Friday, October 12, 2012

IMF calls for action as euro zone crisis festers

TOKYO (Reuters) - The IMF prodded Europe and the United States to act faster to resolve their debt troubles, blaming plodding progress for creating economic uncertainty and slowing global growth.

Christine Lagarde, the head of the International Monetary Fund, said she expected "courageous and cooperative action" as she laid blame on Europe and the United States for fostering a sense of unease that has led companies to delay investment and hiring.

"There are threats on the horizon, threats that can be addressed, should be addressed but are not necessarily addressed," she told reporters ahead of the IMF's twice-yearly meetings in Tokyo.

The IMF cut its global growth forecast this week for the second time since April and said Europe's debt repair process was critically incomplete.

But German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Europe was on track and had accomplished more than it may appear to the outside world.

"I am convinced that we will be able to tell our friends and partners around the world that Europe is in the process of solving its problems and Europe is aware of its responsibility," he said.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Washington had a window of opportunity after the November 6 presidential election to negotiate a debt reform framework.

The differing views offer a glimpse into the tricky politics surrounding the IMF meetings.

European officials are keen to ensure their region is not the sole topic of discussion, and want more attention placed on the difficulties Washington faces addressing its "fiscal cliff" of automatic spending cuts and tax increases that will take effect early next year unless Congress acts.

Geithner said the magnitude of fiscal policy reforms that the United States needed to achieve debt sustainability was between 2 percent and 3 percent of gross domestic product, which he pointed out was "a modest challenge relative to what most countries around the world face on the fiscal side."

"Our belief is that we can use the period between the election and the end of the year to negotiate a framework of reforms that can be phased in over time," Geithner said.

Finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of Seven industrial nations - the United States, Japan, Canada, Italy, Britain, Germany and France - huddled during the afternoon to discuss their challenges, but were not expected to issue a statement outlining their views.

EMERGING MARKETS STUNG

The economic slowdown has not spared emerging market economies, which were instrumental in pulling the global economy out of recession in 2009. Brazil cut interest rates on Wednesday to a record low and South Korea cut rates on Thursday.

"Developing countries, which have been the engine of growth, will not be immune to the increased uncertainty in the global economy," said World Bank President Jim Yong Kim.

"The economic announcements emanating in recent weeks have been sobering. Everyone is vulnerable in times of uncertainty but especially the poor who have few, if any, safety nets and resources and live from day to day."

The IMF has expressed frustration with Europe's piecemeal response to its debt crisis and warned that a recent respite in borrowing costs for debt-laden countries such as Spain may prove short-lived unless euro zone leaders come up with a comprehensive and credible plan.

In its financial stability report on Wednesday, the IMF said that without swift policy action, including the triggering of the European Central Bank's bond-buying program, the premium that investors demand to hold Spanish and Italian debt instead of safer German bonds would nearly double.

Standard & Poor's cut its rating on Spain on Wednesday to a level just above junk territory, and Moody's may soon follow.

The IMF has said it stands ready to support a European bailout for Spain, should Madrid ask. Reuters reported on October 1 that Spain was ready to seek help, but that Germany was blocking an aid request because it preferred to combine a Spanish rescue with additional assistance for other struggling countries such as Greece.

Jose Vinals, the head of the IMF's monetary and capital markets department, warned that countries must not withhold help if Spain were to ask the European Central Bank to buy its bonds under a new bailout program, known as OMT for Outright Monetary Transaction.

"If it were to be the case that they decide to activate this mechanism and they can submit to the proper degree of conditionality, it would be essential that the creditor countries do not negate this activation of the OMT for Spain or for any of the countries," Vinals told Reuters.

Lagarde said the IMF was open to giving both Spain and Greece more time to reduce their budget gaps.

The Fund itself is struggling to muster the sort of decisive action that Lagarde wants to see from world leaders. Its 188 member countries meet on Friday and Saturday, and will fall short of a goal to implement voting reforms that would give large emerging economies greater say and elevate China to the No. 3 spot in IMF power.

A territorial dispute between Japan and China added another element of disharmony. China's top central bank and finance ministry officials backed out of the meetings and sent deputies to Tokyo instead. Lagarde said she hoped the world's second- and third-largest economies could resolve their differences "harmoniously and expeditiously."

"I think they lose out by not attending the meeting," she said of the Chinese officials. "And they will be missing something great."

