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Global Outlook Archive

The January Indicator Suggests A Postive 2012

February 9, 2012, Thursday
As 2011 drew to a close, one of the focal points of our Market Comments was the prospects for a Santa Claus rally and the possible impact this would have for the start of 2012. The Santa Claus rally kicked in about mid-December, and the markets did not look back in January. By the end of the month, most major market indices were showing nearly 10% gains.

The Keystone Delay Won't Stop These Canadian Oil Sands Stocks

February 9, 2012, Thursday
I'm not a knee-jerk hater of the Obama administration. But the President's decision to reject the Keystone pipeline was one of his worst. Aside from creating jobs, the pipeline would have decisively swung U.S. energy supplies more toward domestic sources and those of our friendly neighbor Canada. Granted, the pipeline wouldn't create energy independence but it would mean importing less oil from the Middle East.

February-March 2012 Outlook

February 7, 2012, Tuesday
In the last few months we have seen some limited positive progress out of politicians who previously seemed determined to fail to the detriment of the economy. The US Congress kicked the can down the road again on tax cut extensions, while Europe has gotten closer to an orderly Greek resolution and made some decisions on how to move forward with greater integration. The ECB also bought them some more time by enacting a three year LTRO (long term refinancing operation) to ease bank funding issues, an effort that has salved sovereign markets.

“Compelling Valuation, or Value Trap?”

February 7, 2012, Tuesday
Valuations for U.S. equities have been stuck below the five-decade average for the longest period since Richard Nixon’s presidency; a sign investors don’t trust earnings even after a three-year bull market. Analysts estimate profits in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index will reach a record $104.78 this year after increasing 125 percent since the end of 2009, the fastest expansion in a quarter century, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Could Gold Prices Double in the Next Two Years?

February 7, 2012, Tuesday
We have written many times about the 16- to 18-year cycles that markets and resources follow. For example, Gold increased in price 24 times from $35 in 1970 to $850 in 1980. Oil prices increased 13 times from $2.92 a barrel in 1965 to $38.34 in 1981. Commodity prices then dropped for almost two decades: Gold prices fell 18 years until prices bottomed at $253 in 1999, oil prices followed with a 17- year decline to reach a low of $10.35 in 1998. Seventeen or eighteen years is a long time! It is half of the entire working period of a person’s life.

Poland Gives Green Light to Massive Fracking Efforts

February 3, 2012, Friday
There is perhaps no more controversial energy source after nuclear than "hydraulic fracturing," or "fracking," of subterranean shale deposits containing pockets of natural gas. While the process can liberate previously unusable sources of natural gas, political, environmental and scientific concerns have risen along with production, as evidence mounts that fracking is responsible for everything from polluting subterranean aquifers to causing regional earthquakes.

“Precisely Watson?”

February 2, 2012, Thursday
It is precisely on this distinction that Holmes bases his insight. When the inspector asks, “Is there any point to which you would wish to draw my attention? Holmes responds, “To the curious incident of the dog in the night.” But, protests the inspector, “The dog did nothing in the night.” To which Holmes delivers the punch line, “That was the curious incident.”

Musings

February 2, 2012, Thursday
The Federal Reserve's move on Thursday to keep interest rates at record lows until late 2014 is a very telling monetary policy strategy. Ben Bernanke's decision tells us that the economy is not recovering as robustly as it may have seemed in recent months. Or more importantly, that the USA is a long way from generating sustainable growth. Why else would the Fed implement such a prolonged and historic monetary easing policy?

Is Deepwater Horizon the New Ecuador?

January 31, 2012, Tuesday
Nearly two years after the worst accidental offshore oil spill in the history of the energy industry, some of the biggest companies in the world are busy pointing their legal fingers at one another in court over who has to pay what in claims, damages and fines over the deadly Deepwater Horizon oil spill. A federal judge this week ruled that BP is still obligated to a clause in its contract with Transocean that would protect the rig owner from damages related to the spill. That means BP still has to shell out money to settle claims filed by those along the southern U.S. coast impacted by the spill. BP, meanwhile, is suing Halliburton, something Halliburton said was ridiculous. If the legal mess over Chevron's case involving Ecuador is any indication, former BP boss Tony Hayward will be pushing 80 before this gets settled.

