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CIO Summit Russia And CIS 2011: CIOs Glimpse The Future

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CIO Summit Russia And CIS 2011: CIOs Glimpse The Future

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Next Generation Mining Summit CIS 2011 To Focus On IT Investment

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Next Generation Mining Summit CIS 2011 To Focus On IT Investment

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Next Generation Telecoms Summit APAC 2011 To Feature Leading Voices In The Technology Management Sector

May 26, 2011

Next Generation Telecoms Summit APAC 2011 To Feature Leading Voices In The Technology Management Sector

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FST ANZ Summit 2011 To Discuss Wireless Banking, Data Management And Other IT Issues

May 26, 2011

FST ANZ Summit 2011 To Discuss Wireless Banking, Data Management And Other IT Issues

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CFO Healthcare US Summit 2011 To Be Held On 20-22 September In California

May 24, 2011

CFO Healthcare US Summit 2011 To Be Held On 20-22 September In California

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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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Financial Services Technology Summit Europe 2011 To Open On 4-6 October In Portugal

May 18, 2011

Financial Services Technology Summit Europe 2011 To Open On 4-6 October In Portugal

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CFO Summit Europe 2011 To Focus On Compliance, Governance And The Impact of Regulatory Change

May 17, 2011

CFO Summit Europe 2011 To Focus On Compliance, Governance And The Impact of Regulatory Change

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Oil, Gold Eye EU Summit and US Data as Risk Appetite Searches for Direction

May 17, 2011

Oil, Gold Eye EU Summit and US Data as Risk Appetite Searches for Direction

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The Next Generation Retail Summit APAC 2011 To Be Held On 18-20 October In Singapore

May 17, 2011

The Next Generation Retail Summit APAC 2011 To Be Held On 18-20 October In Singapore

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Champagne And Easy Money: The Web’s Young Stars Confront Another Bubble

May 10, 2011

Peter Thiel looked on in awe. The billionaire early investor in Facebook and co-founder of PayPal, Thiel had spent countless hours in close quarters with young entrepreneurs. But he’d never traveled through the Caribbean on a 14-story cruise ship with 1,000 of them. For three days in April just off the coast of Miami, the ship served as the venue for this year’s Summit Series , an invite-only business conference that draws some of the world’s most successful Internet startup founders. The yacht, the flowing champagne and the brand-name speakers were all part of Summit’s three-year-old business model: convene an elite group of young entrepreneurs, add investors, philanthropists, alcohol and a few celebrities and see what happens. This year’s gathering was the largest Summit yet — perhaps a sign of the times. For an elite class of tech entrepreneurs, including many who danced and drank on the cruise, there is no recession, no unemployment crisis. But, as waves of cash flow into Internet startups, there is talk of a sequel to the late ’90s dot-com bubble . “Markets are defined by greed and fear. We are in the greed mode right now,” declared Fred Wilson, a top New York City venture capitalist, in a blog post late last month. “This is a time to raise money and sock it away for a rainy day.” Startups are heeding Wilson’s advice. Thus far, 2011 has been the venture capital industry’s best annual fundraising start since 2001, as deep-pocketed backers aimed funds at hot late-stage technology companies, such as Facebook, Twitter and Zynga. Facebook’s value rose 58 percent during the first quarter to $65 billion, according to research firm Nyppex, while Zynga’s climbed 80 percent to $8 billion. As U.S. venture capitalists raised $7 billion during the first quarter of 2011, Internet firms snatched up $2.3 billion in funds, according to research firm CB insights. Those totals were up 76 percent and 46 percent, respectively, from the first quarter of 2010. Across the globe, more than $5 billion flowed into young web companies in the first four months of 2011, Reuters reported . The result has been something of a mad dash to raise startup funds — any funds. At the Summit Series, attendees could hardly throw a business card without hitting the founder of an Internet company that had raised millions in recent months. Take Travis Kalanick, a Summit-goer who founded Uber , an on-demand car service that uses mobile apps. In February, less than eight months after its launch, Uber rounded up nearly $12 million from investors at a $60 million valuation. Kalanick said Uber has more than 10 investors with a long line of suitors eager to snap up shares. Aaron Batalion, co-founder of the daily deals site LivingSocial , also had something to toast at this year’s Summit. Four days before the conference, and less than four months after landing a $175 million investment, Living Social raised $400 million at a whopping $3 billion dollar valuation. The cash rolling in at many young Internet companies has been a welcome, if frothy, development: In 2009, venture capital investments fell to a 12-year low , according to a report by National Venture Capital Association and PricewaterhouseCoopers. “During the downturn, good companies just couldn’t get funding,” said John Frankel, a partner at ff Venture Capital. “But the pendulum has quickly swung back.” In 2010, venture capital investments rose for the first time in three years, to $21.8 billion. Frankel and other investors say that in recent months they’ve seen valuations for early-stage web startups jump to two or three times the level of the previous three years. “You’ve got a whole group of investors who missed out on Groupon and Facebook and really don’t want to miss out on the next big deal,” Ben Lerer, founder of the online men’s lifestyle network Thrillist and a partner at Lerer Ventures, told an audience at Bloomberg’s Empowered Entrepreneur conference in April. “There’s a lot of money out there,” Lerer added. (Lerer is the son of Ken Lerer, a cofounder of The Huffington Post.) Wall Street, too, has raced to get in on the flood of attention on Internet startups. Rather than waiting for high-flying tech companies like Facebook, Zynga or Twitter to go public, banks are piling into the private secondary markets in an attempt to cash in. (Aboard the Summit Series’ 14-story yacht) In January, Goldman Sachs invested $450 million in Facebook in a deal that valued the social network at $50 billion. Last week, Reuters reported that a group of Facebook shareholders is trying to offload $1 billion worth of shares on the private secondary market. The sale would value the social-networking giant at more than $70 billion. In February, JPMorgan Chase raised $1.22 billion for its Digital Growth Fund to invest exclusively in later-stage tech companies. The bank quickly purchased a 10 percent stake in Twitter, valuing the company at $4.5 billion. Companies that are selling stock through secondary markets are getting the economic benefits of going public without increasing disclosure, said Jim Anderson, the head of Silicon Valley Bank’s software, Internet and e-commerce division. “Valuations are just indicators,” Anderson added. For many web companies, he warned, “there’s real uncertainty about the revenue model.” The red-hot market for private company shares has drawn the attention of the Securities and Exchange Commission and led critics to call it a “shadow market” where investors are being kept in the dark about the companies they are buying into. Even as employees or VCs use secondary markets like SecondMarket or SharesPost to sell their stock, the companies themselves are not required by law to disclose detailed financial information. Historically, employees and early investors at successful tech startups were left holding valuable stock they couldn’t unload until an IPO or an acquisition. But secondary markets, their proponents say, free up capital by allowing employees and early investors at private tech companies to unload their stock before a public offering. At least some of this new cash is circulating back into the startup world. Armed with the expertise, money and interest, tech entrepreneurs-turned-investors are assisting and financing the current generation of startup founders. Some do it because investing in startups is more appealing than leaving cash in the bank or