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JAL shares rise on re-listing

Written By Unknown on 19 September 2012 | 08.17

Japan Airlines (JAL) shares rose 2.6% on strong demand, almost three years after it filed for bankruptcy in one of Japan's biggest corporate failures.

JAL shares climbed as high as 3,890 yen, up from its re-listing price of 3,790 yen on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

The 663bn yen ($8.4bn; £5.2bn) initial public offering comes after the airline was given a government-backed bail out in 2010.

It is the second biggest share sale this year globally after Facebook.

Since it was de-listed from the stock exchange, JAL has taken on huge restructuring, cutting more than a third of its workforce, cancelling unprofitable routes and replacing older planes.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19644938#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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08.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

Business bank will 'need £40bn'

The government-backed "business bank" planned by Vince Cable will need £40bn to successfully boost lending to UK firms, say the think tank IPPR.

It says the bank must also be able to tap bond markets for up to £100bn.

The IPPR also suggests the government allow the bank to invest in infrastructure projects such as road building to help reflate the economy.

The business secretary announced plans for the business bank last week.

Mr Cable has said he hoped such a bank would "shake up the market" and help boost overall lending to firms.

How the bank will be structured and funded is still being worked out.

Sketchy

Details on what form the business bank will take have yet to be revealed. Nor have any details been released about what firms it will aim to lend to, or the length in years of any loan agreements.

Mr Cable, a Liberal Democrat member of the coalition government, has said the details are still in "gestation" but "may" involve some state lending, although the Treasury, with Conservative Chancellor George Osborne in charge, is understood to be against this.

The IPPR's chief economist, Tony Dolphin, said: "Because the chancellor will not spend more government money boosting aggregate demand in the economy, he has been reduced to indirect schemes like funding for lending to support growth.

"What we need in the UK is a fully-fledged British investment bank designed to suit the particular circumstances of our economy."

The think tank points out that the £40bn of government capital it believes is needed to kick start the project is unlikely to appeal to the chancellor as it would make it unlikely he would meet his fiscal targets designed to rein in government spending and cut the gap between income and spending.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19641548#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Rachel Lomax 'no' for Bank chief

The former deputy governor of the Bank of England Rachel Lomax says she will not be applying to be the bank's next governor.

The economist - who previously sat on the Bank's Monetary Policy Committee - had been named as the leading female candidate to take over from Sir Mervyn King.

Sir Mervyn is due to step down next year.

Ms Lomax made the remarks to Evan Davis on Radio 4's The Bottom Line.

Ms Lomax, who was deputy governor from 2003 to 2008, discussed her time working for the Bank the lead-up to the financial crisis, and outlined the characteristics she thinks the next governor will need.

She left just before the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

She described the period she was there as "one of sort of unreal calm for the first four years and then this very terrifying period, the last year I was there, when markets froze.

"We knew that something was bad happening, but we really didn't know, couldn't really imagine how bad it was going to be. I mean, I left the bank just before Lehmans collapsed and it's got a lot more interesting since I left."

She said Sir Mervyn's successor would have a "huge job".

The Bank is adding to its current role and is taking over from the Financial Services Authority.

It will be in charge of overseeing the banking system, financial firms and the system in general to prevent new speculative bubbles appearing.

No women

"It's going to be a very different organization - much bigger and more complex organization than the one that Mervyn King's presided over. So you need someone who can get their mind round that and at least sort of lead the change and put together the team that can implement it."

She said the job was not for her and that "life had moved on". She also expressed disappointment that there are no other credible female candidates.

Ms Lomax is now a non-executive director of HSBC, where she is also a member of several audit and risk committees.

An advert for Sir Mervyn King's replacement was published in the Economist magazine last Friday.

A Bank spokesman confirmed to the BBC that the issue of compensation for the next governor had yet to be decided.

Sir Mervyn benefited from a final-salary pension scheme that will pay him an annual pension of just over £200,000.

His pension basic salary - frozen since 2010 - is £305,000 a year so the Bank may have to offer his successor a less generous pension, and may have to pay a higher salary.

