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


To: TobagoJack who wrote (109445)1/2/2015 9:11:18 PM
From: carranza2  Respond to of 217860
 
Yes, avoid mcd.

Not only is it crap food, it is dangerous in a central city location with many teenagers in attendance.

Note: we are so PC nowadays that code has developed so that meaning is not lost.

"Teenagers" means drug addled drop out savages. "Central city" means ghetto.

The venerable NYT even stooped so low a to call the Ferguson looters and arsonists "demonstrators." It was trying to fool itself as much as it was trying to mislead its readers.

We dare not offend, not even with the facts.

The NYT had an interesting piece on a Chinese "study city." A bit much, in my view, but preferable to what makes the news around here.

nytimes.com



To: TobagoJack who wrote (109445)1/2/2015 9:42:07 PM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217860
 
I'm watching Richard Quest blathering on about the fears of Euro deflation and the dangers of it. But now he's asking what's wrong with low and falling prices. Maybe they haven't noticed that oil has gone from $140 down to $50. That's deflation writ large.

Now Gillian Tett, Financial Times US managing editor, is trying to explain why deflation is scary problematic.

This takes me back nearly 50 years to the late 1960s when I was first hearing about the dangers of inflation and how it would be a disaster if it gets up to 5%. Which it did in the 1970s and then a lot more besides. But there was no financial disaster. Just the stagflation and whatnot of the 1970s and 1980s.

There is talk of inflation/deflation as being scary alien invaders which come roaring over the horizon bent on destruction. Of course it's just the controllers of money who do it, not magic or ethereal beings from the void.

As Big Ben said, deflation couldn't happen because he was able to produce as much money as he liked out of thin air. He could issue everyone holding a US$ with twice as many, or just his friends and sponsors which is the traditional approach.

The fall in the price of oil enables a big spendathon by the money manipulators without causing inflation. They will of course indulge that fun thing to do.

Since gold is made from oil, the price of gold is going nowhere. Especially as there's no particular panic elsewhere making people buy gold. Which might be the right time to buy it. Given the swarming interest in alternative energy supplies at $100 a barrel, it seems that $50 a barrel is not particularly cheap. The over-amped fears of Global Warming are going nowhere either, with no warming evident.

The big deal is the continuing tsunami of mobile Cyberspace and the fibresphere which links it together.

Jihad is a bit like the IRA in the 1970s and 1980s. Annoying and quite bloody in spots, barbaric and stupid, but in the big picture, nothing much to worry about. I guess China won't submit. Euroserfs will probably resist, though they are maybe getting a bit late to do so.

Russia's small 0.1 billion population will be increasingly beholden to China's 1.3 billion as the silly Euroserfs and Yanks are banned from trading with Russia. Genghis Khan's descendants will end up working in Russia helping develop infrastructure and supplies all the way to the eastern edge of Euroserfstan. Further than they got 800 years ago. Blame Zbigniew. He's still trying to fight the 1930s wars when Stalin ruled and Operation Barbarossa was looming.

The umpty$billion hydrocarbon supply contract between Russia and China was a bad start for Euroserfstan.

Mqurice



To: TobagoJack who wrote (109445)1/4/2015 4:05:47 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217860
 
What if of trying so much QEs they got a formula that works?

We have the Japan type of QE, applied for 2 decades did not work. (empty airports and bridges to nowhere) I can see Japan coming out

American QE produced the shale boom after investing 500 billion (without QE this would not have been possible)

Next we will have the Euro QE they may apply a new type of QE and this gigantic experiment may turn out to shape the global economy.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (109445)1/4/2015 4:09:29 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217860
 
Japan word of the day is tie up

Toshiba Seeks Europe Lighting Tie-Ups to Take on Philips
Bloomberg-Mar 19, 2014
Seguineau estimates that Toshiba, whose products range from ... Toshiba has so far focused on sales to businesses as the corporate world ...

Sony, Toshiba and Hitachi confirm LCD tie-up
Financial Times-Aug 31, 2011
The new company, to be called Japan Display, will be 70 per cent owned by INCJ while Sony, Toshiba and Hitachi will each take a 10 per

Repair tie-up in Japan
TradeWinds (subscription)-Dec 28, 2014
Kawasaki Heavy Industries (KHI) and Mitsui Engineering and Shipbuilding (MES) have agreed on a tie-up in their ship repair business starting ...

Refiners Idemistu and Showa Shell in talks for tie-up
The Japan Times-Dec 22, 2014
Shares in Japanese refiners surged on Monday after two of the largest said they were discussing a tie-up, as falling demand for fuels spurs the ...

BPI-Japan firm tieup sealed
Inquirer.net-Dec 26, 2014
Ayala-led Bank of the Philippine Islands has completed the sale of a 49-percent stake in its leasing and financing business to Japanese ...

Two Reliance groups tie up with two Mitsui firms from Japan
Financial Express-Dec 25, 2014
In an interesting coincidence, the two Reliance groups — headed by brothers Mukesh and Anil Ambani — today announced separate ...