putting it in the stock market; some do it simply to stay plugged into the startup world. “You now have a wave of entrepreneurs who have founded companies, sold their stock, and are using the money to either start another company or reinvest in other startups,” said Frankel, the venture capitalist. THE SUMMIT COLLECTIVE “The Roots are about to take center stage for their final performance of the Summit Series,” blared a voice over the ship’s intercom. Moments later, crowds poured out onto the pool deck as a neon laser-light show pulsated across the boat’s stern. Three days of hyperactive networking mixed with champagne, extreme ocean sports and TED-style speeches by industry titans like Richard Branson and Google executive Jared Cohen had worn attendees down. But the celebration continued on through the night. Not until 6 a.m., when boat security ordered the crowds to disperse, did attendees finally return to their rooms. Summit’s final morning wasn’t the only time the ship’s security intervened in the festivities. Earlier in the trip, two tipsy attendees were detained and subsequently fined after jumping off the boat into the ocean. (The jump, a premeditated dare, did not result in any injuries.) For many, Summit felt more like a spring break getaway with friends than a business conference. Weeks before the jaunt, participants connected with friends and colleagues online using Summit’s private social network, dubbed “The Collective.” On the ship, they sported lanyards that carried their name and company and were provided with small plastic “e-toys” to swap virtual business cards. Yet many didn’t need identification. Attendees already knew fellow “Summiteers” from previous conferences or through business dealings. Summit’s collective is a microcosm for the startup world: a group of young, smart, mostly white males hailing from the East or West Coast who are intimately connected to the investment community either through exclusive social networks, late nights spent boozing at invite-only gatherings — or because they are active investors themselves. “I don’t remember seeing so many 27-year-old angel investors running around,” said one Summit attendee, who also noted that many attendees blurred the line between startup founders and startup investors. Though data on individual investors, also known as “angel investors,” is scarce, it is widely believed that the total number of angels and amount of angel investments has grown substantially in the past five years. (A panel at this year’s Summit Series) Part of the reason is individuals now have access to a wide array of resources that didn’t exist five years ago to learn the trade and to access deals, such as AngelList, an online networking service that matches entrepreneurs with investors. “The result is better and more reliable investors which is a huge benefit to entrepreneurs,” said James Geshwiler, founding chairman of CommonAngels, a Boston-based network of investors. And for the “in crowd” of entrepreneurs at Summit, there’s no shortage of opportunities. “It’s very different than it was a few years ago,” said Robby Walker, co-founder of Greplin, an Internet search tool that lets users search across their Facebook, LinkedIn and other personal Web services. “A few years ago, when you raised a Series A, investors did due diligence and lawyers got in involved. Now you do a convertible note over lunch.” Greplin raised $4 million during its first round of financing, or Series A, in February and now boasts a distinguished group of angels including Bret Taylor, the former CTO of Facebook; Paul Buchheit, co-founder of FriendFreed; and Christina Brodbeck, a design lead at YouTube. As cash piles up and today’s top entrepreneurs become pickier about whom they take money from, a new class system for investors is emerging. “We’re not just looking for money, we’re looking for someone to offer advice, networks and relationships,” said one tech entrepreneur at the Summit Series who spoke on the condition of anonymity. But, to some, stories of soaring valuations and seamless funding rounds are reminiscent of the late 1990s, when cash flooded the markets and set off a dot-com craze. That bubble burst in 2000, littering the tech field with failed companies and heavy losses. Yet many analysts say there are notable differences between the late-’90s boom and today’s Internet investment environment. For one, venture capital firms are investing considerably less capital than they were during the boom. Ben Horowitz, co-founder and general partner at venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, crunched the numbers and found that venture capital firms had invested $200 billion between 1998 and 2000. More dollars were invested in that single 3-year period than in total over the prior 18 years. Between 2008 and 2010, venture capital firms invested $90 billion, which is less than half the 1998-2000 level. “I remember 1999,” said email service ccLoop founder Michael Wolfe, who was previously the vice president of engineering at Kana , a web-based communications firm that went public in 1999 at a multibillion-dollar valuation. “Today’s valuations may be 20, 30 or 50 percent too high, but they’re nothing compared to the valuations we saw during the late-’90s bubble.” Those valuations, according to Wolfe, were around 10 times what they should have been. Horwitz and Wolfe are part of a growing chorus of analysts who view the current surge as more of a boom than a bubble. “I’m bullish on the fundamental’s of today’s Web startups,” said Wolfe. Internet businesses, he points out, can be built with substantially less capital than in the ’90s because technology costs have dropped precipitously, enabling entrepreneurs to develop products and bring them to market quicker and with fewer resources. During the late-’90s boom, investors placed bets on capital-intensive Internet companies that burned through cash quickly and took years to turn a profit. Some analysts also claim that today’s tech investors are a different, more discerning breed. “In the ’90s grandmas were investing in startups,” said Walker, Greplin’s founder. “Today it is trained professionals and people with intimate knowledge of the space backing these companies.” Valuations for most late-’90s dot-com rockets generally didn’t soar until after companies went public, after which money from the masses piled in. This exposed ordinary investors — the day-traders and giddy optimists -– to risk as they rushed to the public markets to buy up tech stocks, some technology investors say. Today, valuations for the hottest technology companies are soaring well before initial public offerings. These companies are waiting longer to go public, which keeps average investors from buying shares — U.S. securities law prohibits investments by individual investors who have less than $1 million in assets (or below $200,000 in annual income). “It’s not your cab driver buying shares in today’s tech startups. It’s fairly smart, sophisticated individuals. These private markets are restricted to people who are generally not foolish with their money,” said John Frankel. But this doesn’t mean there’s not a bubble. Supposedly sophisticated investors can be just as susceptible to frenzies as the general public. After all, paid professionals fueled the most recent housing bubble. But if there is a tech bubble today, presumably the average Joe won’t be directly affected when it bursts, some analysts believe. Bubble detractors also say that high valuations for today’s hottest Internet companies are not inflated because the market opportunity for digital media has become so large. Today, about one in three people are online, or roughly two billion global users, according to data from Internet World Stats , compared to 1999, when less than five percent of the global population used the Internet. Flush with cash and in the crosscurrents of several seemingly game-changing trends , the startup world is confident that tomorrow’s billion-dollar businesses are being built today. Thiel, in his keynote on the second day of the summit, offered some advice to an audience filled with entrepreneurs and investors. “One of the most important things Facebook did was never sell the company,” he said. That is the mantra echoing through the startup world right now: Don’t sell and stay private so you can maintain control of your company’s vision. If Summit’s attendees and the investors that floated in their wake are any indication, the world of soaring valuations, million-dollar funding rounds and lofty entrepreneurial hopes will, for now, remain invite-only. Disclosure: The reporter’s brother was involved in the creation of the Summit Series. He has not played a role in its organization since 2009.

