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Australia- Merced Systems Hosts Seminar in Sydney

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Australia- Merced Systems Hosts Seminar in Sydney

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Investorium.tv Multicommodity Showcases Indochine (ASX:IDC), Australian Bauxite (ASX:ABZ) and Zamia Metals (ASX:ZGM) in Sydney on July 4th

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Investorium.tv Multicommodity Showcases Indochine (ASX:IDC), Australian Bauxite (ASX:ABZ) and Zamia Metals (ASX:ZGM) in Sydney on July 4th

Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

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Video: Kapstream’s Maroutsos Favors Asian Corporate Bonds

April 29, 2011

April 29 (Bloomberg) — Nick Maroutsos, a portfolio manager and co-founder at Kapstream Capital in Sydney, talks about the outlook for equities and corporate bonds. Maroutsos speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Whitehead Says Rio Could Control Riversdale in a Year

March 30, 2011

March 30 (Bloomberg) — Colin Whitehead, an analyst at Fat Prophets, talks about Rio Tinto Group’s bid to take control of Riversdale Mining Ltd. He speaks from Sydney with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Join Symposium at the March 2011 Resources Roadshows in Sydney and Melbourne

March 15, 2011

Join Symposium at the March 2011 Resources Roadshows in Sydney and Melbourne

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Video: Westpac’s Jones Sees 125,000 Extra U.S. Jobs in January

February 4, 2011

Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) — Russell Jones, global head of fixed income at Westpac Banking Corp., talks about his estimate for U.S. payrolls in January. Employment increased by 146,000 workers last month after a 103,000 gain in December, according to the median forecast of 85 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Jones speaks from Sydney with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Sydney Mining Club Present Exeter Resource Corporation (TSE:XRC) and Extorre Gold Mines (TSE:XG) at The 152nd Sydney Mining Club

January 20, 2011

Sydney Mining Club Present Exeter Resource Corporation (TSE:XRC) and Extorre Gold Mines (TSE:XG) at The 152nd Sydney Mining Club

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Hedge Fund Fights for a Spinoff or Sale of Australian REIT’s $1.8 Bil. U.S. Office Portfolio

January 19, 2011

Charter Hall Office REIT, a Sydney, Australia-based REIT is looking to sell up to a half-interest in its U.S. office portfolio valued at a total of more than $1.83 billion. The plan, however, isn’t sitting well with Orange Capital LLC, a New York City hedge fund that holds a little more than 5% of Charter Hall Office’s stock – making it the REIT’s largest independent shareholder. Charter Hall Office REIT owns 14 office properties in the U.S. with…

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Video: Chilton Says Riversdale Plugs Coking Coal `Gap’ for Rio

December 24, 2010

Dec. 24 (Bloomberg) — Peter Chilton, an investment analyst at Constellation Capital Management Ltd., talks about Rio Tinto Group’s A$3.9 billion ($3.9 billion) bid for Australian coking coal developer Riversdale Mining Ltd., and the potential for a rival bid from International Coal Ventures Ltd. ICVL appointed Citigroup Inc. to examine a possible takeover offer for the Sydney-based coal company with mines in Mozambique, the venture’s chairman C.S. Verma said yesterday. Chilton also discusses his investment strategy for mining stocks. He speaks from Sydney on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Westpac’s Callow Says Ireland Bailout `Not Imminent’: Video

November 16, 2010

Nov. 16 (Bloomberg) — Sean Callow, a senior currency strategist at Westpac Banking Corp., talks about the outlook for a potential financial bailout for Ireland. Ireland signaled a willingness to weigh European Union measures to aid its banks, potentially abandoning a go-it-alone defense to prevent a resurgent debt crisis from destabilizing the euro. Callow also discusses his forecast for the euro. He speaks from Sydney with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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The Gold Symposium To Be Held In Sydney On November 8-10, 2010

October 14, 2010

The Gold Symposium To Be Held In Sydney On November 8-10, 2010

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NetSuite SuiteCloud 2010 brings cloud visionaries to Sydney

October 11, 2010

NetSuite SuiteCloud 2010 brings cloud visionaries to Sydney

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Video: Triganza Says Aussie May Rise as High as US$1.06: Video

October 11, 2010

Oct. 11 (Bloomberg) — Jeff Triganza, a director at Hamilton Rhodes in Sydney, talks about the outlook for the Australian dollar. The Australian dollar rose toward the highest level since it began trading freely in 1983 amid speculation Federal Reserve officials will reiterate the need to expand stimulus, boosting demand for higher-yielding assets. Triganza also discusses the role of the International Monetary Fund in resolving global disputes over currency valuations. He speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television’s “on the Move Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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epay to partner with Cubic for Sydney’s smartcard system

October 7, 2010

epay to partner with Cubic for Sydney’s smartcard system

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Video: Barclays’s Stacey Says RBA May Raise Rates Twice By 2011: Video

October 5, 2010

Oct. 5 (Bloomberg) — Gavin Stacey, a strategist at Barclays Capital in Sydney, talks about the outlook for Reserve Bank of Australia monetary policy. Australia’s central bank unexpectedly left its benchmark interest rate unchanged for a fifth straight month, triggering the biggest drop in the local dollar in almost two months amid signs of cooling domestic demand. Stacey speaks with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Kyriakopoulos Sees Uncertainties for Australian Dollar: Video