(Additional reporting by Anna Yukhananov, Lesley Wroughton, Antoni Slodkowski and Julien Toyer; Writing by Emily Kaiser; Editing by Tim Ahmann and Neil Fullick)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/imf-calls-action-euro-zone-crisis-festers-011054589--business.html

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Nikkei slips on earnings fears, heads for 3rd day of losses

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's Nikkei average fell to its lowest in two months on Thursday, losing ground for a third straight day on mounting concerns that upcoming quarterly corporate earnings will be weak after the U.S. results season got off to a slow start.

By the midday break, the Nikkei had eased 0.2 percent to 8,579.37 after falling as much as 8,514.63. The benchmark has lost 7.6 percent since hitting a four-month high on September 19.

Printer and semiconductor production-related companies rebounded after a recent battering on concerns over the outlook for the PC market.

"People have chosen to come in to do a bit of short-covering on some of the things that have been oversold," said a senior trader at a European bank.

Advantest Corp rose 6.4 percent after shedding 31 percent from September 19 to October 10, while Canon Inc gained 1.4 percent, snapping a five-session losing streak. Dainippon Screen Manufacturing Co Ltd, which is down 39 percent year-to-date, climbed 3.4 percent.

The broader Topix index was flat at 717.08 in active trade, with volume at 57 percent of its full daily average for the past 90 days.

Ryota Sakagami, chief equity strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities said market participants remained worried that this earnings season was set to yield a slew of cuts to annual forecasts, as well as some negative surprises.

"However, if you look at the current prices of individual companies, they should have priced in downward revisions. The market is overreacting," he said, but added that the Nikkei could fall as low as 8,250 in a worst case scenario.

SmartEstimates from Thomson Reuters StarMine show expectations for an average negative earnings surprise from Nikkei 225 companies of 1.3 percent for July-September quarterly results.

The benchmark Nikkei is up 1.5 percent so far this year, trailing a 13.9 percent rise in the U.S. S&P 500 and a 9.9 percent gain in the pan-European STOXX Europe 600 index.

On Wednesday, the S&P 500 fell for a fourth day after Chevron Corp said third-quarter profits would be "substantially lower" than the previous quarter, while Alcoa Inc posted a quarterly loss and cut its outlook for global aluminum demand.

Japanese automakers and parts suppliers were under pressure after Toyota Motor Corp said it would recall more than 7.4 million vehicles worldwide for faulty power window switches.

The sector was already faced with concerns over the impact of sluggish global growth and anti-Japanese sentiment in China over a territorial dispute between the two countries.

Car parts maker Tokai Rika Co Ltd slumped 8.5 percent after the recall by Toyota, which lost 1 percent, in line with a 1.1 percent fall in rival Nissan Motor Co.

Other gainers included KDDI Corp, which advanced 2.4 percent after J.P. Morgan lifted its price target on the mobile operator.

Shin-Etsu Chemical Co Ltd added 1.7 percent after Nomura upgraded its rating on the company to 'buy' from 'neutral' and lifted its price target.

(Editing by Edwina Gibbs and Joseph Radford)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nikkei-slips-earnings-fears-heads-3rd-day-losses-031115311--sector.html

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Thursday, October 11, 2012

Teen blogger shot by Taliban 'critical' after surgery

Gunmen hunted down young Malala Yousufzai at her school, shooting her in the head after she dared to criticize the extremists who are ravaging her country. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.

By Mushtaq Yusufzai, NBC News

PESHAWAR, Pakistan -- As a shocked Pakistan prayed for her recovery, Malala Yousufzai, the 14-year-old Pakistani girl shot by the Taliban for writing a blog about daily life in the war-torn Swat Valley, was still in a critical condition Wednesday after surgery to remove a bullet, her surgeon told NBC News.

Standing up for Pakistani school girl shot by Taliban

Doctors said her head, face and neck started swelling Tuesday night, prompting doctors?to call an emergency meeting at 1 a.m. Wednesday (4 p.m. ET) when they decided to operate on her.

Surgery at the?Combined Military Hospital in Peshawar?started at 2 a.m. and was completed at 5 a.m. Wednesday (5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday ET).?The doctors' panel treating Malala, which includes military and civilian staff, is led by senior neurosurgeon Mumtaz Khan.?

Talking to NBC News after the surgery, Khan said Malala's brain had started swelling as its left portion was damaged by the bullet.

He said they operated on the damaged part of her brain and neck and removed the bullet from her body.