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Richard (RJ) Eskow: Green Alert: Banks Use Bush Terror Team, Threat Tactics to Push Debit Card Fees

May 5, 2011

Big banks and credit card companies have made a PR misstep in the fight over debit card charges. They’re trying to use the Bush Administration’s anti-terror team to convince Americans that exorbitant debit card fees are needed for our nation’s security. The timing couldn’t be worse. Just as Bin Laden was being hunted down they decided to rely on the credibility of Michael Chertoff and Gen. Michael Hayden, two of the senior officials who failed to find him. It’s hard to imagine that somebody made a proposal for this campaign and somebody else gave it the green light. Attackers could strike the U.S. banking system, of course, either for criminal purposes or as a terrorist act. (I wrote a memo on the topic myself, in 1998.) But this campaign never suggests that any significant portion of U.S. debit card fees is being used to prevent cyber-attacks. Instead they use vague threats and insinuations to suggest that an attack could happen, and that we could be very, very sorry, if we don’t do as we’re told. Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Just think: For a few bucks more they could’ve hired Tom Ridge to issue an “orange alert.” Their strategy centered around a meeting called the “Visa Global Security Summit – Evolutions in Payment Security.” It should be noted that Visa has more than 60% of the entire U.S. debit card market and Mastercard had the lion’s share of the rest. This duopoly crushes all competition in this marketplace, which is the main reason credit unions and other normally trustworthy groups have been arm-twisted into supporting them on this issue. After, all, if you don’t play along with Visa and MasterCard, you don’t have anywhere else to go. (Free market, anyone?) Publicity around the “summit” centered on a “Live Data Breach Simulation” moderated by Gen. Michael V. Hayden of the Chertoff Group. Here’s what you need to know about Gen. Hayden: His greatest foray into information technology came when, as director of the NSA, he initiated what may be the largest software development failure in history. As the Baltimore Sun reported in 2006, “A program that was supposed to help the National Security Agency pluck out electronic data crucial to the nation’s safety is not up and running more than six years and $1.2 billion after it was launched … After an estimated $1.2 billion in development costs, only a few isolated analytical and technical tools have been produced, said an intelligence expert.” Gen. Hayden didn’t just waste a billion dollars of taxpayer money. His project’s delays and failures also endangered our national security, leaving our defenses weakened at a critical time. One can only hope that the Summit’s “live simulation” came in on time and on budget. An executive in private industry would have been fired for a debacle like Trailblazer. Instead Hayden eventually became CIA Director, after pushing hard throughout the Bush years to dismantle civil liberties and expand the warrantless wiretapping program. These two events aren’t unrelated, of course. Compliance can be more useful than competence, when a boss wants the right political answer and a subordinate can be depended on to give it. Hayden chose a time-honored, if cynical, road to career advancement. Mr. Chertoff’s path to becoming Secretary of Homeland Security is equally instructive. As Special Counsel for the “Senate Whitewater Committee,” Chertoff worked tirelessly (if fruitlessly) to prove that Bill and Hillary Clinton did something illegal, in the now-discredited “Whitewater Scandal,” then did some fundraising for the Bush campaign in 2000. He was rewarded for his service with a judgeship on the Third Court of Appeals. When Rudy Giuliani sidekick (and now convicted felon) Bernie Kerik was forced to step aside, Chertoff was further rewarded with an appointment to Homeland Security. These two gentlemen appear to share a certain – how shall we say it? – responsiveness to the needs and wishes of their superiors. Their shared history hardly lends credibility to the claim that high debit card fees are the only thing standing between our bank accounts and the bad guys. The crux of this PR campaign came with stories like this one from the Washington Post : “The Federal Reserve has proposed capping … interchange or “swipe fees,” depending on which side you’re on — at 7 to 12 cents per transaction. That would reduce banks’ revenue from the fees by about 75 percent … On Wednesday, the card industry said a massive cybersecurity data breach could … be the result.” The Post added: “Debit card fees help pay for banks and the networks that process the transactions, namely Visa and Mastercard, to combat fraud and identity theft.” True, but excessive debit card fees don’t. The Fed didn’t just decide to cut fees by 75 percent on a whim. The recommended rate for similar fees in Western Europe is 75 percent lower, and they’re presumably as concerned about cybersecurity as we are. On the other hand, it could be true that cybersecurity four times as much here as it does in Europe – that is, if Hayden is managing it. Just it case you didn’t get the point of the Summit, a panel was held on what was called “the Durbin Effect,” named after the Durbin Amendment restricting debit card fees. The panel was described this way: “Panelists will explore long-term issues stemming from this new law, specifically the potential to impact payment security. Will a reduction in financial institution debit card revenue reduce future innovations and investments in new technology or force them to create more efficiency through tighter transaction screening?” We’re willing to place bets on which conclusion the panel reached. There was another unfortunate coincidence of timing As the Summit was being held last week, the Pew Foundation released a report which slammed the banking industry for taking advantage of debit cards to hit its customers with excessive and deceptive overcharge fees. (There have been no panels suggesting that deceptive overdraft fees are also needed to protect us from cyberattacks … at least none yet.) With this cynical move, the banking and card industries have only reinforced the impression that they have no legitimate argument for these extraordinarily high fees. Americans have reasonably good memories, and they remember when some of the same high-profile individuals who appeared at the Summit used security threates to promote everything from the invasion of Iraq to the re-election of political partisans. For more background on the debit card charge issue, the work of Zach Carter & Ryan Grim and that of Mike Konczal , is extremely helpful. (We did an overview of the debit card debate ourselves in March and concluded that it has become Wall Street’s ” invisible tax .”) More perspective can be found in this Grim/Arthur Delaney piece on how banks exert their influence over Congress. And as Carter reported today , Republicans made headway today in their efforts to prevent the government from protecting consumers from a wide range of bank ripoffs. None of this should reflect negatively on the other participants in the Visa Security Summit, by the way. There are a lot of good professionals working in this field, and presumably they provided valuable technical perspective to the discussion. That presumably includes Visa’s senior executive for risk management, who provided the first keynote address for the event. Risk management is a complex field, and most people who have leadership roles have earned them. But Chertoff’s speech and Hayden’s staged event only served to remind us of those desperate days when cynics used our greatest threats, and our greatest fears, to advance their own self interest. In trying to scare us into submission, the banks and card companies may have just lost their case. Richard (RJ) Eskow, a consultant and writer (and former insurance/finance executive), is a Senior Fellow with the Campaign for America’s Future. This post was produced as part of the Curbing Wall Street project. Richard also blogs at A Night Light . He can be reached at “rjeskow@ourfuture.org.” Website: Eskow and Associates

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Kyle Westaway: The Top Four Startups At The Summit Series Conference

April 25, 2011

It’s been called “The Next TED” and “Davos for Generation Y.” President Bill Clinton has called it “A gift to the United States and the world.” But, honestly, the only way to describe the Summit Series is… Epic. Summit Series engages the world’s most dynamic dreamers and doers through curated events, such as this year’s Summit at Sea, in order to make the world a better place. The Summit Series team believes what’s good for business should be good for the world, and is working to inspire the millennial generation to redefine what success looks like in business and in life. To that end, earlier this month a boat carrying the next generation entrepreneurs, artists and activists set sail from Miami for a weekend of inspiration, connection and, of course, revelry. The weekend was filled with inspiring content from Richard Branson, Russell Simmons, Gary Vaynerchuck and Jaqueline Novogratz. The party was set to the music of The Roots, Imogen Heap, Pretty Lights, Axwell and Eclectic Method. You couldn’t wait in line for a drink at the bar without meeting a 20-30 something that is crushing it in their respective field. The atmosphere was very open, and every conversation was both humbling and inspiring. In the closing session one of the founders of the Summit Series said, “If you want to be a fast runner, spend time with sprinters.” Well, in the world of entrepreneurship and social good, this boat was full of world-class sprinters. Out of this group there were four exceptionally innovative startups from members of the Summit Series community that have the potential to be incredibly disruptive… in a good way. SKILLSHARE What is Skillshare? from Skillshare on Vimeo . The learning revolution is on! Skillshare is redefining what an education is by challenging the assumption that learning only occurs within the four walls of a classroom. Skillshare is a platform to learn anything, from anyone. Think of it as the “Etsy for Learning”. Want to learn how to compost food, win at scrabble, or bake the perfect cupcake from the folks at Magnolia Bakery? You’ll be able to take a class on these interesting topics through the Skillshare community. Skillshare is flipping the traditional notion of education on its head and democratize learning by tapping into existing communities and networks, which we believe are the world’s largest universities. Skillshare is in Beta. THE ADVENTURE PROJECT What’s the best way to create access to water in rural India, clean cookstoves to Haiti, or irrigation in Uganda? The Adventure Project believes it’s by encouraging investment in social entrepreneurs in the developing world. Rather than giving charity, which is so often ineffective, inefficient and destructive, The Adventure Project seeks to empower local entrepreneurs on the ground to meet the biggest challenges in their community. The Adventure Project accesses microphilanthropy — donations of $100 or less — from their grassroots network of donors in America and invests those donations in innovative, low cost solutions in developing communities across the globe. Every quarter they focus on a different project. The Adventure Project transforms philanthropy into investment. The vision is simple. The Adventure Project believes that we can end extreme poverty in our lifetime by reinventing how we give. Ways that spur economic opportunity, promote dignity and save lives. The Adventure Project launched in December 2010. Check them out at http://theadventureproject.org ZAARLY Zaarly Introduction from Team Zaarly on Vimeo . Say you’re on a deadline at the office and you’re totally craving Chicken Tikka Masala from that one Indian restaurant across town, but there’s no way you can get out to grab it. You think to yourself, “Man, I’d pay $30 to get that Tikka Masala right now.” Well, that’s exactly what Zaarly does. Zaarly is a proximity based, real-time buyer powered market. Buyers make an offer for an immediate need and sellers cash in on an infinite marketplace for items and services they never knew were for sale. It’s the perfect marketplace to facilitate division of labor, so that users can spend their time focusing on the best use of their time. Additionally, it’s creating a solution to the languishing unemployment problem. Anybody can run errands in their free time and make a decent amount of money. Zaarly is in stealth mode. BRE.AD Do we really need another link shortener? That was my initial thought when I heard about bre.ad. But Bre.ad is the first innovator in this space because its patented technology enables users to promote their personal brands and causes. Here’s how it works: say you send me a link to a Harvard Business Review article. When I click on the link I will be directed to a 5 second billboard of your choosing, perhaps a page promoting Pencils of Promise, then it will automatically take you to the HBR article. The first bre.ad link was used by Lady Gaga to promote her new album on Twitter and Facebook. The company is working with online personalities, brands and charities to help them gain more exposure across social media while letting their audiences know what they care about most. Bre.ad is currently in stealth mode To sign up for their beta, visit http://bre.ad These four startups are changing the way we learn, give, share and get stuff done. But there are sure to be more innovative startups coming out of conversations that happened at the Summit at Sea. With all the talent, ambition, positive vibes, great music and inspiration on the ship, there’s sure to be dreamers and doers that are bold enough to ask the question, “What if…?” Whatever the answer to that question is, the world is bound to be a better place because of it.