September 19, 2010

Sept. 20 (Bloomberg) — John Kyriakopoulos, head of foreign-exchange strategy in Sydney at National Australia Bank Ltd., talks about the Australian dollar. The currency rose toward a two-year high before its central bank tomorrow releases minutes of this month’s meeting, when it extended a pause in raising borrowing costs, saying interest rates were appropriate “for the time being.” Kyriakopoulos also discusses the outlook for the yen. He talks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Pengana’s Kessler Discusses Australian Stocks Strategy: Video

September 5, 2010

Sept. 6 (Bloomberg) — Rhett Kessler, who helps manage about $1 billion at Pengana Capital Ltd. in Sydney, talks about his investment strategy for Australian stocks. Kessler also discusses the outlook for Reserve Bank of Australia monetary policy and the U.S. economy. He speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Westpac’s Shugg Expects `Disappointing’ U.S. Payrolls: Video

September 2, 2010

Sept. 3 (Bloomberg) — James Shugg, a senior economist at Westpac Banking Corp., talks about the outlook for the U.S. economy and the Labor Department’s nonfarm payrolls report today. The August payrolls report may show that the economy lost 105,000 jobs, the third straight monthly decline, according to the median forecast of 81 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Shugg speaks from Sydney with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Westpac’s Shugg Expects `Disappointing’ U.S. Payrolls: Video

September 2, 2010

Sept. 3 (Bloomberg) — James Shugg, a senior economist at Westpac Banking Corp., talks about the outlook for the U.S. economy and the Labor Department’s nonfarm payrolls report today. The August payrolls report may show that the economy lost 105,000 jobs, the third straight monthly decline, according to the median forecast of 81 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Shugg speaks from Sydney with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Spiderman arrested for scaling Sydney skyscraper

August 31, 2010

Spiderman arrested for scaling Sydney skyscraper

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Video: Callow Says Market `Disappointed’ by BOJ Policy Move: Video

August 29, 2010

Aug. 30 (Bloomberg) — Sean Callow, a senior foreign-exchange strategist in Sydney at Westpac Banking Corp., talks about the outlook for the yen. The yen pared its loss against the dollar on speculation the Bank of Japan’s decision to introduce more credit-easing measures won’t be enough to weaken the Japanese currency from near a 15-year high. Callow talks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Noah Mallin: Digital: Mad Men Google Bombing For Fun – and Profit?

August 26, 2010

On last Sunday’s episode of AMC’s period ad drama Mad Men , John Slattery’s World War II vet Roger Sterling exploded in rage at the prospect of pitching to a Japanese client: “Why don’t we just bring Dr. Lyle Evans in here?” The other characters draw a blank on who exactly Dr. Lyle Evans is. As Vanity Fair and others pointed out within minutes the Internet surged with the same question – who is Dr. Lyle Evans? Google searches on the name skyrocketed. Initial speculation was that Mad Men creator Matt Weiner and the show’s writers had created the name as a so-called “Google bomb”, a prank intended to drive a made-up name into trending search charts. So far that still seems to be the case, though some have pointed (check the comments in the Vanity Fair link) to the character of Evan Llewellyn Evans played by Sydney Greenstreet in the classic ad movie The Hucksters as the source of the reference. If it was planted on purpose though, could it also have been for another reason beyond the fun of influencing the behavior of a large group of strangers online? This is entirely speculative, but consider the value of product placement within television shows, a practice that has been on the upswing of late. Typically though the results of such placements can be hard to measure, especially when the product is woven organically into the show’s storyline (as it should be.) How do you prove effectiveness? Search engine queries are a great start. The immediate online response of a big swath of viewers to a show that already offers a dense tapestry of historical references and Easter eggs is hard to beat. What better way to show this influence over fans? This got me to thinking on a broader level about how my fellow modern day ad colleagues look at data to guide strategy and measure results. Sometimes it can be helpful to go off the beaten path and look at non-traditional sources of measurement for inspiration. Take a blog post I read recently about a press release from GM’s OnStar division, which offers drivers turn-by-turn navigation to destinations. The press release listed the Top 10 destinations drivers had used OnStar to search for by brand: 1. Wal-Mart 2. Holiday Inn 3. Home Depot 4. Walgreens 5. Marriott 6. McDonald’s 7. Bank of America 8. Starbucks 9. Target 10. Hampton Inn My first thought was that people may need gas but they don’t seem to care what brand they get it from. The second was that every single one of the brands in the Top 10 ought to be thinking about the power of mobile search ads. Plenty of people use their smart phones to find local destinations while driving (hopefully with the help of a non-driving passenger). What a great additional proof point to bring this home. The fact that an in-car navigation system can tell us about the potential of advertising on mobile devices, and search volume on Google can give insight into the behavior of television viewers brings home the fact that we tend to be doing many things at once these days. We search (and make phone calls) while driving and watching TV, we watch TV and buy things online simultaneously, we work and chat with pals on Facebook at the same time. As our activities multiply, the need to vary the data sources that help us understand this is vital .

