge funds, which then used that information to make big trades in the companies’ stock. The information was enormously profitable for the firms that received it, according to the court documents. Many of the allegations involve Winifred Jiau, who, the documents say, was employed by various technology companies and, at the same time, by Primary Global Research LLC, as a “private expert.” PGR would allegedly receive information from Jiau and then pass it on to clients, including Freeman and Barai. In May 2008, for instance, Jiau allegedly gave Freeman and Barai early information about the earnings of Marvell Technology Group. According to the SEC, Barai’s hedge fund subsequently reversed its short position on Marvell’s stock, and reaped close to $1 million in profits and avoided losses. In another case, Freeman earned about $9.7 million for his hedge fund, after learning secret information, the SEC says. The FBI documents add more color to the accusations. In November last year, after he read about the probe into insider trading, Barai allegedly wrote to Pflaum from his BlackBerry: – This scope is said to focus on the use of so-called expert network firms – Concern for years that some experts may be passing out confi [meaning, confidential] info about to go public cos [meaning, companies] to traders…. – [The Firm] was only one named!!!! – F*****ck The next morning he said, according to the FBI: – Didn’t sleep much either. – I dunno – I think we ok tho – I think U just go into office – Shred as much as u can He also said, according to the FBI: – Let’s not worry…. – No evidence we got exact info – So it doesn’t matter…. – Forget the past – No proof – So ur fine During a conversation between Freeman and Longueuil, which they recorded, they describe how to destroy electronic evidence, the FBI says. From the document: Freeman then remarked, “I don’t see how you get rid of this sh*t,” to which LONGUEUIL explained, “Oh, it’s easy. You take two pairs of pliers, and then you rip it open … and then, it’s just a piece of NAND. … So I just f*cking ripped it apart right there. … I had two external drives that had like wafer numbers on ‘em. F*ckin’ pulled the external drives apart. Destroyed the platter. … Put ‘em into four separate little baggies, and then at 2a.m. … 2a.m. on a Friday night, I put this stuff inside my black North Face [u/i] jacket, … and leave the apartment and I go on like a twenty block walk around the city … and try to find a, a garbage truck … and threw the sh*t in the back of like random garbage trucks, different garbage trucks.” Longueuil and Freeman have been accused of insider trading while they were employees of SAC Capital Advisors, the $12 billion hedge fund run by Steven A. Cohen. The company released a statement saying it is “outraged by the alleged actions of two former employees, which required active circumvention of our compliance policies and are egregious violations of our ethical standards.” Cohen, who is worth more than $6 billion , and who owns artist Damien Hirst’s embalmed tiger shark, “The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living,” has been sued repeatedly by his ex-wife, Patricia Cohen. In the latest version of the suit, she alleges that Cohen himself participated in insider trading. From the suit : Such privileged information was provided to Steven as part of his relationship with Mr. Newberg and as part of an effort to “take care of one another.” They sometimes referred to their group of Wharton friends as “the Wharton mafia.” READ the complaints below, from the SEC and the FBI: comp-pr2011-40 CNBC_Barai_et_al_Complaint

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Carl Pope: The Next Economic Crisis

February 8, 2011

Mumbai, India — Like stock indexes around the world, India’s Sensex plunged with the news of the unrest in Egypt, largely over fear about oil prices. But unlike other exchanges, the Sensex has not bounded back. It fell for four straight days, rebounded for one, and then on Friday fell by 2.9 percent. But in India oil is not the only commodity whose price can have a devastating economic impact. Indeed, higher oil prices hit India’s economy primarily indirectly — through their impact on food prices, which are up 17 percent. The Nielson Global Consumer Confidence index says Indians are leading the world in worries about food inflation. The moment oil broke the $100/barrel, major domestic banks here announced higher interest rates. And India is not the only country facing a crisis over commodity prices. The Sensex is simply the early warming system that a looming combination of higher oil prices and food inflation threatens to engulf the world this quarter. Ironically, it’s good news that’s partly responsible for this threat. Manufacturing levels all over the world, even in the U.S., have begun to recover from the Great Recession. This puts economic output on a collision course with an underlying shortage of commodities like oil, steel, cement, chemicals, and food. It’s the same pattern that drove up food prices in 2008 and helped tilt the world into recession a year later.

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Hagen Realty Group Extends Its Expertise to the Carolinas

February 7, 2011

CHARLOTTE, NC–(Marketwire – February 7, 2011) – Longtime industry veteran William A. Higgins has teamed up with Hagen Realty Group as vice president of the firm’s sales in North and South Carolina.

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