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Sebastian Lindstrom: Summit at Sea: Breeding Collaboration and Breaking Down Convention

April 21, 2011

At a spring break on steroids, where “every one of you is a Clark Kent,” Barack Obama’s philanthropic adviser was in search of the future. Summit co-founder Justin Cohen told the crowd that his team had “created a social sculpture.” Their proverbial clay consisted of 950 hyperactive people, three out of five of them male, most based out of four main U.S. hubs: New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. Alongside a hyperawareness of advertising slogans, attendees embraced the music/video/light performances, free-flowing alcohol, beer-fueled panel discussions and elite networking interactions. This cruise, with its Twitter hashtag #SASea , became the world’s epicenter for innovation as Summiteers focused on being true to who they were, with or without chocolate-coated mushrooms. My Indian friend Nitin tweeted the day after arriving back to shore that “apparently the one place where random guy with glow-stick spanks a VC is #SASea .” Summit at Sea , the latest in the Summit Series , was about creating a space that would breed collaboration and break down convention. The Summit team’s mottos: travel, friends/family, work on something meaningful and don’t be recognizable. Their rules of engagement: if you wanna play with us, you gotta be a kid; if it’s not fun, it doesn’t count; start the conversation being excited and passionate. Andr

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4th China Leasing Summit 2011 To Focus On Liquidity, Sustainability And Localised Strategy

April 5, 2011

4th China Leasing Summit 2011 To Focus On Liquidity, Sustainability And Localised Strategy

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The Third China Green Building Summit 2011 To Focus On Sustainable And Responsible Growth

April 5, 2011

The Third China Green Building Summit 2011 To Focus On Sustainable And Responsible Growth

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Portugal Unlikely To Seek EU Bailout Package

March 24, 2011

LISBON/BRUSSELS – The resignation of Portugal’s prime minister will dominate a summit of EU leaders on the European economy on Thursday and Friday, with pressure intense on Lisbon to seek a bailout package. Prime Minister Jose Socrates resigned on Wednesday after parliament rejected his government’s latest austerity measures aimed at avoiding EU financial assistance. But he said he would still attend the two-day summit in a caretaker capacity. Socrates remains adamantly opposed to requesting EU/IMF aid and has made it clear he intends to hold that line, at least until a new Portuguese government is formed in the weeks ahead. That leaves Portugal in limbo, but the likelihood remains that a bailout will have to be taken in the end. Asked if Socrates would ask for aid at the summit, a senior EU official said: “I would be surprised. There is a doubt on whether he has any mandate right now to do so … But I would not rule out.” Lisbon needs to refinance 4.5 billion euros of sovereign debt in April, which may prove a trigger for finally making the request for aid. One problem complicating Portugal’s situation is that any bailout request would have to be approved by parliament and the majority is opposed to asking for help. “I have always warned of the profoundly negative consequences of seeking foreign aid,” Socrates said as he resigned, vowing to continue to do everything to avoid it. If aid were to be requested — and EU officials have made clear they stand ready to provide one — it is estimated that Lisbon would need 60-80 billion euros. Portuguese benchmark 10-year bond yields rose further on Thursday, climbing to 7.90 percent, far above the 7.0 percent that is regarded as long-term sustainable. The euro weakened to $1.4070 from $1.4117. China, which has offered to buy Portuguese government debt in the past, said it saw continued risks from the euro zone debt crisis but added that it had increased its holdings of European government bonds to help the region. SUMMIT PROBLEMS The summit, which was originally expected to sign off on a “comprehensive package” of measures that EU leaders thought would help resolve their year-long debt problems, is now not expected to take any firm decisions on central issues. “We think that no agreement at the EU summit on the bailout facilities should erode euro support further in the near term,” said Valentin Marinov, currency analyst at CitiFX. Draft conclusions drawn up ahead of the summit showed that a decision on how to increase the effective lending capacity of the current bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, would not now be taken until mid-year, probably ahead of a summit in late June. While a technical issue — it centers on whether euro zone member states will provide capital or guarantees to raise the effective capacity of the EFSF from 250 billion euros to the full 440 billion — it risks further undermining market confidence in EU policymakers’ ability to resolve the crisis. Finland is one of the main obstacles to a decision, since it has dissolved parliament ahead of elections on April 17 and cannot therefore sign off on a deal. Helsinki opposes using more guarantees to increase the effective size of the EFSF. A new Finnish government is only likely to be formed by May at the earliest, and that government may include the euroskeptic True Finns party, which opposes some of the EU’s proposed crisis steps, further complicating the outlook. Over the last few months, EU leaders have made considerable progress in putting together the crisis package. They have decided in principle to expand the EFSF, agreed to create a permanent crisis fund — the European Stability Mechanism — to replace the EFSF from 2013, and agreed to strengthen economic coordination and increase productivity. But as well as being unable to agree on exactly how the EFSF’s capacity should be increased, there are doubts about how they will finance the 500 billion euro ESM using paid-in capital, callable capital and guarantees. A German official said on Wednesday that Berlin now wanted this week’s summit to alter a timetable agreed by EU finance ministers on Monday for injecting cash into the ESM. While this is another nitty-gritty issue, it contributes to a sense in financial markets that EU member states are endlessly at odds over how best to handle the debt crisis, and that everything could yet unravel. NO MOVE ON IRELAND The summit is also unlikely to make progress on reducing the interest rate on bailout loans extended to Ireland. Dublin says the rate is so high that it cripples the Irish economy, but agreement on cutting it has been held up by Dublin’s refusal to give in to German and French pressure for Ireland to raise its low corporate tax rate. “There is almost certainly not going to be a resolution of the Irish issues tomorrow or Friday,” an EU diplomat said on Wednesday. “The feeling is that the outstanding issues for Ireland, which are not just the interest rate but the banking question, that they are better dealt with as a package.” Dublin and the EU are only expected to start detailed talks on how to rescue the Irish banking system after the central bank publishes its assessment of Irish commercial banks on March 31. (Editing by Mike Peacock) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Euro Traders’ Confidence to be Put to the Test after EU Summit

March 12, 2011

Euro Traders’ Confidence to be Put to the Test after EU Summit

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Euro At Crossroads Ahead Of EU Summit, Australian Dollar Reversal To Slow Ahead Of 100-Day SMA

March 10, 2011

Euro At Crossroads Ahead Of EU Summit, Australian Dollar Reversal To Slow Ahead Of 100-Day SMA

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Euro Moves Higher Against the Greenback as EU Summit Eyed

March 8, 2011

Euro Moves Higher Against the Greenback as EU Summit Eyed

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Forex: Dollar Steady through NFPs, Traders Now Look to Fed Chatter, Rates, Risk and EU Summit

March 5, 2011

Forex: Dollar Steady through NFPs, Traders Now Look to Fed Chatter, Rates, Risk and EU Summit

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FOREX: Markets to Look Past UK Retail Sales, Focus on G20 Summit

February 18, 2011

FOREX: Markets to Look Past UK Retail Sales, Focus on G20 Summit

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2nd China Safe And Sustainable Packaging Summit 2011 To Be Held In March In Hangzhou

December 30, 2010

2nd China Safe And Sustainable Packaging Summit 2011 To Be Held In March In Hangzhou

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2nd China International Medical Device Summit 2011 To Be Held In January in Beijing

December 29, 2010

2nd China International Medical Device Summit 2011 To Be Held In January in Beijing

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Video: Shaich Says Recession Didn’t Really Affect Panera Bread: Video

November 19, 2010

Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) — Ronald Shaich, chairman and founder of Panera Bread Co., talks about the performance of the company’s restaurants. Shaich talks with Carol Massar at the MIT Sloan CFO Summit in Boston on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Shaich Says Recession Didn’t Really Affect Panera Bread: Video

November 19, 2010

Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) — Ronald Shaich, chairman and founder of Panera Bread Co., talks about the performance of the company’s restaurants. Shaich talks with Carol Massar at the MIT Sloan CFO Summit in Boston on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Steve Grossman Expects `More Active’ State Treasurers

November 19, 2010

Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) — Massachusetts State Treasurer-Elect Steve Grossman talks about the outlook for his tenure in that position and the prospects for President Barack Obama’s re-election in 2012. Grossman talks with Carol Massar at the MIT Sloam CFO Summit in Boston on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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FOREX: Euro Gains on Irish Bailout Bets, EU Summit Eyed for Details

November 18, 2010

FOREX: Euro Gains on Irish Bailout Bets, EU Summit Eyed for Details

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Five Ways New Technologies Are Changing Stores And Shopping

November 17, 2010

At last year’s annual WWD Apparel & Retail CEO Summit, the talk was all about recession and inventory control. But at this year’s gathering in New York, the assembled execs buzzed about technology. Now that retailers seem to be moving out of crisis mode, they’re back to investing in new bells and whistles for their stores and websites.