Those Fascinating Fibonacci Numbers and The Golden Ratio

January 31, 2012, Tuesday
Support and resistance levels on bar charts are a major component in the study of technical analysis. Many traders, including myself, use support and resistance levels to identify entry and exit points when trading markets. When determining support and resistance levels on charts, one should not overlook the key Fibonacci percentage "retracement" levels. I will detail specific Fibonacci percentages in this feature, but first I think it is important to examine how those numbers were derived, and by whom.

S&P 500: Momentum Sends a Market Message

January 31, 2012, Tuesday
High-volume trading characterizes a healthy bull market. Yet, the market's rise in the past few months has mostly included low volume. The past several weeks in particular have seen the percentage of up volume declining in the New York Stock Exchange. Moreover, the NYSE advance/decline ratio has been going downhill.

Chart Presentation: Different Perspective

January 31, 2012, Tuesday
There seems to be a certain similarity between the current time period and that of early 1999. In other words the post-Eurozone bears a certain resemblance to the post-Asian/Russian/Brazilian situation that marked the end of 1998. First is a comparison between the S&P 500 Index and the sum of 3-month and 10-year Treasury yields from 1997 into 2000. Next is the same comparison running from the start of 2010 to the present day.

LNG Trade is About to Take Off

January 31, 2012, Tuesday
Over the past two years, I have discussed at length the benefits of the coming U.S. trade in liquefied natural gas (LNG). Exporting LNG will offset the glut forming from excessive shale gas extractions, bringing balance to the U.S. market. It will also cause a small group of companies already involved in the development of this trade to become a main focus of investors. This is a complete game-changer.

U.S. REITs

January 31, 2012, Tuesday
The U.S. housing market seems to have settled down, albeit at depressed levels. If, and it remains a big IF, the U.S. housing scene truly has bottomed (foreclosures were 40% less in 2011 than in 2010, although mortgage delinquencies remained largely unchanged), then housing and housing-related stocks may continue to recover. Since October 1, 2011, there has been phenomenal stock price increases in many of the U.S. housing stocks. Check out: Toll Bros. (TOL); D.R. Horton (DHI); Pulte Group (PHM); Lennar Corp. (LEN); and KB Homes (KBH).

Expected Breakout Has Materialized

January 30, 2012, Monday
Since the October 4th 2011 low, market action has been characterized by a series of higher lows. A Senior U.S. Portfolio Advisor wrote, “We are creatures of habit that often leads us to repeating the past. I believe that because we are creatures of habit, technical analysis is a very useful tool.” More and more indicators have been breaking out above the previous highs, repeating the behaviour of the past. In fact, the NASDAQ 100 Index is now at new 10 year highs! More and more long term Trend indicators have recently turned positive for major market averages.

Corporate Spending and Unemployment

January 26, 2012, Thursday
Numerous investment articles over the past few months have implored America’s corporations to unleash their vast, burgeoning cash hoards to kick-start the economy. This may now be occurring and, if so, could provide the catalyst for a winning stock market in 2012, at least in the United States. A Federal Reserve report released in September 2011 stated that, at the end of June, U.S. non-financial corporations held more than $2 trillion in cash, and that excludes foreign cash holdings. This comprised 7.1% of all company assets, and was the highest level since 1963.

Something's Fishy in Tripoli

January 25, 2012, Wednesday
Way back in early 2011, members of the U.N. Security Council had no problem getting a resolution through that authorized military force in Libya ostensibly to protect civilians from attacks by forces loyal to strongman Moammar Gadhafi. The year before, lawmakers on both sides of the Atlantic were bickering over who did what and why in terms of the cancer-stricken Lockerbie bomber. This Scottish decision to release him, depending on which U.S. lawmaker you spoke with, was tied to a BP deal to drill for oil in Libya. Despite fractures in the new interim government in Tripoli and reports of renewed protests, a decision by the Italian government to quietly discuss trade relations suggests something isn't quite right in the way Western allies pick their fights.

What The Next Decade Holds For Commodities

January 25, 2012, Wednesday
What a decade!... A rapidly-urbanizing global population, driven by tremendous growth in emerging markets, has sent commodities on quite a run over the past 10 years. In fact, you would find that all 14 commodities are in positive territory if you annualized the returns since 2002. The best performer was silver with an impressive 20% annualized return. Surprisingly, that was higher than the 19% annual return on gold. Notably, all commodities, except natural gas, outperformed the S&P 500 Index 10-year annualized return of just 2.92%.