Hitachi, Swiss firm consider tie-up on electricity distribution equipment

The Japan Times-Dec 15, 2014
Hitachi Ltd. is in talks with Switzerland-based ABB Ltd. on a joint venture to supply electric power equipment to Japan, where the government is ...

ABB, Hitachi to Tie up for HVDC Power Grid in Japan
NDTV-Dec 16, 2014
Explore in depth (58 more articles)

Marubeni mulls tie-up with leading Japanese wholesaler
IntraFish.com-Dec 8, 2014
Japanese wholesaler Kokubu & Co. and Marubeni Corporation are considering teaming up on their wholesale businesses, the companies



To: TobagoJack who wrote (109445)1/4/2015 4:20:25 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217860
 
With cheap money available, Japan Inc. seen to follow Suntory's M&A path

acquiring overseas companies to gain a foothold in faster-growing markets even as global economic uncertainty and a weaker yen temper deal-making.Japan's slow domestic growth and cash-heavy balance sheets, together with declining birth rates and an ageing society, have encouraged outbound acquisitions by companies in a broad range of sectors from consumer and retail to finance and electronics.

with Japan's central bank printing money and borrowers awash in cheap loans, takeovers by Japanese companies both large and small are expected to remain steady, according to executives, investment bankers and lawyers interviewed by Reuters


With cheap money available, Japan Inc. seen to follow Suntory's M&A path

More Japanese companies are expected to follow Suntory Beverage & Food Ltd ( 2587.T) in acquiring overseas companies to gain a foothold in faster-growing markets even as global economic uncertainty and a weaker yen temper deal-making.Japan's slow domestic growth and cash-heavy balance sheets, together with declining birth rates and an ageing society, have encouraged outbound acquisitions by companies in a broad range of sectors from consumer and retail to finance and electronics.

The value of announced Japanese acquisitions in the first quarter rose nearly four-fold from a year ago to 2.07 trillion yen ($20.23 billion), Thomson Reuters data show, though that total was heavily weighted by Suntory's huge takeover U.S. bourbon maker Jim Beam.

Still, with Japan's central bank printing money and borrowers awash in cheap loans, takeovers by Japanese companies both large and small are expected to remain steady, according to executives, investment bankers and lawyers interviewed by Reuters.

"The aspiration for growth hasn't gone away," Yuichiro Wakatsuki, head of mergers and acquisitions at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in Japan, told Reuters. "There is ample capital and banks are quite aggressive about lending, so there aren't constraints in terms of capital."

That sentiment was well represented in the takeover agreement by Japanese beverage group Suntory Holdings, which announced the purchase of U.S. spirits company Beam Inc. in January for a total deal of $16 billion, using around $14 billion in borrowed money.

A year ago, the Bank of Japan announced an intense burst of monetary stimulus, pledging to buy assets to accelerate consumer inflation to 2 percent in about two years. The ultra-easy monetary environment, along with hopes of "Abenomics" stimulus spending, helped to drive Tokyo shares up 57 percent in 2013. The BOJ is widely expected to launch further easing later in 2014.

Wakatsuki noted a mixed outlook for global M&A deals due to macroeconomic concerns, but said there was little change in the search for opportunities abroad by Japanese companies. First-quarter M&A data show Japan ranking fourth globally in cross-border M&A, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Outbound mergers and acquisitions by Japanese companies fell 5 percent to 6.17 trillion yen ($61 billion) in the year ending March 31, according to preliminary data by Thomson Reuters.

But that pullback is coming off a 13 percent climb the previous year, when optimism over Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's reflationary policies lifted Japanese stocks and business confidence.

Mark Weeks, managing partner of law firm Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe in Tokyo, said there was increasing M&A interest among CEOs of medium-sized companies.

"We are also seeing strong, traditionally domestically focused Japanese companies, in the $150-$300 million size range, that are looking outside of Japan for the first time," he said.

A weekend poll by the Nikkei Shimbun showed around 47 percent of Japan's CEOs were interested in M&A, with 36 percent looking for a partner and 3 percent already in talks.

Of the respondents who indicated interest, 61 percent said they would consider deals with U.S. and European companies, while 52 percent were looking to China and developing economies.

Genichi Tamatsuka, due to take over as CEO of Lawson Inc ( 2651.T) in May, said the 24-hour convenience store chain was doing well in Hawaii and the company would consider M&A to expand further in the U.S. market.

"The purpose of our expansion in Hawaii was to establish a beachhead into North America. We need to consider M&A with an eye on the North American market," he told reporters this week.

Yuichi Jimbo, head of investment banking at Citigroup Global Markets Japan, said current market conditions presented "a very good window" of opportunity for deals, one that companies don't expect to last much longer.

"Once the inflation target is achieved, interest rates will inevitably rise," he told a recent seminar in Tokyo, calling money, at this stage, "practically free."

($1 = 102.31 Japanese yen)