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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 2MAR$ who wrote (86023)1/17/2012 10:33:10 PM
From: Cogito Ergo Sum  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 217805
 
Mainstream business news was all happy about China and possible easing... gold up.. stocks down.. TSX down.. lots of issues I own popped then pooped.. Encana closed a teeny bit green ... as NG continues to do the Acapulco cliff dive.. youtube.com

That NG can go nowhere but down crowd is mainstream now... Everybody 'knows' NG is cooked.. Mr. O is now endorsing NG (well it is cheap) ?? meanwhile.. field day for anti frackers... albertasurfacerights.com Conventional and CBM NG may get some legs out of this ?? ... not tomorrow... but ...

If fracking is constrained and oilsands are constrained.. don't bet on Canada...



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (86023)1/18/2012 12:42:23 AM
From: average joe  Respond to of 217805
 
Bre-X, Nortel and next...

Analysis: Nortel case delay highlights Canada crime approach

Tue Jan 17, 2012 5:12pm EST

By Cameron French and Allison Martell

TORONTO (Reuters) - The years-long delay in bringing three former Nortel Networks executives to trial for fraud has reinforced Canada's well-earned reputation as a laggard in markets enforcement, particularly when compared with the United States, its critics say.

Jurisdictional issues, lack of personnel and a national police task force that has not produced results all contribute to what lawyers and academics say is Canada's dysfunctional approach to prosecuting white-collar crime.

"There is no question that the U.S., if you look empirically, is way better at enforcing these kinds of things," said Ramy Elitzur, a professor at the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management.

Nearly eight years has passed since former Nortel Chief Executive Frank Dunn, former Chief Financial Officer Douglas Beatty and former Controller Michael Gollogly were fired from the one-time tech industry heavyweight.

Accused of altering financial statements to ensure lucrative bonuses, they only stepped in court to hear opening statements in their trial on Monday.

If the proceedings last the expected six months, it will prove to be a shorter ordeal than the prosecution of fraud at theatre company Livent, which went bankrupt in 1998, a few years before the U.S. scandals at Enron and WorldCom.

Livent founders Garth Drabinsky and Myron Gottlieb were convicted in 2009, and were not jailed until they lost an appeal last fall. The principles at Enron and WorldCom went to prison more than half a decade ago.

"It does take longer here," said P.M. Vasudev, a law professor at the University of Ottawa. "There is a perception that enforcement on this side of the border is not as rigorous and it is more difficult to secure convictions."

PATCHWORK REGULATION

Vasudev and others point to the Canadian securities regime, which is a patchwork of ten provincial regulators, rather than the single-regulator system of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Investigations of major cases are carried out by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's Integrated Market Enforcement Teams, established in 2003 to beef up the country's approach to prosecuting corporate crime.

The several layers of authority lead to delays, critics say, while the RCMP has not lived up to expectations.

"I think that the RCMP is a great organization, but I mean the skills you need to investigate something like this are very very different than, say, a homicide," says Elitzur, echoing a common perception.

Also a problem is the fuzzy line between the authority of provincial regulators, which have powers to lay quasi-criminal charges, and crown prosecutors.

IMPROVEMENT

Even so, observers say the record of prosecutors in Canada has improved in recent years. The Livent case, after all, did end in a conviction, as did the prosecution of lawyer Stan Grmovsek, who pleaded guilty to insider trading in 2009.

Looming large in the rearview mirror, however, are debacles such as Bre-X, the largest corporate fraud in Canadian history, involving a gold-salting scam at the company's Busang property in Indonesia.

Enthusiasm over the supposed worth of the deposit drove Bre-X's market value to nearly C$6 billion in the mid-1990s, before independent surveys showed the deposit was worthless, prompting the shares to plummet to nothing.

Chief geologist John Felderhof, the only figure in the fraud ever charged with the crime, was acquitted of insider trading 2007.

Such cases have long stuck in the craw of Canadian market watchers, who say the impression that market security is lax is a deterrent to foreign investment.

Asked about delays in the system, Brendan Crawley, a spokesman for Ontario's attorney general, said his office takes white-collar crime very seriously.

"This ministry has a number of experienced counsel dedicated to providing advice to police and to prosecuting difficult, lengthy and complex criminal cases involving white collar crime," he said.

Cristie Ford, a law professor at University of British Columbia, said the approach of Canadian prosecutors is not the same as the "get the bad guys" approach of their U.S. counterparts.

"In Canada, the Crown is taught not to think of its job as being to win... They are representatives of the Crown and are charged with administering justice," she said.

"I've often defended the Canadian approach, which is more about compliance before the fact and less about enforcement after the fact, but a compliance-oriented approach is only going to work where the reality of meaningful enforcement is there in the background."

(Additional reporting by Alastair Sharp; Editing by Frank McGurty)



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (86023)1/18/2012 1:27:18 AM
From: average joe  Respond to of 217805
 
PlayBook, BlackBerry-maker RIM rumoured to be in talks with Samsung the potential buyer

January 17, 2012 17:01:00
Vanessa Lu
Business Reporter

Shares in Research In Motion jumped 8 per cent Tuesday after a technology blog suggested the BlackBerry maker is in talks to sell all or parts of the company to Samsung.

The report, from The Boy Genius Report, a well-respected technology blog that closely follows RIM, said the South Korean electronics giant Samsung is the front-runner among possible bidders.

Shares in RIM, which has been the subject of takeover or sale rumours for months, were up $1.30 (U.S.) to $17.47 (U.S.) on the NASDAQ with nearly 59 million shares changing hands. On the TSX, the share closed at $17.76, up 90 cents.