Danger Ahead

January 25, 2012, Wednesday
As I was writing this past weekend's newsletter "A Technical Review Of The Markets" it really dawned on me just how complacent investors have become on the economy, the markets and risk in general. The mainstream media, and most of analysts, are looking at recent improvements in the economic data as a sign that the economy has begun to make a turn for  the better. This view is further supported by the rise of the stock market. With a couple of breadcrumbs, a sprinkle of "hope" and a cup of optimism - analysts, economists and investors have whipped up the perfect concoction by extrapolating recent upticks into long term future advances.

Solar Yacht Sails Around the World Powered by Nothing More than the Sun

January 25, 2012, Wednesday
The World Future Energy Summit has recently finished in Abu Dhabi and for me one of the highlights was the Turanor, an impressive solar powered yacht designed and built by Planet Solar. It is the largest boat of its kind to ever sail and the first to ever circumnavigate the globe powered entirely by the sun. It steadily cruises at an average speed of five knots, but is capable of reaching more than double that on clear, calm, sunny days.

Using Ocean Temperature Differences to Create Renewable Energy

January 25, 2012, Wednesday
Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) is an idea for creating renewable energy by exploiting the difference in ocean temperatures between the surface and the seabed. The OTEC permit office first opened in 1981 as part of NOAA, America's National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the marine counterpart to NASA. It was created after the oil price spike of the 1970's when interest in alternative power sources rose. Oil prices eventually settled and as a result interest in the alternative power sources dwindled, so in 1994, just 13 years later the OTEC office was closed without ever having issued a permit. Good old American bureaucracy.

Everybody’s Unhappy!?

January 24, 2012, Tuesday
Money managers are unhappy because 70% of them are lagging the S&P 500. Economists are unhappy because they do not know what to believe: this month’s forecast of a strong economy or last month’s forecast of a weak economy. Technicians are unhappy because the market refuses to correct and gets more and more extended. Foreigners are unhappy because due to their underinvested status in the U.S. they have missed a big double play: a big currency move plus a big stock market move. The public is unhappy because they just plain missed out on the party after being scared into cash.

Corporate Spending and Unemployment

January 24, 2012, Tuesday
Numerous investment articles over the past few months have implored America’s corporations to unleash their vast, burgeoning cash hoards to kickstart the economy. This may now be occurring and, if so, could provide the catalyst for a winning stock market in 2012, at least in the United States. A Federal Reserve report released in September 2011 stated that, at the end of June, U.S. non-financial corporations held more than $2 trillion in cash, and that excludes foreign cash holdings. This comprised 7.1% of all company assets, and was the highest level since 1963.

China to Aid Saudi Arabia in Nuclear Power Development

January 19, 2012, Thursday
Ever since the end of World War Two, the U.S. has come to regard Saudi Arabia as almost its exclusive oil producing enclave. In February 1945, after the Yalta Conference with Soviet General Secretary Iosif Stalin and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, on his way home U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and King Ibn Saud met aboard the New Orleans-class heavy cruiser U.S.S. Quincy in the Suez Canal's Great Bitter Lake.

“The Turtle?”

January 18, 2012, Wednesday
“We are suffering just now from a bad attack of economic pessimism. It is common to hear people say that the epoch of enormous economic progress which characterised the century is over; that the rapid improvement in the standard of life is now going to slow down; that a decline in prosperity is more likely than an improvement in the decade which lies ahead.”

The New Year Begins on a Positive Note

January 13, 2012, Friday
We would like to wish our subscribers a healthy and prosperous 2012. While observing the way the media portrayed 2011, one would get the impression that it was a year to  forget. But was it that bad? Certainly there were large doses of dramatic events on the economic and political fronts: the Euro-zone saga, rising debt, political and economic instability, and social unrest, to name just a few. However, despite all the chaos and negativity, the North American markets  finished the year much better than news sources reported.

Pakistan to Produce Gas - by Burning Underground Coal

January 12, 2012, Thursday
As we start a new year, consider the miserable plight of the average Pakistani electricity consumer. With about 50 per cent less electricity generation capability than the actual demand, Pakistan's National Grid is facing more than a 5,000-megawatt shortfall in power generation, leading to blackouts in both urban and rural areas of the country.