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Video: Bisignani Says 2010 Will Be `Great Year’ for Airlines: Video

August 24, 2010

Aug. 25 (Bloomberg) — International Air Transport Association Chief Executive Officer Giovanni Bisignani talks about the outlook for the global airline industry. International passenger demand rose 9.2 percent in July from a year earlier and international scheduled freight traffic increased 22.7 percent, according to IATA, which represents 230 airlines carrying 93 percent of international traffic. Bisignani speaks from Sydney with Bloomberg’s Susan Li. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Australia’s Gillard, Abbott Vie for Power in Close Vote: Video

August 22, 2010

Aug. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Haslinda Amin reports from Sydney on Australia’s federal election. Neither Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard nor opposition leader Tony Abbott gained an outright majority in the Aug. 21 election, meaning one side must win negotiations with independent lawmakers to form a government. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lahey Says Australian Businesses Want to See Tax Reform: Video

August 22, 2010

Aug. 23 (Bloomberg) — Katie Lahey, chief executive of the Business Council of Australia, an association of CEOs of Australia’s top 100 companies, talks about the country’s federal election. Tony Abbott’s Liberal-National coalition led Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s Labor Party 72 seats to 70, four short of an absolute majority, according to figures on the Australian Electoral Commission website as of 8:45 a.m. today. Two independent lawmakers who may hold the balance of power say they disapprove of Gillard’s mining tax, which she has refused to scrap. Lahey speaks from Sydney with Bloomberg’s Susan Li. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Australia Poll Predicts Election Tie for Gillard, Abbott: Video

August 19, 2010

Aug. 20 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Haslinda Amin reports from Sydney on Australia’s election this weekend. Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s Labor Party is locked 50-50 with opposition leader Tony Abbott’s Liberal-National coalition, according to a Newspoll published in the Australian newspaper today. A Galaxy opinion survey in the Herald Sun newspaper today gives Labor a narrow lead on a two-party basis. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Wise-Owl’s Morris Says BHP Bid for Potash Is Fair Price: Video

August 17, 2010

Aug. 18 (Bloomberg) — Tim Morris, an analyst at Wise-Owl.com, talks about BHP Billiton Ltd.’s $39 billion unsolicited takeover offer for Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc. BHP may go directly to shareholders as early as this week with the bid, said two people with direct knowledge of the matter. Potash Corp., the world’s largest fertilizer producer, rejected BHP’s $130-a-share offer yesterday, calling it “grossly inadequate.” Morris, who speaks from Sydney with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat, also discusses the outlook for agricultural commodities. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Weston Says Australia May Not Raise Rates by Year-End

August 17, 2010

Aug. 17 (Bloomberg) — Chris Weston, a Melbourne-based institutional dealer at IG Markets, talks about Australian central bank monetary policy and the outlook for the nation’s currency. Reserve Bank of Australia policy makers kept borrowing costs unchanged two weeks ago for a third month, judging the nation’s economic expansion won’t stoke inflation and amid doubts about the global recovery, according to minutes of their Aug. 3 meeting released in Sydney today. Weston talks with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Video: Kapstream’s Maroutsos Says Global Stocks to `Struggle’

August 12, 2010

Aug. 13 (Bloomberg) — Nick Maroutsos, portfolio manager at Kapstream Capital in Sydney, talks with about his investment strategy for global stocks and bonds.¶ He speaks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Start Up.”

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Video: Lele Likes Global `Cyclical’ Stocks on Economic Growth: Video

August 11, 2010

Aug. 12 (Bloomberg) — Atul Lele, an equity strategist at Credit Suisse Group AG, talks about his investment strategy for global stocks. U.S. stocks dropped the most in three weeks as equities retreated from Tokyo to Moscow and London amid speculation the Federal Reserve’s stimulus plan indicates the economic recovery is in jeopardy. Lele speaks from Sydney with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Bloomberg’s Sebastian Henbest Discusses Climate Change: Video

August 4, 2010

Aug. 4 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg New Energy Finance’s Sebastian Henbest discusses climate change and the outlook for global cooperation on emissions reduction. Data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration showed that the combined global land and ocean surface temperature for June was the warmest on record for the month. Henbest, speaking from Sydney, talks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Wendt Says Rio-Chalco Deal a `Win-Win’ for Both Parties: Video

July 29, 2010

July 30 (Bloomberg) — Gavin Wendt, a senior analyst with MineLife Co. Ltd., talks with Bloomberg’s Susan Li from Sydney about Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd.’s agreement to pay $1.35 billion for a stake in Rio Tinto Group’s Simandou iron ore project in Guinea. Chalco, as the Beijing-based company is known, will acquire a 44.65 percent stake by funding development over the next two to three years, the companies said in a joint statement. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Barratt Says Hayward Departure a `Political Play’ by BP: Video

July 27, 2010

July 27 (Bloomberg) — Jonathan Barratt, managing director at Commodity Broking Services Pty in Sydney, talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Barton about BP Plc’s decision to replace Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward with Robert Dudley, the director of the company’s oil spill response unit. BP reported a record loss after taking a charge for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the worst in U.S. history. Dudley’s challenge will be to overcome cleanup costs and liabilities from the environmental disaster, which analysts expect will exceed $30 billion. (Barratt spoke before BP released a statement saying Dudley would take over from Hayward on Oct. 1. Interview excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Attrill Says Euro Rally May Reverse in Coming Weeks: Video