A short documentary profiling an 11-year-old Pakistani girl on the last day before the Taliban closed down her school. (By Adam B. Ellick)

"Malala is still in critical condition and had been shifted to the intensive care unit of the hospital, but I am optimistic and by the grace of Allah she will recover," Khan said.

A plane is on standby at Bacha Khan International airport to take her to the United Arab Emirates for treatment if doctors decide this is necessary.

Girl shot by Taliban to be sent abroad for treatment, Pakistani president says

Malala was nominated for the International Children's Peace Prize in 2011 for a blog she wrote under a pseudonym for the BBC's Urdu-language news service. She started writing it when she was just 11.

She also won the National Peace Prize in Pakistan, was honored with a school named after her, and quickly became an outspoken critic of the Taliban in Pakistan and a public advocate for peace.

ISPR via AFP - Getty Images

Soldiers carry Malala Yousufzai, 14, at an army hospital following an attack by gunmen in Peshawar, Pakistan, on Oct. 9, 2012.

In her blog, Malala chronicled life in the Swat Valley under the brutal and oppressive rule of the local faction of the Pakistani Taliban, who carried out public floggings, hung dead bodies in the streets, and banned education for girls.

In early 2011, the militants had added Malala to their hit list.?

Nosheen Abbas, of BBC Urdu, told NBC News that Malala was "very passionate about education, and she spoke about that a lot to me."


"It angered her deeply when girls' schools were closed, and she was affected, and her class fellows were affected. She would talk about (hiding school bags)," she said.

"She was so open about what they were doing to her city, and she was so vocal about it -- that is what made her so threatening," she added.

?Abbas tried to explain why the Taliban had reacted so strongly.

"When it's coming from a child, it's innocent, it's honest, it's open, and I think that's what was so threatening," she said of the blog.

"I think that code of honor that used to exist where women and children, they weren't attacked, they were honored in a way never touched. I think that no longer exists, I think that is what it shows," she added.

Pakistani school girls pray for the recovery of Malala Yousufzai in Multan, Pakistan on Oct. 10.

Grief across Pakistan
Meantime, the shooting drew a huge outpouring of reaction across Pakistan.?The front pages of national newspapers carried pictures of a bandaged and bloody Yousufzai being brought to hospital.? "Hate targets hope" the Express Tribune said in a headline.

Pakistan's president, prime minister, and heads of various opposition parties joined human rights group Amnesty International and the United Nations in condemning the attack.

"Pakistan's future belongs to Malala and brave young girls like her. History won't remember the cowards who tried to kill her at school," Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said on Twitter.

The attack was also condemned by many leaders of ethnic Pashtun tribes in northwest Pakistan.

"This attack is against Pashtun and Islamic practices," said Khurshid Kaka Ji, leader of a jirga, or tribal council, in Swat, a one-time tourist destination of peaks and meadows where the military has battled the Taliban intermittently since 2007.

"The security forces and police deployed should capture the attackers and punish them. If they do not catch these people, then the peace that Swat has gained through bloodshed will be shaken."

Reuters and NBC's Waj Khan contributed to this report from Islamabad.

More world stories from NBC News:

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/10/14332088-pakistani-teen-blogger-shot-by-taliban-critical-after-surgery?lite

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

British Airways and University of Glamorgan Announce Engineering ...

CARDIFF, Wales, October 1, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --

Initiative brings world-leading technical training from Heathrow to South Wales

British Airways and the University of Glamorgan have signed a landmark agreement to combine technical training for one of the world's leading airlines with the enhanced career prospects of a university degree. ?Under the new initiative, to be accredited by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), engineers will graduate from Glamorgan with a BSc degree in Aircraft Maintenance Engineering having also completed the industry-standard EASA Part 66 training, awarded under British Airways' licence. ?The first intake of 100 students will enter the course in October. Engineering staff at British Airways will also have the opportunity to study academic modules from the University at undergraduate and postgraduate level.

Bill Kelly, General Manager Heavy Maintenance at British Airways, said: "We are delighted to be forming this relationship with the University of Glamorgan. British Airways employs over 1,400 people across three sites in South Wales, and this partnership will ensure that we continue to produce world-class engineers, ready to take on the challenge of maintaining our fleet. This is an exciting time for the airline, with next-generation aircraft such as the Boeing 787 and Airbus A380 presenting new challenges for our engineers. Partnering with the University of Glamorgan will allow us to develop the skills necessary to take our business forward."