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Video: Orlins Says China Moving Toward Consumption-Led Economy

November 12, 2010

Nov. 12 (Bloomberg) — Stephen Orlins, president of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations, discusses U.S. relations with China and the outcome of the Group of 20 leaders summit in Seoul. President Barack Obama attacked China’s policy of undervaluing its currency minutes after the summit ended. The G-20 failed to agree on a remedy for trade and investment distortions. Orlins speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Obama Joke Inspires ‘Slurpee Unity Tour’

November 11, 2010

Is President Barack Obama willing to risk Slurpee brainfreeze as he grapples with political gridlock? A strange but real possibility. The president’s campaign-trail attack on Republicans as Slurpee-sipping do-nothings boomeranged on him the day after the GOP won the House majority in last week’s midterm elections. He was asked if he would have likely House Speaker John Boehner over for the slushy 7-Eleven staple, and the White House meeting next week with Congressional leaders was jokingly dubbed the “Slurpee Summit.” No word yet on whether the nation’s most powerful elected officials will actually be sipping Goji Berry Cherry Slurpees when discussing tax cuts on Nov. 18. But the Slurpee sellers at 7-Eleven are giddily taking advantage of the golden marketing opportunity with a “Slurpee Unity Tour” now zigzagging across the country to Washington. The Slurpee is ready for its close-up, even if the president and Congress might not be. “The more people that drink Slurpees, the happier we are,” said 7-Eleven spokeswoman Margaret Chabris. “Republicans, Democrats, independents, tea partiers, whoever.” Discussion about this Slurpee Moment usually comes with tongues planted firmly in chilly cheeks, which makes sense. Though Slurpee’s place in the pop culture pantheon is secure, it’s not necessarily exalted. The drink, with its funny-sounding name and corner store pedigree, is more the stuff of punch lines than political discourse. Slurpee got a name check in “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” during an expletive-laced argument touching on ethnic stereotypes. More famously, slushy drinks are spoofed on “The Simpsons” as the “squishee,” sold by Apu at the Kwik-E-Mart as something to wash down sketchy hot dogs. And getting a “slushie” to the face is an ever-present hazard for the singing and dancing high schoolers on “Glee.” In “Planes, Trains and Automobiles,” John Candy’s oafish shower curtain-ring salesman memorably offers a Slurpee to the tightly wound Steve Martin character as he tries to make up for stealing Martin’s cab. Candy: “Some tea?” Martin: “No.” Candy: “Lifesavers?” Martin: “No.” Candy: “Slurpee?” Martin (annoyed): “Sir, please!” Pop-culture critic Chuck Klosterman says that image makes the Slurpee seem an odd fit for a political summit. “The lack of seriousness comes from this premise of: Who do you imagine typically buying a Slurpee in a given circumstance?” said Klosterman, author of “Eating the Dinosaur.” “It’s sort of what a teenager buys with two corn dogs because they only have five dollars.” Obama seems to have played on that perception on the stump before the midterm elections. Obama would liken the Democrats’ efforts on the economy to trying to get a car out of a ditch – with Republicans standing on the side fanning themselves and sipping a Slurpee. The Slurpee-Obama connection was reinforced the day after Republicans retook the House on Nov. 2. A reporter asked Obama whether he was going to have Boehner over for a Slurpee. Amused by the phrase “Slurpee Summit,” Obama replied, “I might serve … they’re delicious drinks.” Just another milestone to Slurpee history. The drink’s origins date to the late `50s, when a Kansas hamburger joint owner named Omar Knedlik served soft drinks from a freezer after his soda fountain broke down. Customers liked the slushy sodas and that led to the development of a special drink machine. A 7-Eleven representative, who later noticed a machine making “Icees” in a Texas store, tested them in the convenience chain in 1965. They were a hit. The machines were widespread in 7-Eleven stores two years later when the company renamed the drink Slurpee. (The inspiration for the name is obvious to anyone who has ever sipped a Slurpee through a straw.) 7-Eleven claims that more than 6 billion Slurpee drinks have been sold during the past 45 years in a rainbow of flavors, from Fulla Bulla to Jolly Rancher and Bruisin’ Berry. Still, it’s a longshot that the “Slurpee Summit” will go down in the history books as one of those momentous meetings with catchy nicknames like the “Kitchen Debate” between Vice President Richard Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in 1959. More likely, it will be seen as on par with Obama’s “beer summit” last year. That meeting at the White House among Obama, a black Harvard scholar and the white police sergeant who arrested him after a confrontation featured Obama sipping Bud Light and his guests drinking other brands. Still, the mere mention of “Slurpee Summit” was enough to prompt 7-Eleven executives to launch its multi-city “Unity Tour” from Dallas last week, complete with Slurpee trailers dispensing red, white and blue Slurpees, along with a special “Purple for the People” flavor. 7-Eleven offered to cater the summit and/or install Slurpee machines in the White House and for Congress. They have not heard back, but no matter. 7-Eleven will host its own summit in Washington that day, offering Slurpees for the masses. “We simply had to act,” said Laura Gordon, senior brand director for Slurpee and the company’s other big-name drink, the Big Gulp. “So this is a great opportunity for the Slurpee brand, but I think this is a more important opportunity to make a broader statement, which is this is just about having a good time and bringing people together.” It’s all in fun, though at least one branding expert thinks 7-Eleven’s marketing efforts will have the staying power of a Slurpee left in the sun. Rob Frankel, author of “The Revenge of Brand X,” said there is just such a deluge of information out there it’s hard for something like this to catch on with the public. “What are they going to do?” Frankel asked. “Are they going to dress up and look like John Boehner all of the sudden?”

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easy-forex® exhibiting at The Middle East Online Trading Summit & Awards 2010

November 3, 2010

easy-forex® exhibiting at The Middle East Online Trading Summit & Awards 2010

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FxPulp to Participate in Middle East Online Trading Summit & Awards 2010

October 29, 2010

FxPulp to Participate in Middle East Online Trading Summit & Awards 2010

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FxPulp to Participate in Middle East Online Trading Summit & Awards 2010

October 29, 2010

FxPulp to Participate in Middle East Online Trading Summit & Awards 2010

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FOREX: US Dollar Tumbles as Focus Returns to Fed QE After G20 Summit

October 25, 2010

FOREX: US Dollar Tumbles as Focus Returns to Fed QE After G20 Summit

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Bloomberg convenes top financial minds at Asia Hedge Funds Summit

October 6, 2010

Bloomberg convenes top financial minds at Asia Hedge Funds Summit

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Video: Jim Davidson Sees Pickup in Technology Acquisitions: Video

September 30, 2010

Sept. 30 (Bloomberg) — Jim Davidson, co-founder and co-chief executive officer of Silver Lake, discusses the outlook for investing in technology companies and the prospects for mergers and acquisitions in the industry. Davidson speaks with Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness With Margaret Brennan” from the Bloomberg Dealmakers Summit in New York. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Euro Halts Three-Day Rally Following G20 Summit, British Pound Bounces Back

June 28, 2010

Euro Halts Three-Day Rally Following G20 Summit, British Pound Bounces Back

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Indonesia to host Green Investments Summit 2010

May 17, 2010

Indonesia to host Green Investments Summit 2010

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EU to Set Up Emergency Fund to Defend Euro, Halt Spread of Greek Crisis