Rachel Lomax appears on Radio 4's The Bottom Line on Thursday, 20 September at 20:30 BST. Listen again to programme via the Radio 4 website or The Bottom Line download.The Bank of England has begun advertising the job of its next governor, but is still "undecided" on what pay and pension it will offer.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19644571#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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05.45 | 0 komentar | Read More

URGENT URGENT



Dear friend,

I know that this message will come to you as a surprise. I am Dr.Abu Salam from Burkina Faso the Accounting and Auditing Manager bank of Africa (B.O.A), Ouagadougou

I hoped that you will not expose or betray this trust and confident that I am about to repose on you for the mutual benefit of our families. I need your urgent assistance in transferring the sum of (usd$10.5m) million to your account within 10 to 14 banking days. This money has been dormant for years in our bank without claim. I want the bank to release the money to you as the nearest person to our deceased customer (the owner of the account) died along with his supposed next of kin in an air crash since July, 2005.

I don't want the money to go into our bank treasurer account as an abandoned fund. So this is the reason why I contacted you so that the bank can release the money to you as the next of kin to the deceased customer. Please I would like you to keep this proposal as a top secret and delete it if you are not upon receipt of your reply, I will give you full details on how the business will be executed and also note that you will have 35% of the above mentioned sum if you agree to handle this business with me? And 10% will be set aside for any expenses that warrant on the process before the fund get into your bank account such as telephone calls bills (etc).

Finally send your photo or your international passports for more identification.

Best Regards,
Dr.Abu Salam
04.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Key party quits India government

Written By Unknown on 18 September 2012 | 23.55

A key regional party has pulled out of India's ruling coalition over its plan to open the retail sector to global supermarket chains and other reforms.

The Trinamool Congress party of West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee said that its six ministers would resign from the coalition on Friday.

Ms Banerjee, who is also angry at fuel price rises, said her 19 MPs would not back the coalition in parliament.

Correspondents say the government's parliamentary majority is not at risk.

"My party's six ministers have decided to resign. It is time to fight the battle alone," said Ms Banerjee after a meeting of Trinamool leaders in Calcutta, the capital of West Bengal state.

Earlier on Tuesday Indian India's Finance Minister P Chidambaram insisted that the government was stable despite the unhappiness among its coalition partners over plans to introduce more measures to boost the economy.

"Our allies in the government and outside will understand and continue their support to the government. We will be able to convince our allies," he said.

Delhi's supermarket plan is aimed at reviving a flagging economy, but small shops fear they will be put out of business.

Last year, the government was forced to suspend a similar plan amid protests. Opposition parties have called for a strike on Thursday in protest over the latest moves to attract more Foreign Direct Investment (FDI).

On Friday, the government also announced it would open airlines to foreign capital, sell minority stakes in four state-run companies and increase the price of diesel - all measures that have attracted sharp criticism from across the political spectrum.

Correspondents say that the implementation of many of the reforms will be left entirely to the states, suggesting that some opposed to the changes could opt out.

Other conditions have also been imposed on groups wanting to invest in India.

Companies will have to invest at least $100m (£67m), open outlets only in towns with a population of more than one million and source at least 30% of produce from India, according to reports.

Many of the larger states like Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, West Bengal, Bihar and Orissa, which are ruled by opposition parties and Congress allies who are against organised retail, have refused to entertain proposals by global retailers.

Only nine states, including several smaller ones like Delhi, Indian-administered Kashmir, Assam, Manipur and Uttarakhand, support the move.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-19637424#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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SA miners 'to go back to work'

Striking miners at a Lonmin-owned platinum mine in South Africa have agreed to return to work on Thursday, mediators and reports say.

Miners cheered when they were told of a proposed 22% pay rise, a witness told Reuters news agency.

But South Africa's labour dispute body told the BBC it was waiting to hear if the latest pay offer had been accepted.

Last month, police opened fire on demonstrators at the mine in Marikana, killing 34 striking workers.

Production at the mine has been paralysed for weeks and unrest has spread to other mines.

The Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration told the BBC a delegation of workers representatives had gone to inform the striking miners of the latest offer this afternoon.

The workers, most of who are rock drill operators, gathered at a football pitch near the Marikana mine to hear the address. They have been demanding a salary of 12,500 rand ($1,513; £935) - they currently earn between 4,000 and 5,000 rand.