The January Barometer

January 10, 2012, Tuesday
It’s that time of year again when the media is abuzz with that old stock market saying, “so goes the first week of the new year, so goes the month and so goes the year.” Admittedly, the January Barometer has a pretty good track record. To wit, according to the Stock Trader’s Almanac. Devised by Yale Hirsch in 1972, our January Barometer states that as the S&P 500 goes in January, so goes the year. The indicator has registered only seven major errors since 1950 for an 88.5% accuracy ratio. . . . Including the seven flat-year (minor) errors (less than +/- 5%) yields a 77.0% accuracy ratio.

Football Pitch-Sized Batteries Could Change the World of Renewable Energy

January 10, 2012, Tuesday
2011 saw huge advances in solar, wind and other renewable energy sources, and these advancements will continue into 2012. In fact 2012 could be the year that renewable energy sources start to seriously compete with traditional fossil fuels, at least that is the hope in the battle to reduce carbon emissions and our dependence on dwindling oil stocks. However a major problem with renewable energy sources is that they can rarely provide consistent power levels, due to a myriad of factors outside of human control.

Fundamentals Weigh on the Rupee

January 9, 2012, Monday
Believe it or not, today the rupee is hovering around 53 against the US dollar.  The deteriorating external environment has driven investors to the US dollar as a flight to safety, hitting most Asian currencies. The depreciation in the rupee increased when weakening domestic  environment in the form of widening current account deficit, coupled with a rising fiscal deficit, came to the fore. In the wake of an impending global slowdown and weak fundamentals at home, nothing augurs well for the rupee in the months ahead.

Gold Likely to Lose its Shine

January 9, 2012, Monday
In the last 11 years, gold prices have risen from $280/ounce to $1,920/ounce. In fact, in 2011, gold outperformed most asset classes. There are several reasons for this huge rally in gold. The yellow metal’s role as a store of value continues to gain with the growth in the global money supply (M2). Gold prices have grown faster than the growth of the global money supply (M2). Since the year 2000, world’s major central banks’ answer to crises have been easy monetary  policies and stimulus packages in various forms. Because of this, real interest rates have turned negative and inflation is constantly moving up (except in 2007-08).

Shareholding pattern reveals how the shares of a company are divided among the various bodies that constitute its ownership.

January 9, 2012, Monday
Before buying any stock, we research the company from all possible angles.  We take into account the company’s profit and loss, sales and debt, among other things and thus, try to gather as much information as possible about the business into  which we are going to invest our hard-earned money so as to avoid nasty surprises in the future. This is also important because when we buy a share, we are not just buying a piece of paper, but also becomin  a part owner of the business to the extent of the shareholding percentage.

Market participants can consider contra and arbitrage funds in present market conditions.

January 9, 2012, Monday
The performance of equity markets have forced investors to look at  different types of mutual fund schemes instead of blindly putting money in conventional equity schemes. Equity markets have been under pressure since the past few months and if experts are to be believed, then in the coming months, the markets may remain range-bound. In such a scenario, retail investors can invest a part of their allocated money  in contra funds or arbitrage funds as these have outdone the benchmark indices in the last one year.

Eicher Motors Ltd in India is likely to continue its growth story in the coming years.

January 9, 2012, Monday
Incorporated in the year 1982, Eicher Motors Ltd (EML) is the flagship company of the Eicher Group and a leading player in the Indian automobile industry. It is present in various businesses like commercial vehicles (CVs), two-wheelers and related component and design services, with CVs being the key revenue driver. Its 50-50 joint venture with the Volvo Group, VE Commercial Vehicles Ltd (VECV) designs, manufactures and markets reliable, fuel-efficient commercial vehicles of high quality and modern technology, engineering components and provides engineering design solutions. Eicher Motors manufactures and markets the iconic Royal Enfield motorcycles.

Review your life insurance policies on a timely basis and ensure the financial security of your loved ones.

January 9, 2012, Monday
Most of us believe that taking a life insurance policy will secure the  financial future of our near and dear ones. While that is what is expected of an insurance policy, do not expect it to work for you if you had taken the policy a few years ago when circumstances were different from what they are now. Over a period of time several factors that contribute to determining the insurance coverage for an individual are bound to have changed. You may now have been promoted, which means more money at your  disposal or you may have bought your first house taking a home loan you were not eligible for earlier.

The Rates for small saving schemes will now be benchmarked to those of G-secs.