July 22, 2010

July 23 (Bloomberg) — Ray Attrill, global research director at Forecast Ltd. in Sydney, talks with Bloomberg’s Linzie Janis about the European Union’s bank stress tests and his forecast for the euro. The euro headed for a weekly decline against the dollar on speculation stress-test results today will reveal loan losses at European banks, reducing demand for the region’s assets. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Barratt Sees `Light at The End of The Tunnel’ for BP: Video

July 20, 2010

July 20 (Bloomberg) — Jonathan Barratt, managing director at Commodity Broking Services Pty in Sydney, talks with Bloomberg’s Linzie Janis about the outlook for BP Plc. BP seeks cash to meet the costs of the worst oil spill in U.S. history. BP’s talks to sell half its stake in Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay oil field to Apache Corp. stalled twice over the weekend, raising doubts about whether the deal will be completed, said a person with knowledge of the matter.(Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Barratt Sees `Light at The End of The Tunnel’ for BP: Video

July 20, 2010

July 20 (Bloomberg) — Jonathan Barratt, managing director at Commodity Broking Services Pty in Sydney, talks with Bloomberg’s Linzie Janis about the outlook for BP Plc. BP seeks cash to meet the costs of the worst oil spill in U.S. history. BP’s talks to sell half its stake in Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay oil field to Apache Corp. stalled twice over the weekend, raising doubts about whether the deal will be completed, said a person with knowledge of the matter.(Source: Bloomberg)

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PIMCO Hires Ki Myung Hong as Managing Director and Head of the Firm’s Asia Pacific Region

July 18, 2010

NEWPORT BEACH, CA–(Marketwire – July 18, 2010) –  PIMCO, a leading global investment management firm, announced today that it has hired Ki Myung (Kim) Hong as a Managing Director and Head of the firm’s Asia Pacific region, based in Hong Kong. Mr. Hong will have management oversight responsibility for the firm’s business in the region, including PIMCO’s Hong Kong, Singapore, Sydney and Tokyo offices which will report to him. He will also become a member of the Global Operating Committee, and will report to Douglas Hodge, PIMCO’s Chief Operating Officer (who previously served as Head of Asia Pacific).

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Video: Robertson Says Australia May Keep Rates Steady in 2010: Video

July 6, 2010

July 6 (Bloomberg) — Rory Robertson, economist and interest rate strategist at Macquarie Group Ltd., talks about the outlook for the Australian economy and central bank monetary policy. The Reserve Bank of Australia paused today in raising borrowing costs for a second month, and dropped a reference to the level of its benchmark being appropriate for the “near term.” Robertson speaks from Sydney with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connections.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: McGuire Says BP May Change Company Name, Top Management: Video

July 6, 2010

July 6 (Bloomberg) — Peter McGuire, managing director at CWA Global Markets Pty, talks with Bloomberg’s Linzie Janis about the outlook for BP Plc as the company seeks cash to meet the costs of the worst oil spill in U.S. history. BP is considering selling fields in Colombia, Venezuela and Vietnam, a person with knowledge of the matter said. BP shares have dropped 49 percent since the April 20 blowout that sank the Deepwater Horizon rig, killing 11 workers. McGuire, speaking from Sydney, also discusses his forecast for crude oil prices. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Allen Says Gillard May Keep Main Elements of Mining Tax: Video

June 28, 2010

June 29 (Bloomberg) — Belinda Allen, an analyst at Colonial First State Global Asset Management, talks from Sydney with Bloomberg’s Susan Li about the outlook for the Australian government’s planned resources tax under the leadership of Prime Minister Julia Gillard. As soon as Gillard ousted Kevin Rudd as prime minister on June 24, she vowed to resolve a standoff over his proposed 40 percent mining tax on what he called “super” profits. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Westpac’s Rennie Sees Opportunity to Sell Euro at $1.25: Video

June 28, 2010

June 28 (Bloomberg) — Robert Rennie, head of currency research at Westpac Banking Corp., talks about the outlook for currencies following the Group of 20 leaders summit in Toronto. Rennie, speaking in Sydney, also discusses the Chinese and U.S. economies. He talks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Sportingbet’s Sullivan Says Brazil Is World Cup Favorite: Video

June 27, 2010

June 28 (Bloomberg) — Michael Sullivan, chief executive officer of online bookmaker Sportingbet Australia, talks with Bloomberg’s Susan Li from Sydney about betting on the World Cup. Three-time champion Germany beat England 4-1 yesterday to reach a the quarterfinal against Argentina, a 3-1 winner against Mexico. Both games were overshadowed by controversial decisions from match officials. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Whitehead Says Gillard Won’t Remove Mining Tax Entirely: Video

June 24, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Colin Whitehead, equity analyst at Fat Prophets, talks with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat about the potential implications of Julia Gillard’s appointment as Australian prime minister for the government’s proposed mining profits tax. Gillard, who was sworn in yesterday after ousting Kevin Rudd, said she is willing to negotiate on the tax with mining companies. Whitehead, speaking from Sydney, also discusses the outlook for Australian mining stocks and the global economy. (Source: Bloomberg)

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FINANCE VIDEO: Direct Nickel Chairman Julian Malnic Speaks with Brian Carlton at Symposium Resources Roadshow in Sydney, June 2010

June 24, 2010

FINANCE VIDEO: Direct Nickel Chairman Julian Malnic Speaks with Brian Carlton at Symposium Resources Roadshow in Sydney, June 2010