May 7, 2010

By James G. Neuger and Gregory Viscusi May 8 (Bloomberg) — European leaders agreed to set up an emergency fund to halt the spread of Greece’s fiscal woes, seeking to prevent a sovereign debt crisis from shattering confidence in the 11-year-old euro. Jolted into action by the sliding currency and soaring bond yields in Portugal and Spain, leaders of the 16 euro countries said the workings of the financial backstop will be hammered out before the markets open on May 10. “We will defend the euro, whatever it takes,” European Commission President Jose Barroso told reporters early today after the leaders met in Brussels. Europe’s failure to contain Greece’s fiscal crisis triggered a 4.3 percent drop in the euro this week and led the U.S. and Asia to rally around in a bid to prevent a global sovereign-debt crisis from pitching the world back into a recession. European officials declined to disclose the size of the stabilization fund, to be made up of money borrowed by the European Union’s central authorities with guarantees by national governments. Finance ministers will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Brussels to flesh out the details. “When the markets re-open Monday, we will have in place a mechanism to defend the euro,” French President Nicolas Sarkozy said. “If you don’t think that’s significant, you haven’t been to many EU summits.” Independent ECB Barroso said he wouldn’t push the independent European Central Bank to, for example, buy government bonds. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet accelerated the market selloff on May 6 by rejecting that measure. With the euro facing its stiffest test since its debut in 1999, the summit — called to discuss longer-term efforts to coordinate economic policies — turned into a crisis-management session that dragged past midnight. The euro slid to $1.2715 from $1.3293 during the week, and is down 15 percent since late November. European stocks sank the most in 18 months, with the Stoxx Europe 600 Index tumbling 8.8 percent to 237.18. The extra yield that investors demand to hold Greek, Portuguese and Spanish debt instead of safer German bonds rose to euro-era highs yesterday. The premium on 10-year government bonds jumped as high as 973 basis points for Greece, 354 basis points for Portugal and 173 basis points for Spain. Spreading Contagion Europe came under pressure on a hastily arranged conference call of Group of Seven finance chiefs yesterday. All agreed on “the need for a clear, timely and strong response,” Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty , who chaired the call, told reporters in Ottawa. “We hope to see a strong, early policy response in Europe.” The spreading contagion also drew the attention of President Barack Obama , who said in Washington that U.S. regulators will examine the “unusual market activity” that on May 6 briefly drove the Dow Jones Industrial Average down by almost 1,000 points, erasing more than $1 trillion in wealth before the market bounced back. In Brussels, German Chancellor Angela Merkel stepped up German calls for a closer monitoring of government finances and more rigorous enforcement of the deficit-limitation rules, originally drafted by Germany in the 1990s. Europe will send “a very clear signal against those who want to speculate against the euro,” Merkel said. Credit-Rating Authority With the euro region’s overall deficit forecast at 6.6 percent of gross domestic product in 2010 and 6.1 percent in 2011, the vow to bring budget shortfalls back below the euro’s 3 percent limit echoes promises that have been regularly broken ever since governments in 1999 set a three-year deadline for achieving balanced budgets. Plans for a European credit-rating authority are already under consideration at the EU Commission, the bloc’s Brussels- based executive agency. It also is investigating whether ratings companies such as Standard & Poor’s wield too much power over investors’ perceptions of governments. Asked whether steps to stem speculation against government bonds would include restrictions on short sales or credit default swaps, Barroso said “some of the points you have mentioned will be contemplated.” The political leadership of the $12 trillion economy also signed off on a 110 billion-euro ($140 billion) aid package for Greece negotiated by finance ministers last week. So far nine governments have cleared the way for funds to be sent to Athens. Biggest Contributor Germany, the biggest contributor with as much as 22.4 billion euros over three years, fell in line yesterday with endorsements in the lower and upper houses of parliament. A group of German academics filed a lawsuit to try to halt the payout. A day after whisking a three-year, 30 billion-euro program of deficit cuts through parliament, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou ruled out further belt-tightening steps for the time being, saying the point of the summit was to “reaffirm our confidence in our economies and our common currency and this I believe is a very important message for the global economic recovery.” Europe’s unprecedented lending pledge has “proven insufficient to stop market contagion to the rest of the euro- zone periphery,” Michael Saunders and other economists at Citigroup Inc. said in an e-mailed note before the summit. “Different kinds of solutions are necessary to fix the underlying problems of the rest of the euro periphery other than Greek-style packages, and these are unlikely to come in the very short term.” To contact the reporters on this story: James G. Neuger in Brussels at jneuger@bloomberg.net ; Gregory Viscusi in Brussels at gviscusi@bloomberg.net .

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Vivian Norris de Montaigu: Microcredit Summit in Kenya and Redemption

April 16, 2010

There is not much to add to this fabulous email I received from Sam Daley-Harris of the Microcredit Summit, except to say that it is not only in the “developing world” (I really hate that term) that we need “Redemption” … Wall Street could learn something from the poorest of the poor! Read on! And for more background you can read my previous HuffPost piece: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/vivian-norris-de-montaigu/microfinance-as-a-solutio_b_217216.html “….In my opening ceremony remarks I asked you to use this Summit to re-inspire yourselves. I asked you to re-commit to your most profound vision of microfinance for your institution, your country and the world. Some people have come up to me and said that this Summit has been a life-changing experience for them. Others have said it was the best microfinance conference they have ever attended. I am sure there are others who might not have had such an extraordinary experience. But the question I want to ask each of you is this one: Has this Summit caused you to change your thinking about what is possible? Was there anything you previously saw as impossible that you now see as possible? Do you see new possibilities with microfinance and agriculture or microfinance and the environment that you hadn’t seen before? Do you see new possibilities with microfinance and health or microfinance and peace building that you hadn’t seen before? Do you now see that it is possible to reach and empower beggars, thieves, and prostitutes and you had never seen that possibility before? If that kind of change has occurred for you then this Summit has been a resounding success. Here is how I have changed as a result of this Summit. I now see that the spiritual dimension of microfinance, the redemptive dimension of microfinance as central to my vision for the field. The technical side is important, but only if it serves the transformational dimension. In my opening ceremony speech I spoke about the gang member known as “the general” whose life had been transformed. I said that there are many vision for microfinance including this one: microfinance for redemption. The dictionary defines redemption as restoring one’s honor and worth, setting one free. It was at this Summit that I realized that there might be many visions for microfinance, but my vision for the field is redemption. Wednesday morning Ingrid Munro introduced us to Wilson Maina who was one of the most wanted criminals in Mathare Valley slum in Nairobi. Wilson said he would rather die from a policeman’s bullet than die a slow, slow death from hunger and that was why he turned to crime. But a member of Jamii Bora’s staff saw a better life for Wilson and helped him see a better life for himself. Over a one year period Wilson saved $10, none of it from stealing, and then received a $20 loan. Wilson now has four businesses and has convinced hundreds of youth to get out of crime. How is that for a return on investment? He has convinced hundreds of youth to get out of crime. It might not be the return on investment some investors want, but it is the return on investment that communities need and the return on investment that the world needs. The world’s poor need this kind of redemption–redemption that restores people honor and worth. And here is another kind of transformation the world also needs–that we see people whom we had previously seen as the problem instead as the solution. The world needs us to change our thinking. I hope that like me, this Summit has brought profound changes in thinking for you too–changes in thinking that will bring changes in action.” Sam Daley-Harris, Director Microcredit Summit Campaign 750 First Street, NE, Suite 1040 Washington, DC 20002

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Obama Urges Nations to `Summon the Will’ to Confront Nuclear-Terror Threat