“It isn’t the first time that we have heard they are kicking the tires,” said Carmi Levy, “But the BGR report suggests Samsung may be doing more than just sniffing. There is some credence.”

The main question is the price. The blog suggested that RIM is seeking $12 billion to $15 billion for an outright sale, which converts to about $22.90 to $28.60 a share.

After Tuesday’s surge, RIM’s market capitalization is more than $9 billion (U.S.), but still less than the $12 billion to $15 billion range the company is reportedly seeking for a full sale.

A RIM spokeswoman in New York declined to comment saying it doesn’t respond to rumours or speculation.

Levy said the real value in RIM is its assets including intellectual property, patents and licensing.

One of RIM’s biggest assets is its BlackBerry Messenger instant texting service, which would allow Samsung set itself apart from the Android operating system that it uses in its smartphones.

Despite the rough ride RIM has had in recent years, its wireless email encryption technology remains unbeaten, making it popular with government and business.

“Anyone who does buy it or licenses it or gains access through a partnership would get a piece of differentiating technology,” Levy said.

But he cautions the list of Rim suitors may be dwindling.

Nokia and Microsoft reportedly flirted with a joint bid last summer. Nokia is using Windows Phone as its primary platform. Google is taking over Motorola Mobility, so any Motorola bid for RIM is less likely.

The online retailer Amazon also reportedly approached RIM, keen to gain a gateway to users for its services, but Reuters said it was rejected by RIM’s board.

“Timing is everything in this business,” Levy said. “It’s not like there’s a lineup around the block (for RIM).

“They don’t want to be too greedy, but they don’t want to give away the store.”



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (86023)1/18/2012 1:55:36 AM
From: average joe  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217805
 
Samsung squashes RIM takeover rumours

Matt Hartley, National Post
Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012

Consumers hoping to get their hands on a BlackBerry Galaxy smartphone appear to be out of luck.

Despite rumours to the contrary, it now seems South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., maker of the Galaxy line of mobile devices, is not one of the many technology giants reportedly kicking the tires of Research In Motion Ltd.

Shares of RIM spiked on Tuesday, rising more than 7% in the United States, after the popular tech blog Boy Genius Report published rumours that Samsung officials had met with RIM’s leadership about a possible takeover.

Although RIM issued its customary “RIM’s standard policy is to decline comment on rumors and speculation” statement, Sasmsung squashed the rumours Tuesday evening, sending shares of RIM down nearly 4% in late trading.

In an email, Samsung Canada told the Financial Post: “Media reports of Samsung Electronics’ buyout of Research In Motion are not true. Samsung is not considering the acquisition of RIM.”

So much for that.

While some observers remain convinced that RIM co-chief executives Jim Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis have erected a “For Sale” sign outside the company’s headquarters in Waterloo, to date, takeover speculation surrounding the once powerful BlackBerry maker appears to consist of a lot of smoke, and little fire.

Which isn’t to say there aren’t companies that are likely taking a long hard look at RIM and their own balance sheets as they try to decide if such a takeover is worth the risk, and the pricetag.

Shares of RIM jumped last week on rumours that the company had hired U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to explore strategic options for the company, which could include the sale of particular divisions, or the company as a whole.

As RIM’s stock price nosedived in 2011 — it closed out the year down more than 70% — rumours began to percolate that the wolves were beginning to circle RIM, lurking around the shadows of Waterloo, plotting a possible takeover of Canada’s BlackBerry maker.

It’s easy to see why some of the biggest companies in Silicon Valley and beyond would be interested in RIM. Despite all of its recent struggles, the company generated more than US$20-billion in revenue last year and continues to pull in nine-figure profits each quarter. Last year, RIM’s global user base shot up 44% to about 70 million, and the company continues to grow its presence in international markets.

Add to that the company’s globally recognizable BlackBerry brand, its best in class email and encryption technology and its treasure trove of patents, and it becomes clear why cash-rich technology powerhouses are, if nothing else, curious what it might cost to get their hands on RIM.

Amazon.com Inc. was reportedly interested during the summertime, as were software giant Microsoft Corp. and Finnish cellphone maker Nokia Oyj. However, reports suggest RIM rebuffed those advances, determined to go it alone and wasn’t interested in a tie-up.

Other rumours suggest RIM’s leaders were asking too high a price and that potential buyers aren’t willing to pay what RIM’s co-chief executive tandem believe the company is worth. This was at a time when shares of RIM were trading closer to $25.

Now that shares of RIM are trading closer to $16, the question becomes: how many of those companies have called back?

One of the reasons that RIM’s shares spiked on Tuesday once Wall Street caught wind of the Samsung rumour is that the South Korean firm seems like a good fit for RIM.

RIM’s BlackBerry Messenger technology would be a nice way to help Samsung’s smartphones differentiate themselves from the rest of the Android crowd, while RIM’s enterprise technology would make Samsung a leader in the corporate world.

But all that is moot, since it would appear Samsung isn’t interested in RIM.

Still, any sale of RIM would come with its own unique set of complications, not the least of which would be Canada’s federal government, which may, or may not, block any attempted takeover of RIM. In fact, there’s no way of knowing if the government would support a RIM sale, since the Conservatives have failed to update the Investment Canada Act.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s recent comments that “we all know this is an important Canadian company” do little to clarify the matter.



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (86023)2/10/2012 4:18:36 AM
From: 2MAR$  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217805
 
LNG popped big today $14.45 from $8 to $14.45 .... "Clean Energy Fuels and Cheniere Energy Look to Benefit From Obama's Natural Gas Endorsement"

The Paragon Report Provides Equity Research on Clean Energy Fuels Corporation & Cheniere Energy
finance.yahoo.com

Cheniere Energy Shares Popped: What You Need to Know
fool.com