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Greenspan Says U.S. May Soon Reach Borrowing Limit

June 18, 2010

By Jacob Greber June 18 (Bloomberg) — Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the U.S. may soon face higher borrowing costs on its swelling debt and called for a “tectonic shift” in fiscal policy to contain borrowing. “Perceptions of a large U.S. borrowing capacity are misleading,” and current long-term bond yields are masking America’s debt challenge, Greenspan wrote in an opinion piece posted on the Wall Street Journal’s website. “Long-term rate increases can emerge with unexpected suddenness,” such as the 4 percentage point surge over four months in 1979-80, he said. Greenspan rebutted “misplaced” concern that reducing the deficit would put the economic recovery in danger, entering a debate among global policy makers about how quickly to exit from stimulus measures adopted during the financial crisis. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said this month that while fiscal tightening is needed over the “medium term,” governments must reinforce the recovery in private demand. “The United States, and most of the rest of the developed world, is in need of a tectonic shift in fiscal policy,” said Greenspan, 84, who served at the Fed’s helm from 1987 to 2006. “Incremental change will not be adequate.” Rein in Debt Pressure on capital markets would also be eased if the U.S. government “contained” the sale of Treasuries, he wrote. “The federal government is currently saddled with commitments for the next three decades that it will be unable to meet in real terms,” Greenspan said. The “very severity of the pending crisis and growing analogies to Greece set the stage for a serious response.” Yields on U.S. Treasuries have benefitted from safe-haven demand in recent months because of the European debt crisis, a circumstance that may not last, said Greenspan, who now consults for clients including Pacific Investment Management Co., which has the world’s biggest bond fund. Benchmark 10-year Treasury notes yielded 3.20 percent as of 12:11 p.m. in Tokyo today, down from the year’s high of 4.01 percent in April and compared with as high as 5.32 percent in June 2007, before the crisis began. Yields have remained low “despite the surge in federal debt to the public during the past 18 months to $8.6 trillion from $5.5 trillion,” Greenspan said. The swing in demand toward American government debt and away from euro-denominated bonds is “temporary,” he said. “Our economy cannot afford a major mistake in underestimating the corrosive momentum of this fiscal crisis,” Greenspan said. “Our policy focus must therefore err significantly on the side of restraint.” To contact the reporter for this story: Jacob Greber in Sydney at jgreber@bloomberg.net

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Video: Finkelstein Calls BP Chief’s Hearing Performance `Awful’: Video

June 18, 2010

June 18 (Bloomberg) — Sydney Finkelstein, a management professor at Dartmouth College’s Tuck School of Business, talks about BP Plc Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward’s performance during congressional testimony yesterday. Finkelstein talks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Australia Utilities Scale Debt Wall as Economy Trumps MBIA Subprime Fall

June 17, 2010

By Sarah McDonald June 18 (Bloomberg) — Bond prices show the pace of Australia’s economic growth may help infrastructure and utility companies to refinance $13 billion of debt without top credit ratings they once bought from insurers such as MBIA Inc. Envestra Ltd. , ElectraNet Ltd. and five more firms raised $2.3 billion from bonds this year, up from $140 million in 2009, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Brisbane Airport Corp. has A$350 million ($304 million) of MBIA-backed notes due on June 30, while SP AusNet has A$185 million of bonds insured by a unit of Ambac Financial Group Inc. due in September. The nation’s central bank has led Group of 20 policymakers in increasing the benchmark cash rate six times since October on surging Asian demand for commodities and a jobs boom that has pushed down unemployment to around half that of the U.S. and Europe. The extra yield investors demand to own Australian utility debt instead of government bonds has fallen 52 basis points to 206 basis points this year while spreads for firms in the industry widened globally, Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes show. “Investors are buying into an economy that outperformed the world through the financial crisis,” said Brad Scott , director of debt capital markets at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Sydney. “Many recognize Australia is a far more attractive place to invest than previously given credit.” Infrastructure and utility firms were Australia’s biggest users of insurers to sell cheaper, longer-dated debt until MBIA and Ambac were stripped of their top ratings in 2008 amid losses on notes backed by subprime mortgages. Since then five straight quarters of growth in the country’s A$1.2 trillion economy have bolstered corporate profits, attracting investors willing to accept lower credit rankings and greater risk. U.S. Placements Investors “show strong appetite for names out of the region,” Lori Pollicino , an executive director of debt capital market private placements at JPMorgan Securities Inc. in New York, said in an e-mailed response to questions. Australian utility companies’ spreads will “modestly tighten throughout the remainder of 2010.” Between 2000 and 2006 Brisbane Airport paid spreads of between 100 basis points and 130 basis points including fees on five bond sales backed by insurers, or so-called monolines, Chief Financial Officer Tim Rothwell said in a telephone interview. While new debt is “certainly going to cost more than it did a few years ago, it’s come down from the very high margins of late 2008 and early 2009” when the airport was told it would have to pay as much as 600 basis points, Rothwell said. Miami Visit The owner of the nation’s third-busiest airport aims to pay about 200 basis points on a sale by early 2011, according to Rothwell, who was “pleasantly surprised” at U.S. interest in Australian bonds when he visited Miami last year. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. SP AusNet, which manages a A$6.3 billion electricity and gas network and is rated A- by Standard & Poor’s, has sold bonds denominated in Swiss francs, Hong Kong dollars and Australian dollars since February. The company’s Ambac-insured notes yielded 45 basis points more than the bank bill swap rate when they were issued in 2000, according to Bloomberg data, which doesn’t show the insurer’s fee. SP AusNet, based in Melbourne, priced A$300 million of bonds to yield 160 basis points more than the swap rate in March. As companies seek to develop relationships with investors now they’re refinancing without monoline support, Australia’s economic strength is proving to be a “positive factor” in negotiations, SP AusNet Treasurer Alastair Watson said in an interview. Concentration Risk Airports, utilities and infrastructure-related issuers have A$15 billion of debt due by the end of 2011, according to Moody’s Investors Service, while S&P says utilities must refinance a third of their outstanding debt next year. S&P said in a March 5 report that it’s concerned about the concentration of maturing debt, even though companies are arranging refinancing well before their bonds and loans mature. Investors demanded about 60 basis points of extra yield to hold Australian corporate bonds rather than government debt in June 2006, a Bank of America Merrill Lynch index shows. That spread widened to as much as 433 basis points in April 2009 before shrinking to 212 as of yesterday, the index shows. Bond Returns Australia is the world’s biggest exporter of iron ore and coal, and Chinese demand helped the economy expand 2.7 percent in the first quarter of 2010 from a year earlier. Investors have profited from Australian corporate bonds every year for at least the past 13 years, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch data, and the notes delivered a 4.18 percent return this year. Adelaide Airport Ltd. bought back A$231.5 million of MBIA- insured bonds in April and issued A$235 million of notes without a third-party guarantee. The new bonds yield 255 basis points more than the bank bill swap rate compared with 49 basis points on the insured notes, excluding MBIA’s fee, Bloomberg data show. United Energy Distribution Pty. Ltd. , which provides electricity to more than 600,000 customers in the state of Victoria, sold $435 million of four- and seven-year notes to U.S. investors in April. The bonds were priced to yield 180 basis points more than similar-maturity Treasuries, according to a person familiar with the transaction. The company, rated Baa2 by Moody’s, paid an 83 basis point spread when it sold $260 million of Ambac-insured notes in 2003, according to Bloomberg data which doesn’t show the insurer’s fees. “While these companies are paying more for their debt now than before the crisis, they’re certainly not alone,” said Michael Bush , Melbourne-based head of credit research at National Australia Bank Ltd. “The market’s so different to what it was three years ago, and all borrowers are affected.” To contact the reporter on this story: Sarah McDonald in Sydney at smcdonald23@bloomberg.net .