April 13, 2010

By Roger Runningen and Julianna Goldman April 13 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama urged world leaders today to confront the prospect of nuclear terrorism and take concrete action to head off what he called one of the greatest threats to global security. Obama opened today’s session of his nuclear security summit in Washington with a call for a new approach that recognizes the changed nature of the nuclear threat. “Two decades after the end of the Cold War, we face a cruel irony of history — the risk of a nuclear confrontation between nations has gone down, but the risk of a nuclear attack has gone up,” Obama said. That requires “we summon the will, as nations, as partners, to do what this moment in history demands,” he said. Representatives and heads of state from 47 nations are gathered for a second day to come up with a plan of action for locking down global nuclear stockpiles within four years. Obama has said the most significant security threat is the potential for al-Qaeda or other terrorist groups to acquire the materials for developing a nuclear weapon through theft or illicit sales. The United Nations atomic energy agency has documented 18 cases of theft or loss of highly enriched uranium or plutonium, not counting incidents that individual countries haven’t confirmed, according to Matthew Bunn , an associate professor at Harvard University who once worked as an adviser on U.S. nuclear controls. Al-Qaeda’s Goal “Al-Qaeda has been engaged in the effort to acquire a nuclear weapon for over 15 years, and its interest remains strong today,” John Brennan , Obama’s adviser on counterterrorism and homeland security, said at a briefing yesterday. Obama got the first concrete result from the summit yesterday with the announcement that Ukraine will relinquish its entire stockpile of highly enriched uranium and convert research reactors to use lower-grade fuel. Ukraine will dispose of roughly 90 kilograms of the uranium, “enough to construct several nuclear weapons,” and convert nuclear research reactors to use lower grade fuel, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said. Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper , who is in Washington for the summit, separately announced his country will send spent highly enriched uranium to the U.S. for processing to make it unusable for a weapon. Commitments Gareth Evans , a former Australian foreign minister who is co-chairman of the International Commission on Nuclear non- Proliferation and Disarmament , said he expects the communiqué from the summit to commit each country to take steps toward securing stockpiles and include support for ratifying various international agreements that have been stalled. Neither the summit nor the resulting statement will deal with radiological materials used for so-called dirty bombs, nor the disputed issue of recycling fuel already used in reactors for further use, he said.     “I think we all do anticipate that the summit will leave a substantial amount of unfinished business that will need strong, continued attention,” Evans said. Two potentially high-risk sources of illicit nuclear materials, Iran and North Korea, weren’t invited to the summit and aren’t specifically part of the agenda. Source while Iran isn’t known to have succeeded in enriching uranium to weapons grade, its suspected support for militant groups raises the specter that it ultimately also might slip material to terrorist allies, said Robert Gallucci , a former U.S. special envoy on the spread of missiles and nuclear weapons.      In North Korea, Kim Jong-Il’s government has plutonium and said last year that it has almost succeeded in developing highly enriched uranium.      “We should not limit our concern about the nuclear programs in Iran and North Korea to their acquisition of nuclear weapons,” said Gallucci, now president of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation , which supports projects to reduce the risk of nuclear weapons.     Tracing material back to its source may be difficult and even tracking movement of nuclear supplies across the globe presents challenges, Gallucci said. He cited North Korea’s suspected role in helping Syria construct a nuclear reactor that the Israelis bombed in September 2007.    “To the best of my knowledge, the United States government was surprised to learn that the North Koreans were building a plutonium-production reactor in Syria,” Gallucci said. “That tells me that, if we are looking for relatively small amounts of material, we should not expect to catch that movement.” The U.S. president announced that the next nuclear security summit will be held in 2012 in South Korea. To contact the reporters on this story: Roger Runningen in Washington at rrunningen@bloomberg.net ; Julianna Goldman in Washington at Jgoldman6@bloomberg.net .

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UK 2010 Budget Report and the European Union Summit

March 27, 2010

UK 2010 Budget Report and the European Union Summit

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UK 2010 Budget Report and the European Union Summit

March 27, 2010

UK 2010 Budget Report and the European Union Summit

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Europe Ahead: Eyes Remain on the EU Summit Decisions

March 26, 2010

Europe Ahead: Eyes Remain on the EU Summit Decisions

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Thoughts from a Recent Meeting on Distressed Commercial Real …

February 13, 2010

Thoughts from a Recent Meeting on Distressed Commercial Real … by on February 13, 2010. I attended the Tampa Distressed Real Estate Summit in Tampa yesterday. Go here to see the original: Thoughts from a Recent Meeting on Distressed …

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EU Leaders Meet to Hammer Out Greek Aid Package Before Summit in Brussels

February 11, 2010

By James G. Neuger Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) — Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou met his French and German counterparts today as they hammer out what may be a precedent-setting aid package for Greece at a European Union summit in Brussels. Germany and France set the stage for the meeting by working on options such as loan guarantees as long as Papandreou overcomes street protests and makes deeper cuts to the EU’s biggest budget deficit. The International Monetary Fund may participate in the EU-led plan, German Vice Chancellor Guido Westerwelle said today. “We will stand by Greece politically, there’s no doubt about that,” Westerwelle told reporters in Berlin. “But the German taxpayer can’t offer a blank check for Greece.” Greek bonds extended their rally after the biggest gains since at least 1998 yesterday. The yield on the 10-year security fell 12 basis points to 5.89 percent. That left Greek yields 267 basis points above German levels, the smallest spread since Jan. 19, yet more than double the 108 basis points on Aug. 8, 2009. The gains raised the risk of a selloff if the 27-nation bloc fails to send a convincing signal of support for Greece after leaders spent weeks denying they would need to rescue the country. “Markets could try to test such a commitment,” said Carsten Brzeski , an economist at ING Group in Brussels. “Markets would probably be enthusiastic at first glance, but at second glance there might be people trying to check how strong this commitment was.” Snow Delay The summit, which was delayed because of snow, is scheduled to start at 12 p.m. local time and will also be attended by European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet . The euro, which has weakened 9 percent since the start of December, strengthened today to $1.3759 as of 11:38 a.m. in Brussels from $1.3737 yesterday. Called by EU President Herman Van Rompuy to sketch out a 10-year economic strategy, the summit has turned into a crisis- management exercise that will test Europe’s ability to run a common currency with 16 separate national fiscal policies. For that reason, EU officials have resisted putting Greece in the sole hands of the IMF , concerned that recourse to outside assistance would expose Europe’s inability to get its own house in order. Investors might view an IMF-led package “as a sign that the European institutions had failed,” Ben May , an economist at Capital Economics in London, said in a research note. “This could cast doubt on the long-term future of the euro zone.” Options Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk , who country is not in the currency area, said the EU’s options include bilateral assistance and issuing eurobonds “to raise capital for a special aid fund for countries in crisis.” The U.K. has indicated it won’t contribute funds to any Greek bailout. Greece, representing 2.7 percent of the bloc’s $13 trillion economy, posted a budget deficit of 12.7 percent of gross domestic product in 2009, the highest in the euro’s 11-year history and more than four times the EU’s 3 percent limit. Papandreou’s government needs to sell 53 billion euros ($73 billion) of debt this year, the equivalent of about 20 percent of GDP. Greece’s credit rating was cut by Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings in December. The euro’s slide to a nine-month low of $1.3586 on Feb. 5 forced Greece to the top of the EU agenda out of concern that speculators might take aim at Spain and Portugal, which are also struggling to cut their deficits. Distance The EU needed to act to calm exaggerated fears in the markets, a French official told reporters late yesterday. Spanish Finance Minister Elena Salgado distanced Spain’s fiscal woes from Greece’s, saying “whatever is said today will be very specifically aimed at Greece.” Greece said yesterday that spending cuts started to take hold in January, narrowing the central government’s cash shortfall to 818 million euros in January from 1.3 billion euros a year earlier. Belt-tightening measures “will be implemented in every detail,” Papandreou told reporters in Paris yesterday. Papandreou met German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy along with Van Rompuy in Brussels before the summit started, a European official said. Rompuy also had a session with European Commission President Jose Barroso , Trichet and Spanish Prime Minister Jose Zapatero , who holds the EU’s rotating presidency. Lifeline Whether from individual countries or the EU as a whole, a financial lifeline for Greece would open a new chapter in the euro experiment by breaking with the orthodoxy that each country has to steer its own economy. Germany will demand “tough pre-conditions” on any rescue package, Markus Ferber , a member of Merkel’s bloc in the European Parliament , said yesterday after contacts with federal officials. EU treaties bar the ECB or national central banks from bailing out members countries through buying their debt or offering loans, while rules on government-to-government support are more ambiguous. One clause in the Lisbon Treaty, a rulebook adopted last year after almost a decade of haggling, permits EU financial aid for a country in “severe difficulties caused by natural disasters or exceptional occurrences beyond its control.” All options are under consideration, including a standing facility to provide credit guarantees as part of a mix of national and EU measures, an EU official told reporters in Brussels. To contact the reporter on this story: James G. Neuger in Brussels at jneuger@bloomberg.net

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An Insider�s View of the Real Estate Train Wreck

February 11, 2010

The first time I spoke with real estate entrepreneur Andy Miller was in late 2007, when I asked him to serve on the faculty of a Casey Research Summit. As John Mauldin, a former faculty member himself

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Germany, France Demand Greek Budget Cuts in Talks Over European Union Aid