"What has happened here has been a victory really for the workers, and they're going to work on Thursday morning," AFP news agency quotes mediator Joe Seoka, the Bishop of Pretoria, as saying.

Bishop Seoka, from the South African Council of Churches, told the BBC there would also be a one-off payment of 2,000 rand to help cover the weeks of not being paid while they were on strike.

He refused to give any further details of the offer.

On Monday, President Jacob Zuma said that the disruption had cost the industry $548m (£337m) in lost output.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-19641510#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Uganda confirms new oil deposits

Uganda has confirmed the discovery of an additional one billion barrels of oil in the country.

In 2010, it had announced it had discovered commercially viable deposits of 2.5 billion barrels.

However, the commissioner for petroleum exploration told the BBC that deposits were now at least 3.5 billion barrels.

"This is because of new discoveries, and also the ability to extract more oil from existing wells," Ernest Rubondo told World Business Report.

Investors sought

Mr Rubondo said that out of 77 wells drilled so far, 70 contain oil and gas.

Companies such Tullow Oil, Total and CNOOC already operate in Uganda, but Mr Rubondo said he was looking for other investors to join them.

Before that happens, changes to the previous licensing bills have to be made in parliament,

"Bills were passed before the presence of oil was confirmed and now the risk for commercial companies has reduced," he said.

Continue reading the main story

A nation's security of supply for petroleum products enhances its competitiveness"

End Quote Ernest Rubondo Commissioner for petroleum exploration

Critics say that production in existing fields has been delayed by contractual disagreements, tax disputes and infrastructure setbacks.

"When oil is discovered in the middle of the country there are logistical problems which have to be overcome before it can be shipped," Mr Rubondo said.

"You cannot compare it to oil and gas discovered in the middle of the ocean," he said, "where you just have to load it onto a tanker."

He pointed out that anywhere in the world, it can take between eight and 10 years from the discovery of oil on land, to actually extracting it.

Rather than exporting the oil, he said that it was government policy to refine the oil in Uganda to provide petrol, diesel and jet fuel.

"A nation's security of supply for petroleum products enhances its competitiveness," he said.

When commenting on whether ordinary citizens would share in the wealth generated by oil, he said: "There is a communication strategy on our website so stakeholders can see exactly what is happening.

"The constitution provides laws on how local and central governments share the royalties," he added.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19637784#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Fedex warns of weakening economy

Global shipping service company Fedex has cut its full-year profit forecast, warning that the global economy is continuing to weaken.

The company, whose earnings are widely watched because of the number of countries it does business in said its net income for the first quarter had fallen 1% on last year to $459m.

Fedex said it expected annual profits to be about 10% lower than expected.

Customers are moving business from air to slower and less expensive routes.

Fedex is the world's second largest package delivery company.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19640127#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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Electronic Arts creates 300 jobs

Games company Electronic Arts is creating 300 new jobs at its European customer service centre in Galway, in the Republic of Ireland.

The centre already has a 400-strong workforce.

The US firm said it had received support from the Irish government, which is keen to attract more digital games firms to the country.

Irish premier Enda Kenny said the new jobs showed the "enormous potential" of the gaming industry.

It has been a difficult time for games retailers such as Game Group, which went into administration earlier this year, with the loss of more than 2,000 jobs.

Peter Moore, chief operating officer of Electronic Arts, told BBC News that the industry was changing, adding that some of the Game stores were reopening under new ownership.

And he said that the creation of the customer service showed how quickly the industry was moving away from sales of boxed games on the High Street and "evolving quickly to digital".

"More and more we are dealing direct with consumers," he said.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19638173#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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20.27 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man Utd net profits rise to £23m

Profits at Manchester United football club jumped 79.2% to £23.3m in year to 30 June, according to latest figures.

However, the numbers, the first since the club floated on the New York stock exchange last month, show that total revenues fell 3.3% to £320m.

Earnings from commercial operations, which includes sponsorship, hit a record £117.6, up 13.7%.

Shares in the club were floated 10 August at $14 each, but have since fallen.

18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19633967#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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