January 9, 2012, Monday
As per a government directive, the returns on small saving schemes will now be market-linked. What this means is that the rate of interest on various schemes such as public provident fund (PPF), National Savings Certificate (NSC) and post office deposits, among others, will be benchmarked to government securities or G-secs of a similar maturity with a positive mark up of around 25 basis points. For senior citizens however, there is little more reason to cheer as the mark-up for the Senior Citizens Savings Scheme is 100 basis points. But does this necessarily mean that it is a great reason to reallocate your investments and put a larger share of it into such small savings schemes? Definitely, not.

The Animation industry in India is set to witness an exponential growth.

January 9, 2012, Monday
India’s role as a significant destination for outsourcing of works related to animation is a fact. But a larger fact that  needs immediate attention is the strength of the Indian animation market to produce, create and develop exceptional animation works and workers and their strong acceptance in the Indian markets itself. Today, there is an increasing section of audience, appreciators across age groups, that is emerging and interested in works related to  animation. A case in point is the recent release ‘The Adventures of  Tintin’. Based on a comic book, the 3D-film was lauded by a wide range of audiences in India and abroad, too.

Land acquisition issues and the lack of urgency to meet deadlines are holding up infrastructure projects in Mumbai.

January 9, 2012, Monday
Mumbai’s crumbling infrastructure is no secret. It is a complaint that every  Mumbaikar has and despite repeated promises by the state government, the city seems to be stuck in a time warp. While over the past several years, efforts have been made to improve the city’s infrastructure and for some reason or the other, most infrastructure projects meant to improve the city of Mumbai have faced delays. For instance, the Worli-Haji Ali sea-link, the proposed bridge to link Worli to Haji Ali over sea, is stuck because of a standoff between the state government and Reliance Infrastructure.

Indian Investors should opt for a good dividend-paying company.

January 9, 2012, Monday
What would you like  to have: a scenario where you work for money or where the money works for you? Obviously, we all would like the  money to work for us. And is such a scenario possible? Yes, it is possible if you are an equity investor and choose to invest in some of the good dividend-paying companies. In investing, two most powerful tools have contributed to the wealth of legends like Warren Buffett. One is the power of compounding and the other is the power of dividends.

A ‘domino effect’ of the current crisis on the Indian economy could soon be a reality.

January 9, 2012, Monday
Comatose is a condition pertaining to or affected by coma. And coma, a word derived from the Greek word ‘koma’, meaning deep sleep, is a state of extreme unresponsiveness, in which an  individual exhibits no voluntary movement or behaviour. Sounds too medical? Indeed. But look at the headlines of pink papers and the term comatose will surely seem appropriate for the current state of the Indian economy.

Without discrediting the government’s views on STT, those opposing it are also right in seeking the abolition of this tax

January 9, 2012, Monday
The ongoing debt crisis in Europe and the efforts by governments in the Euro zone to put their economies back on track has brought  to the fore the topic of financial transaction tax (FTT). Economists, policy groups and some nations have proposed the imposition of FTT to curb destabilizing speculation in the financial markets and increase revenue for the government. While a concrete decision on this tax is awaited, speculations are rife that the Indian government may cut or completely roll back the securities transaction tax (STT), a version of the financial transaction tax.

Slovakia's Nuclear Schizophrenia - Shut Down, Continue As Usual, or Boldly Go - Where?

January 6, 2012, Friday
The implosion of the USSR in December 1991 produced massive economic "collateral damage" in its East European allies, as they simultaneously sought both to assert their new-found independence and draw closer to their potential European allies on the western side of 1946's "Iron Curtain." Following the euphoria amity quickly devolved down to practical issues, one of which was that the European Union was leery of welcoming new members after the collapse of Communism that relied on power from Soviet-era nuclear power facilities, especially in the wake of the April 1986 nuclear disaster at Chernobyl in Ukraine.

Investment in African Renewable Energy Reaches $3.6 Billion in 2011

January 5, 2012, Thursday
Although Africa has vast fossil and renewable energy sources, only twenty percent of its population has direct access to electricity and in some rural areas, four out of five people are completely without power. According to the UN, over 600 million Africans currently do not have access to electric power. A depressing 70 percent of Sub-Saharan Africa's population is living without access to clean and safe energy for their basic needs such as cooking, lighting and heating, making energy poverty among the most urgent issues facing Africa.

