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


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (138255)1/18/2018 4:19:51 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217758
 
you mean like so ... ?

:0)

bloomberg.com

Tencent Widens Its Lead Over Facebook
More stories by Lulu Yilun ChenJanuary 18, 2018, 11:26 AM GMT+8

By
Lulu Yilun Chen

The WeChat operator is widening its lead on Zuckerberg’s firm

Investors are betting on its gaming and social media heft



WeChat's Growing Ambitions

WeChat founder Allen Zhang says the company is targeting some ambitious goals.

Tencent Holdings Ltd. is widening its lead over Facebook Inc. as the world’s most valuable social network company, riding a growing wave of optimism in Chinese technology.

The WeChat operator, which briefly overtook its U.S. counterpart in capitalization during Asian hours in November, has shot ahead after Facebook’s recent selloff. The U.S. company’s shares have slid more than 5 percent since co-founder Mark Zuckerberg outlined plans to highlight content from family and friends at the expense of media outlets and businesses. Tencent’s risen by almost the same amount over that period, establishing a $19 billion lead.

That entrenches the Chinese company among the global top five, well ahead of arch-foe Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. Investors are betting that Tencent can lean on its billion-plus users and hit games to evolve into an advertising and entertainment titan along the lines of a Google or Facebook. Created almost two decades ago as a desktop messaging platform before morphing into one of the world’s biggest purveyors of video games, the argument is that its dominance of Chinese social networking also bankrolls an expansion into newer markets from video streaming to finance.



The valuations of Chinese tech companies have also inflated as concerns about the country’s economy fade. Kuaishou is the latest manifestation of that euphoria, a Tencent-backed video-sharing app that’s said to be seeking a $17 billion valuation after just seven years in business. And smartphone maker Xiaomi Corp. is said to be speeding ahead with an IPO that could help it garner a valuation of as much as $100 billion.

Tencent wouldn’t be the first Chinese corporation among the world’s biggest. Investor enthusiasm for a raft of newly listed government-run entities inflated the valuations of old-economy names such as Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. in the last decade. PetroChina Co. in 2007 became the world’s first $1 trillion company.

A Select ClubTencent and Facebook are vying for the mantle of world's fifth most valuable company

Source: Bloomberg data

Note: As of midday Asia, Jan. 18



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (138255)1/18/2018 4:55:02 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217758
 
hi mq, according to elmat germany, along with japan, china, and and and, all returning to some natural size

the growing bright spots would be ... i am guessing by his logic, nigeria, saudi arabia, indonesia, brazil, haiti, somalia, sudan, and and and

certainly out-of-the-box / nongroupthink

but of course, the world works on both absolute and relative basis, and mathematically speaking absolute is good, relative is also good, but not astute is no good

zerohedge.com

Over The Next Year, Germany Will Hit A Scary Demographic Milestone


In Europe, the economy is humming along at its fastest pace in 10 years.

According to the European Central Bank, the most recent forecast for the eurozone pegs growth at 2.3% for the year ahead, a significant upgrade from the central bank’s previous estimate of 1.8%.

But as Europe regains its economic mojo, Visual Capitalist's Jeff Desjardins notes, a key part of the machine is seeing demographic reality take shape.

A Scary MilestoneIt’s been no secret that Germany, which has a reputation as the economic engine of Europe, is in a troubling demographic predicament. With one of the oldest populations in Europe, and a low fertility rate of just 1.5 births per woman, it is only a matter of time before the rubber hits the road to affect growth in the country.

That time may be finally creeping in, and the country is poised to hit a dubious milestone in the next year that really crystallizes concerns around the demographic composition of Germany’s population.

By 2019, there will be fewer Germans under 30 years old than there are Germans that are 60+ years:

This ratio is certainly extreme on a global level – after all, 24.4% of the world population is under the age of 14, and only 12.3% is older than 60 years.

However, it’s also pretty extreme in comparison to other developed countries. The U.N., for example, recently estimated that the 60 and older population made up an average of 22.1% of the total for all high-income countries.

Conversely, the last time the 60+ group made up the same proportion in the German economy was in 1997.

A Closer Look at GermanyFor a closer look at this trend, here’s an animated and interactive chart of Germany’s population pyramid. Notice that by 2020, the shape starts to represent the negative population growth pattern that we showcased in a previous post.

Use the “lock” button to save an imprint of particular year, and then use the play button to animate future years.








VISUALIZING NEGATIVE GROWTHWith more people in the 60+ age bracket than in the younger generation, it’s inevitably a prelude to population decline in the native population.

Here is this negative growth projection shown, using a more conventional graph:



Based on these United Nations projections, the German population is likely to decline by over 10 million people as we move towards the end of the 21st century.