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David Jones CEO McInnes Quits After `Unbecoming Behavior’ to Female Worker

June 17, 2010

By Robert Fenner June 18 (Bloomberg) — Mark McInnes quit as chief executive officer of David Jones Ltd. , ending a seven-year tenure, after behaving in an “unbecoming” manner to a female staff member. David Jones dropped as much as 4.7 percent in Sydney trading, the biggest intraday decline in four months, after Australia’s second-biggest department-store chain said McInnes will leave his role and the board immediately. Paul Zahra , general manager of stores, will assume the chief executive’s role today, Sydney-based David Jones said in a statement. McInnes, 45, had as CEO increased David Jones’ range of designer fashions to attract affluent customers, shut the unprofitable gourmet food business and lowered costs for getting inventory into stores. The stock surged fourfold and was the best performing retailer in the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index since he assumed the top job in 2003. “He was rated as one of the top business leaders in the country and was seen as having done a really great job with David Jones,” said Cameron Peacock , markets analyst at IG Markets in Melbourne. “He was popular and he did a good job but it’s more than one man that makes a company.” David Jones shares fell 2.4 percent to A$4.40 at 10:50 a.m. in Sydney, extending this year’s decline to 19 percent, after earlier sliding as much as 4.7 percent. Larger rival Myer Holdings Ltd. rose 1 cent to A$3.18. ‘Errors of Judgment’ “At two recent company functions I behaved in a manner unbecoming of the high standard expected of a chief executive officer,” McInnes said in a separate statement. “I have committed serious errors of judgment and have inexcusably let down the female staff member. I have also let down my partner, my family, all my staff, the board and our shareholders.” The statements include no further description of McInnes’s behavior. “This is a bit of an issue short term, but fundamentally nothing has changed,” said Paul Xiradis , chief executive officer of Ausbil Dexia Ltd., David Jones ’ biggest shareholder with an 8 percent stake. “The transformation of the David Jones brand was something that McInnes was very involved in.” The unidentified female staff member made a formal complaint to the board about McInnes’ conduct through a lawyer. “The board has taken and will continue to take steps to ensure that this complaint is appropriately addressed,” Chairman Robert Savage said in the statement. McInnes won’t receive any of his contracted incentive payments, the company said. He will be paid a settlement of A$1.5 million ($1.3 million) and also receive statutory entitlements such as accumulated annual leave worth A$445,000. Zahra, who will also join the board, has 28 years experience in retail, including the past 12 as part of David Jones ’s management team. The company affirmed its forecast for second-half earnings to rise as much as 10 percent and said the first two weeks of its clearance sales have been “pleasing.” To contact the reporter on this story: Robert Fenner in Wellington rfenner@bloomberg.net

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BP’s Gulf Spill Fuels Australian Opponents to Deepwater Drilling for Oil