“2012 – The Year of the Dragon”

January 4, 2012, Wednesday
Year-end letters are always difficult to write because there is a tendency to either discuss the year gone by; or worse, try to precisely predict what is in store for the new year. Nevertheless, 2012 has arrived, and as the Year of the Dragon, I thought I would share these thoughts with you from California Psychics, written by Psychic Verbena.  “The last Year of the Dragon, which occurred in 2000, was fraught with fear. There was a lot of hand wringing about the collapse of our technological world, the Y2K bug and other millennial prophecies that turned out to be more hype than bite. The Year of the Dragon is [here] and fear and trepidation are once more an issue.

War Imminent in Straits of Hormuz? $200 a Barrel Oil?

January 4, 2012, Wednesday
The pieces and policies for potential conflict in the Persian Gulf are seemingly drawing inexorably together. Since 24 December the Iranian Navy has been holding its ten-day Velayat 90 naval exercises, covering an area in the Arabian Sea stretching from east of the Strait of Hormuz entrance to the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Aden. The day the maneuvers opened Iranian Navy Commander Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari told a press conference that the exercises were intended to show "Iran's military prowess and defense capabilities in international waters, convey a message of peace and friendship to regional countries, and test the newest military equipment."

Another Asian Fukushima Imminent?

December 30, 2011, Friday
Taiwan imports 99 percent of its energy, which is vital to its rapidly industrializing economy. The island nation's electricity demand was recently growing at almost 5 percent per year, but this is slowing to about 3.3 percent per annum to 2013. Nuclear power has been a significant part of the electricity supply for two decades and now provides 17 percent of the country's overall energy needs.

Solar Breakthrough: Cheap Quantum Dot Solar Paint

December 29, 2011, Thursday
Researchers have reduced the preparation time of quantum dot solar cells to less than an hour by changing the form to a one-coat quantum dot solar paint. How? Titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanoparticles are coated with cadmium sulfide (CdS) or cadmium selenide (CdSe.) The composite nanoparticles, when mixed with a solvent, form a paste that can be applied as one-step paint to a transparent conducting material, which creates electricity when exposed to light.

“Bear Trap”

December 28, 2011, Wednesday
StockCharts.com defines a Bear Trap as, “A situation that occurs when stock prices break below a significant level and generate a sell signal, but then reverse course and negate the sell signal.” While that’s the formal definition, I have often referred to “Bear Traps” as “Undercut Lows.” The biggest one in recent history occurred on October 4, 2011.

Earthquakes, Water Pollution and Increased Greenhouse Gas Emissions? Fracking - Strike Number Three?

December 20, 2011, Tuesday
The last decade has seen a sustained campaign by the hydraulic fracturing ('fracking") industry against its critics, as the fracking industry in the U.S. alone was worth an estimated $76 billion in 2010 and is projected to grow to $231 billion in 2036 if only those pesky environmentalists can be sidelined. According to Washington's energy Information Administration, production of shale gas in the United States in 2010 totalled 4.87 trillion cubic feet (tcf) compared with 0.39 tcf only a decade earlier.

Don’t Hold Your Breath Too Long While Under Water

December 20, 2011, Tuesday
The headline of this educational feature pertains not to swimming but to trading. Most professional traders do not hold onto their losing positions for very long. Once a trading position goes "under water" most professional traders will immediately begin looking for an exit strategy - if they do not already have one in place (and most do) via protective stops.

“By The Side Of The Road”

December 20, 2011, Tuesday
A man lived by the side of the road and sold hot dogs. He was hard of hearing so he had no radio. He had trouble with his eyes, so he had no newspapers. But, he sold good hot dogs. He put up a sign on the highway telling how good they were. He stood by the side of the road and cried, ‘Buy a hot dog mister.’ And, people bought. He increased his meat and bun order and he bought a bigger stove to take care of his trade. He got his son home from college to help him, but then something happened.

Iraq: An Army of Soldiers to be Replaced by an Army of Businessmen

December 16, 2011, Friday
After nearly nine years, all US Forces are mandated to withdraw from Iraqi territory by 31 December 2011 under the terms of a bilateral agreement signed in 2008. Now the job facing the war-torn country is to re-build its economy. On Tuesday, prime minister Nouri al-Maliki gave a presentation to more than 400 executives representing a wide range of industries including petroleum, engineering and construction, commercial aviation, architecture, maritime cargo and financial services; the leaders of American commerce and industry, to proclaim Iraq's "limitless" opportunities "open for business" to American investors.