February 10, 2010

By Tony Czuczka and Brian Parkin Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) — European Union leaders meeting in Brussels tomorrow will probably press Greece to present more detailed budget cuts and stop short of announcing an aid package for the debt-stricken nation, a German government official said. As officials in Berlin, Paris and Brussels thrashed out potential aid plans to add to political pressure, Greece faced street protests and strikes that shut down schools, hospitals and flights in response to government plans to freeze wages and cut benefits. Germany and France are leading talks to provide help for Greece under “tough pre-conditions,” said Markus Ferber , a member of German Chancellor Angela Merkel ’s bloc in the European Parliament , citing discussions his group had with the federal officials in Berlin. He said they prefer a bilateral approach over an EU plan. “It’s a tightrope walk for European governments,” said Henrik Enderlein, a political economist at the Hertie School of Governance in Berlin. The dilemma is “to signal confidence, because there is no technical reason why Greece should default,” while avoiding a “full-scale bailout.” For weeks, European officials insisted that no bailout was planned and that Greece’s effort to reduce its deficit, estimated at 12.7 percent of gross domestic product, should be given a chance to work. Reversing Course The euro’s slide to a nine-month low and a slump in bond prices prompted leaders to drop their resistance to rescuing Greece and to protect the rest of the euro region from market turmoil. Prospects that the EU would extend a financial lifeline to Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou at the summit sent Greek bonds to their biggest rally since the introduction of the euro today. German Finance Wolfgang Schaeuble told lawmakers in Berlin today that options for helping Greece extend beyond loan guarantees, according to a lawmaker who attended today’s briefing in Berlin and spoke on the condition of anonymity because the discussions were private. EU rules on aid are more flexible than the German government first thought, he said. Schaeuble told reporters today he had “no intention to participate in speculation.” EU law bars the ECB or national central banks from bailing out EU countries through buying their debt or offering loans, the German parliament’s research unit said in a report published yesterday. “Help for Greece is obviously on the way,” said Joerg Kraemer , chief economist at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt. “The EU seems bent on making sure that it reacts in time and not at the last minute.” EU Rules An EU official said today all options are being considered, including a standing facility to provide credit guarantees. The official told reporters the measures under consideration could be national or directed by the EU. An announcement of a plan may be made today, said the official, who declined to be identified because the talks remain confidential. Papandreou, who met French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Paris today, has failed to convince investors that his plan of spending reductions, a wage freeze and stepped-up tax collections to cut the EU’s biggest deficit will work. “We haven’t requested aid,” he told Greek journalists in Paris today, according to a transcript provided by his office. “We have said we just want you to support our will, the credibility of our country in the implementation of this program” to cut the budget deficit. Private Talks EU leaders and European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet will discuss Greece over lunch tomorrow, though no decision on aid has been taken and none is on the agenda, the German official told reporters in Berlin today on condition of anonymity. The onus will lie with Papandreou to send the strong signal that markets are waiting for, the official said. Signs of a rescue helped ease investor concerns that Greece’s worsening finances would derail the global recovery. The risk premium investors demand to buy Greek debt over comparable German bonds tumbled for a second day to 2.82 percentage points, the lowest since Jan. 19. It reached as high as 3.96 percentage points on Jan. 28. The gains in Greek securities may be short-lived. There will be “blood on the walls” in credit markets if the EU fails to agree to a package for Greece tomorrow, Gary Jenkins , head of credit strategy at Evolution Securities Ltd. in London, said in a note to investors. “They must be aware of that and thus it is an extremely unlikely scenario,” he said. ‘Busy Working’ The French government is “busy working” on possible solutions for Greece and Sarkozy plans to hold a joint press conference with Merkel after the summit, spokesman Luc Chatel said in Paris today. Both leaders have a united stance ahead of the summit, the German official said. Aid would come “under strict conditions and if the Greek government undertakes far-reaching state reforms,” Michael Meister , financial-affairs spokesman for Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, said yesterday. Merkel, facing rising unemployment and declining support for her three-party coalition, may face domestic criticism over an attempt to help Greece. Lawmakers from her Free Democratic Party junior coalition partner have spoken out against aid for Greece. “We don’t help the alcoholic by giving him another bottle of schnapps,” Frank Schaeffler , the party’s senior member on the finance committee, said in a speech to lawmakers in Berlin. To contact the reporters on this story: Brian Parkin in Berlin at bparkin@bloomberg.net ; Tony Czuczka in Berlin at aczuczka@bloomberg.net

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Germany, France Demand Greek Budget Cuts in Talks Over European Union Aid

February 10, 2010

By Tony Czuczka and Brian Parkin Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) — European Union leaders meeting in Brussels tomorrow will probably press Greece to present more detailed budget cuts and stop short of announcing an aid package for the debt-stricken nation, a German government official said. As officials in Berlin, Paris and Brussels thrashed out potential aid plans to add to political pressure, Greece faced street protests and strikes that shut down schools, hospitals and flights in response to government plans to freeze wages and cut benefits. Germany and France are leading talks to provide help for Greece under “tough pre-conditions,” said Markus Ferber , a member of German Chancellor Angela Merkel ’s bloc in the European Parliament , citing discussions his group had with the federal officials in Berlin. He said they prefer a bilateral approach over an EU plan. “It’s a tightrope walk for European governments,” said Henrik Enderlein, a political economist at the Hertie School of Governance in Berlin. The dilemma is “to signal confidence, because there is no technical reason why Greece should default,” while avoiding a “full-scale bailout.” For weeks, European officials insisted that no bailout was planned and that Greece’s effort to reduce its deficit, estimated at 12.7 percent of gross domestic product, should be given a chance to work. Reversing Course The euro’s slide to a nine-month low and a slump in bond prices prompted leaders to drop their resistance to rescuing Greece and to protect the rest of the euro region from market turmoil. Prospects that the EU would extend a financial lifeline to Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou at the summit sent Greek bonds to their biggest rally since the introduction of the euro today. German Finance Wolfgang Schaeuble told lawmakers in Berlin today that options for helping Greece extend beyond loan guarantees, according to a lawmaker who attended today’s briefing in Berlin and spoke on the condition of anonymity because the discussions were private. EU rules on aid are more flexible than the German government first thought, he said. Schaeuble told reporters today he had “no intention to participate in speculation.” EU law bars the ECB or national central banks from bailing out EU countries through buying their debt or offering loans, the German parliament’s research unit said in a report published yesterday. “Help for Greece is obviously on the way,” said Joerg Kraemer , chief economist at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt. “The EU seems bent on making sure that it reacts in time and not at the last minute.” EU Rules An EU official said today all options are being considered, including a standing facility to provide credit guarantees. The official told reporters the measures under consideration could be national or directed by the EU. An announcement of a plan may be made today, said the official, who declined to be identified because the talks remain confidential. Papandreou, who met French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Paris today, has failed to convince investors that his plan of spending reductions, a wage freeze and stepped-up tax collections to cut the EU’s biggest deficit will work. “We haven’t requested aid,” he told Greek journalists in Paris today, according to a transcript provided by his office. “We have said we just want you to support our will, the credibility of our country in the implementation of this program” to cut the budget deficit. Private Talks EU leaders and European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet will discuss Greece over lunch tomorrow, though no decision on aid has been taken and none is on the agenda, the German official told reporters in Berlin today on condition of anonymity. The onus will lie with Papandreou to send the strong signal that markets are waiting for, the official said. Signs of a rescue helped ease investor concerns that Greece’s worsening finances would derail the global recovery. The risk premium investors demand to buy Greek debt over comparable German bonds tumbled for a second day to 2.82 percentage points, the lowest since Jan. 19. It reached as high as 3.96 percentage points on Jan. 28. The gains in Greek securities may be short-lived. There will be “blood on the walls” in credit markets if the EU fails to agree to a package for Greece tomorrow, Gary Jenkins , head of credit strategy at Evolution Securities Ltd. in London, said in a note to investors. “They must be aware of that and thus it is an extremely unlikely scenario,” he said. ‘Busy Working’ The French government is “busy working” on possible solutions for Greece and Sarkozy plans to hold a joint press conference with Merkel after the summit, spokesman Luc Chatel said in Paris today. Both leaders have a united stance ahead of the summit, the German official said. Aid would come “under strict conditions and if the Greek government undertakes far-reaching state reforms,” Michael Meister , financial-affairs spokesman for Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, said yesterday. Merkel, facing rising unemployment and declining support for her three-party coalition, may face domestic criticism over an attempt to help Greece. Lawmakers from her Free Democratic Party junior coalition partner have spoken out against aid for Greece. “We don’t help the alcoholic by giving him another bottle of schnapps,” Frank Schaeffler , the party’s senior member on the finance committee, said in a speech to lawmakers in Berlin. To contact the reporters on this story: Brian Parkin in Berlin at bparkin@bloomberg.net ; Tony Czuczka in Berlin at aczuczka@bloomberg.net

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