June 17, 2010

By James Paton June 17 (Bloomberg) — BP Plc ’s Gulf of Mexico disaster is generating opposition to deepwater drilling off Australia, where the government is opening new exploration areas less than a year after the country’s third-worst oil spill. Resources Minister Martin Ferguson will receive the results tomorrow of an investigation into last August’s Timor Sea oil spill, he said in a phone interview. A month ago, he invited companies to bid for permits to explore new “frontiers” as Australia faces an import cost for oil and liquid fuels that may double in five years to A$30 billion ($26 billion). The country was self sufficient in oil as recently as 2000. Ferguson, who today ruled out suspending exploration, is offering 31 drilling areas in waters as deep as 3,750 meters, more than twice the depth of BP’s leaking well. Australia’s expanded search for oil and gas comes as BP’s spill, the worst in U.S. history, focuses attention on petroleum industry safety. “We should hold off on exploring in some of the deeper basins,” said Tina Hunter, an assistant law professor at Bond University in Queensland state who studies offshore oil regulation. “The last thing we need is to go into deeper waters and risk something like what happened in the U.S.” Chevron Corp., Royal Dutch Shell Plc and ConocoPhillips are among companies planning more than $185 billion of oil and gas projects in the country, according to the Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association. ‘Accidents Will Happen’ Increased drilling adds to the risk a disaster the size of the BP Gulf spill could occur off Australia, said Justin Marshall, a professor at the University of Queensland. “The public needs much greater assurance accidents can be dealt with effectively, because they will happen,” Marshall, a former president of the Australian Coral Reef Society , said by phone yesterday. “Safety measures need to be enforced at a much higher level, the risks to the environment are huge.” The U.S. probe into the BP spill and what caused the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig to explode on April 20, killing 11 workers, will focus on safety lapses and equipment failures. Oil producers around the world are bracing for stricter regulation. Norway will ban any deepwater drilling in new areas until the cause of the BP spill is known, Oil Minister Terje Riis-Johansen said June 8. Russia may tighten its rules, Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko said May 24. Obama Response BP’s spill was initially overseen by the U.S. Minerals Management Service . The agency, faulted for lax regulation, was broken into three by President Barack Obama on May 19, creating bodies to oversee leases, drilling safety and fee collection. When Ferguson opened the new areas on May 17, he said the country must streamline rules to make a single agency responsible for safety, well operations and the environment. “There is no intention by the government to scale back the development of the oil and gas industry in Australia,” Ferguson said today. “It is very important in terms of the nation’s energy security, jobs and the overall economy, but I am totally focused on the need to ensure we have the absolute best practices in place.” The National Offshore Petroleum Safety Authority, the Australian Maritime Safety Authority and the Northern Territory Department of Resources are among bodies that had oversight of the Montara spill. Moratorium Needed Australia needs a yearlong moratorium on deepwater drilling to study the Montara report and the BP spill, Bond University’s Hunter told Bloomberg Television today. Companies drilled 1,500 wells off Australia in the 25 years before the Montara accident without any blowouts, the petroleum group said. Explorers face stringent environmental conditions before drilling, Chief Executive Officer Belinda Robinson said in an e-mailed response to questions. Last year’s spill, about 250 kilometers (155 miles) off the Kimberley coast, shows Australia needs a single agency to monitor well safety, protect the marine environment and oversee spill response, according to Hunter. Calls to strengthen Australian regulations began before the Montara incident when a 2008 explosion at Apache Corp.’s Varanus Island gas plant caused fuel shortages in Western Australia, source of a third of the nation’s exports. ‘Consistent Approach’ “Some of the issues that have arisen as a result of the Varanus and Montara incidents mean we need to revisit our regulatory system and make sure we have the strongest possible national, consistent approach, rather than allowing potential differences to develop,” Ferguson said. Montara may have spilled about 30,000 barrels of oil between Aug. 21 and Nov. 3, based on estimates by Bangkok-based PTT. That would make it the third-biggest spill in Australian history, according to figures from the Maritime Safety Authority. The Timor Sea accident and a Chinese coal carrier that ran aground in April on the Great Barrier Reef have already damaged the marine environment, University of Queensland’s Marshall said. “The ocean is full of life, and when that oil sinks to the bottom it’s going to be killing things,” he said. Australian Greens party Senator Rachel Siewert urged the government to scrap the latest set of new drilling permits, concerned about the threat to whales, seals, turtles and other marine life in one area marked for exploration off the Western Australian coast. Parts of this block are “extremely deep,” as much as 3,750 meters, the Resources Department said. “If a Montara-size spill occurred there, you’d see oil on the coast,” Siewert said in a telephone interview. “There are dangers inherent in deepwater production, and the government should put a hold on exploration that we have control over.” To contact the reporter on this story: James Paton in Sydney jpaton4@bloomberg.net .