Startling the Global Community, Canada Withdraws from the Kyoto Convention

December 16, 2011, Friday
Canada has announced its intention to withdraw from the Kyoto treaty on greenhouse gas emissions (GGE), sandbagging the other signatories to the convention. The Kyoto protocol, initially adopted in Kyoto, Japan in 1997, was designed to combat global warming with the agreement allowing countries like China and India take voluntary, but non-binding steps to reduce their greenhouse gas carbon emissions. International condemnation was swift.

How Innovation will Follow the Footsteps of Procurement

December 16, 2011, Friday
Pharma giant Eli Lilly has 40,000 employees in 143 countries, and R&D facilities in eight countries. Despite the well functioning machinery, six out of its last 16 medicines were a product of collaboration with external partners. Eli Lilly has identified ten new opportunities for co-creation. In an intensely competitive and high-risk pharmaceutical industry, Eli Lilly has done well to adapt to the future. The success of Eli Lilly lies in the early initiatives it took to complement its R&D. In the 90s, Eli Lilly adopted Alliance Management and Technology Scouting programs.

Weaker lumber markets are causing global sawlog prices to fall for first time since early 2009, reports the Wood Resource Quarterly

December 16, 2011, Friday
Slowing lumber markets throughout the world have resulted in declining sawlog prices in many of the major lumber-producing regions in Europe and North America, according to the Wood Resource Quarterly. The biggest price reductions occurred in Japan, Sweden, Poland and Russia. Seattle, USA. With weaker demand for lumber around the world, sawlog prices fell in a majority of the 21 markets tracked by the Wood Resource Quarterly (WRQ). The Global Conifer Sawlog Price Index (GSPI) declined in the 3Q for the first time since the 1Q/09. With a few exceptions, prices fell in both local currencies and in US dollar terms.

The Corporate Cash Myth

December 15, 2011, Thursday
A central theme that has absolutely permeated the coverage of the Great Recession is that over the past few years US corporations have cautiously hoarded cash and have stubbornly refused to invest in corporate expansion. Some have described this as a nearly irrational timidity on the part of the private sector and has for many justified the currently robust intervention from the public sector in the form of deficit spending, fiscal stimulus and monetary accommodation. The saying goes that if companies won't spend, government must pick up the slack to restart the economy. The story has been repeated so frequently and so often, that its veracity is rarely questioned.

India Embraces Solar Power, Says Price Will Equal Thermal Power in Five Years

December 13, 2011, Tuesday
Economic South Asian superpower India has firmly embraced solar power, advancing the target date by five years for selling solar-generated electricity at the same rate as electricity generated by fossil fuel plants, from 2022 to 2017. According to government officials, the reason for moving the date forward is plummeting tariffs in the latest solar development projects, a trend that they believe is likely to continue.

“Self Sustaining”

December 13, 2011, Tuesday
The violent swings in the U.S. stock market have damaged investors’ psyches, but money managers at this week’s 2012 Reuters Investment Outlook Summit see the environment as a buying opportunity. The sell-offs this year have produced low price-to-earnings multiples on the stocks of companies with world-class, global franchises and strong balance sheets, investors said. In fact, U.S. corporations still have record amounts of cash on their balance sheets ($2 trillion), which could lead to shareholder-friendly moves including share buybacks, dividend increases, and mergers and acquisitions.

Economies cooling off; a way to open floods of liquidity again

December 12, 2011, Monday
The world is on the verge of slowdown, is it an indication that we may see floods of liquidity in the markets again or shall we see a distant dream to become factual. A dream that countries will adopt good fiscal discipline and competitive market measures through full currency convertibility and will ensure that the old disaster which happened over past half decade will not repeat. The dreams are always dreams and the governments are unwilling to fulfill long term dreams due to pressure on creating temporary solutions.

Luxury Real Estate: Is Paris the most attractive city for large fortunes vs. New York or London?

December 12, 2011, Monday
Being wealthy is good, living in the most attractive city is even better. Paris, New York or London? What is the best city for great fortunes? Nestoria addresses this issue. After the financial crisis (and a decrease from 7% to 12% in price), high-end real estate has taken off in 2010 (a 20% increase in Paris between January 2010 to January 2011) to reach a new rhythm in 2011 (+5% increase since the beginning of the year). The reason? Massive foreign investment. According to the two most important agencies in real estate Barnes et Féau, prices should stabilize.