This is a stark contrast to other parts of the world, such as the booming megacities in Asia and Africa, that will soon dominate the world’s future demographic landscape.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (138255)1/18/2018 7:48:13 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217758
 
Am wondering which if any way is better, however defined, for the folks at grassroots ...

atimes.com

‘Make Trade, Not War’ is China’s daring plan in the Middle EastUnder the Belt and Road Initiative, Beijing aims to connect western China to the eastern Mediterranean
By Pepe EscobarJanuary 18, 2018 12:42 PM (UTC+8)

An LNG terminal in Yangkou Port in Nantong city, which is in China's Jiangsu province. Photo: AFP

China’s “Go West” strategy was brought into sharp focus at a forum in Shanghai last weekend. Billed as the Belt and Road Initiative: Towards Greater Cooperation between China and the Middle East, it highlighted key aspects of Beijing’s wider plan.

The New Silk Roads, or the Belt and Road Initiative, involve six key economic corridors, connecting Asia, the Middle East, North Africa and Europe. One, in particular, extends through the Middle East to North Africa. This is where the Belt and Road meets MENA or the Middle East and North Africa.

Of course, Beijing’s massive economic project goes way beyond merely exporting China’s excess production capacity. That is part of the plan, along with building selected industrial bases in MENA countries by using technical and production expertise from the world’s second-largest economy.

Again, this is will connect western China to the eastern Mediterranean. It will mean developing a corridor through projects such as the Red Med railway. There are also plans to expand ports, such as Oman’s Duqm, as well as substantial investment in Turkey.


Belt and Road Initiative. Illustration: iStock

A look at the numbers tells a significant part of the story. In 2010, China-Arab trade was worth US$145 billion. By 2014, it had reached $250 billion and rising. China is now the largest exporter to assorted MENA nations, while MENA accounts for 40% of Beijing’s oil imports.

The next stage surrounding energy will be the implementation of a maze of LNG, or liquefied natural gas, pipelines, power grids, power plants and even green projects, sprouting up across the new Silk Road corridors and transit routes.

According to the Asian Development Bank, the myriad of Belt and Road infrastructure projects for the next 15 years could hit a staggering $26 trillion. Other less grandiose figures come in at $8 trillion during the next two decades.

The ongoing internationalization of the yuan will be key in the process as will the role of the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).

Naturally, there will be challenges. Belt and Road Initiative projects will have to create local jobs, navigate complex public and private partnerships along with intractable geopolitical wobbles.

Enseng Ho, a professor from the Asia Research Institute at the National University of Singapore, is one of an army of researchers studying how historical links will play an important role in this new configuration.

An excellent example is the city of Yiwu in Zhejiang province. This has become a mecca for merchant pilgrims from Syria or east Africa and has profited the region, according to the Zhejiang provincial government.

In a wider Middle East context, Beijing’s aim is to harness, discipline and profit from what can be considered an Industrialization 2.0 process. The aim is to help oil producers, such as Saudi Arabia and the rest of the Gulf states, diversify away from crude.

There is also reconstruction projections elsewhere, with China deeply involved in the commercial renaissance of post-war Syria.

As well as investing in its own future energy security, Beijing is keen to put together other long-term strategic investments. Remixing the centuries-old Chinese trade connections with the Islamic world fits into the Globalization 2.0 concept President Xi Jinping rolled out at last year’s World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos.

But then, Beijing’s strategy is to avoid a geopolitical collision in the Middle East. Its aim is to: Make Trade, Not War.

From the United States’ point of view, the National Security Strategy document highlighted how China and Russia are trying to shape a new geopolitical environment in the region, which contrasts sharply from Washington’s aims and interests.

It pointed out that while Russia is trying to advance its position as the leading political and military power broker, China is pushing ahead with a “win, win” economic policy. In 2016, that was spelt out in Beijing’s first Arab Policy paper, with its emphasis on bilateral trade cooperation, joint development projects and military exchanges.

Since geopolitical wobbles are never far below the surface in the Middle East, China has even suggested it would be willing to act as a mediator between intractable rivals Iran and Saudi Arabia.

Indeed, diplomacy is a key card for Beijing, according to Zhao Tingyang, a noted philosopher, at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

In his 2006 paper, entitled Rethinking Empire from a Chinese Concept “All-Under-Heaven”, Zhao argued that the country show follow a principle of harmony based loosely on the Confucian notion of “all under heaven” or Tianxia in Mandarin.

Confucius, one would imagine, would be pleased by the Belt and Road Initiative. You could call it: “Make Trade, Not War All Under Heaven.”