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Asian Nations Impose Curbs in Struggle to Slow Expanding Property Bubbles

June 16, 2010

By Shamim Adam and Malcolm Scott June 17 (Bloomberg) — From Shanghai to Singapore, policy makers are struggling in their efforts to curb property bubbles that threaten to derail the world’s fastest growing region. In China, home prices are surging at a record pace even after authorities set price ceilings, demanded higher deposits, and limited second-home purchases. In Hong Kong, where the government has pledged to release more land to cool prices, a site auctioned on June 8 fetched the most since the market peak of 1997. It’s a similar story in Singapore and Taiwan as prices defy cooling measures. “Governments allow the property bubble to get so big and then try to use administrative measures to keep out speculators,” said Andy Xie , former Morgan Stanley chief economist for Asia-Pacific and now a private economist based in Shanghai. It creates the risk of a very hard landing. The right thing to do is raise interest rates.” The International Monetary Fund has cautioned that Asia’s booming home prices “pose risks to financial stability.” Governments in the region are turning to market curbs rather than raising interest rates — at 20-year lows in some places — in an effort to avert a U.S.-style property crash. While real estate prices have yet to respond, equity investors have: a Bloomberg index of 192 Asia-Pacific real estate stocks has lost 15 percent in 2010 versus a 1.5 percent gain for its U.S. peer. “The property bubbles in Asia right now are reminiscent of the U.S. before the subprime crisis because they are both fuelled by debt when interest rates are too low,” Xie said. Hong Kong had its first signal this week of a possible turn in the market, when billionaire Lee Shau-kee ’s Henderson Land Development Co. announced that sales of 20 luxury apartments had been canceled, including a unit that would have set a world record price of HK$88,000 ($11,300) per square foot. Lending Binge China, while keeping interest rates steady, has restricted pre-sales by developers, curbed loans for third-home purchases, raised minimum mortgage rates, and tightened down-payment requirements for second-home purchases. The government is trying to peel back the effects of a $586 billion stimulus plan and $1.4 trillion lending binge that revived economic growth and sparked record property price increases. China’s banking regulator this week said it sees growing credit risks in the nation’s real-estate industry and warned of increasing pressure from non-performing loans. Risks associated with home mortgages are growing and a “chain effect” may reappear in real-estate development loans, the China Banking Regulatory Commission said in its annual report published on its website June 15. While prices have yet to drop, sales volumes have. Property sales in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen fell as much as 70 percent in May. China Vanke Co., the nation’s biggest publicly traded property developer, said its sales fell 20 percent in May from a year earlier. Guangzhou R&F Properties Co.’s contracted sales last month shrank 48 percent. Cut Estimates Property prices rose 12.4 percent in May, compared with a record 12.8 percent increase in April, from a year earlier, indicating price declines are not keeping pace with the drop in transactions. The value of sales last month slid 25 percent from April. The data series, covering 70 cities, began in 2005. JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts on June 8 cut their profit estimates for China’s developers by an average 9 percent in 2010 and 11 percent in 2011 on a “substantial slowdown” in sales. China Se Shang’s Property Index has tumbled 28 percent this year, with 32 of 34 members declining, led by Shanghai New Huangpu Real Estate Co. and Poly Real Estate Group Co. Hong Kong may increase sales taxes on some properties, is accelerating land auctions, and is scrutinizing developers’ sales techniques. Singapore plans to increase the supply of land for housing, has barred interest-only mortgages for uncompleted homes, and levied a seller’s stamp duty on some properties. ‘Regulatory Measures’ Taiwan’s financial regulator asked the bankers’ association to tighten lending procedures, while two state-owned lenders have raised mortgage rates and cut the amount of loans for buyers of luxury homes and property investors. Interest rates on the island have been at a record low since February 2009. “The regulatory measures are not aiming to crash the whole property market, they are aiming to cool the speculative end,” said Khiem Do , Hong Kong-based head of multi-asset strategy at Baring Asset Management (Asia) Ltd., which oversees $11 billion. Do is underweight Asian property in his funds and is looking to buy back into the worst hit Chinese property stocks. Home prices in Hong Kong have risen almost 40 percent from the beginning of 2009, driven by interest rates at 20-year lows, lagging supply growth and buying from rich mainland Chinese. The risk of a property bubble remained in the city amid liquidity and low interest rates, Norman Chan , chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, said May 20. Ability to Pay Potential home purchasers should consider their ability to pay before taking out mortgages, Financial Secretary John Tsang said June 9, a day after a residential site sold at a public auction for HK$10.9 billion ($1.4 billion), beating estimates. In Taipei, home prices climbed 3.4 percent in May from April, Sinyi Realty Co., the biggest housing broker in Taiwan, said May 31. They have risen 29 percent to a record since September 2008 when the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. deepened the global credit crisis. Singapore Sales Private residential sales in Singapore rose to a nine-month high of 2,208 in April, the Urban Redevelopment Authority said, the highest since July 2009, showing the “resilience” of demand for new homes even after the government curbs, Li Hiaw Ho, executive director of CB Richard Ellis Research, said then. Sales dropped to 1,078 units in May. There continues to be concerns over “excessive” asset- price inflation in emerging Asia, the Singapore government said May 20. If asset prices correct too sharply in China, it could have “negative spillover” effects on regional economies, Ravi Menon , permanent secretary at the Singapore trade ministry, told reporters the same day. The failure to raise rates may allow the bubble to keep swelling, said Stephen Halmarick , Sydney-based head of investment-markets research at Colonial First State Global Asset Management, which manages about $135 billion. “The lesson of subprime is that, if you let asset prices go too far for too long, the correction can be very damaging,” he said. To contact the reporters on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at sadam2@bloomberg.net ; Malcolm Scott in Sydney at Mscott23@bloomberg.net

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