The University of Glamorgan is one of the world's few institutions to have its own Aerospace Centre, a purpose-built ?2m facility in South Wales with its own airliner and flight simulator.

Professor Julie Lydon, Vice-Chancellor and Chief Executive of the University of Glamorgan, said: "As the largest airline in the UK and a global player in the aviation market, British Airways takes its relationship with education seriously. ?This initiative cements their links with Glamorgan, and we hope to develop our partnership further in the coming months. ?It's a win-win for British Airways, the University, and the graduates.

"This partnership is the only one of its kind in the UK, and is a testament to Glamorgan's reputation for excellence in the aviation industry. ?Glamorgan was founded by industry, for industry, as a specialist college of engineering, and we carry that forward today in ensuring that our aerospace students get both the technical skills to work on some of the world's leading aircraft, and the enhanced career prospects of a degree. ?The University of Glamorgan is well-recognised for being home to first-class facilities, and for producing graduates of an exceptional standard. ? Our partnership with British Airways is sure to give them a head start in their careers."

British Airways

http://www.britishairways.com?

British Airways is a global airline, flying to over 150 destinations in more than 70 countries. British Airways Engineering has a global reputation for engineering excellence and its technical and logistical expertise supports airline operations on every continent, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. British Airways Engineering has three subsidiaries in South Wales, employing over 1,400 people: British Airways Maintenance Cardiff, British Airways Avionics Engineering, and British Airways Interiors Engineering.

The University of Glamorgan

http://www.glam.ac.uk

Founded by industry, for industry as a centre of engineering and management in 1913, the University of Glamorgan is a key international partner of major public and private sector employers. ?Rated in the UK's top ten universities for the lowest rate of unemployment among its graduates, 93% of Glamorgan students are in work or further study within six months of graduating. ?With 23,000 students from 122 countries on campuses in Cardiff and the South Wales valleys, the University includes two wholly-owned subsidiaries, The College at Merthyr Tydfil and Wales's national conservatoire, the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama. ?With a strong commitment to social justice, Glamorgan opens opportunities to students from a diverse range of backgrounds and is a leading partner in UHOVI, the pioneering Universities' Heads of the Valleys Institute. ?With 70% of its research recognised as being of international standing, Glamorgan is one of the five members of the St David's Day Group of Wales's leading research-active universities. ?It plays a key role informing the policy debate on sustainable energy, the creative industries, public service reform, and economic growth. ?The University is an international leader in the use of ICT and simulation to deliver professional learning: facilities include its own airliner, court room, financial trading floor, HD television studios, computer animation renderfarm, scene of crime house, hospital simulation suite, and police control room. ?

NOTES TO EDITORS

High resolution images and footage available by contacting +44(0)1443-483362 and press@glam.ac.uk.

PRESS CONTACTS
University of Glamorgan
Public Affairs & Communications Team
Tom Griffin/Alexandra Harden/Jenna Hopkinson
+44(0)1443-483362
+44(0)7736-660538
press@glam.ac.uk

British Airways
Press Office
Ewan Fordyce
+44(0)208-738-5100
media.relations@ba.com?

SOURCE University of Glamorgan

Source: http://www.africanbusinessreview.co.za/press_releases/british-airways-and-university-of-glamorgan-announce-engineering-partnership

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Connecticut Conference of Municipalities: Towns Too Dependent on ...

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Connecticut?s 169 municipalities have gotten little increased financial help from the state in the last five years and remain overly dependent on state aid, the Connecticut Conference of Municipalities says.

CCM, the main lobbying group for local communities, released a bulletin Monday to candidates for the state?s General Assembly urging them to make education funding a priority in the coming year, according to the Connecticut Mirror.

State aid for towns stands at about $3 billion per year, while Connecticut?s 169 towns collectively raise about $9 billion annually from local property taxes, James Finley, CCM?s executive director, told the Mirror.

State aid to towns has remained relatively flat over the last five years. When you factor in the rate of inflation, that means towns have actually lost financial ground during that five-year period, Finley added.

The state aid figures represent an over-dependence by towns on local property taxes, something the General Assembly should address by closing shortfalls in education funding to towns, Finley said.

"The key to property tax relief is education finance reform," Finley told the Mirror. "The overdependence on the property tax is unsustainable, and hometown Connecticut is in desperate need of revenue assistance."

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Source: http://middletown-ct.patch.com/articles/connecticut-conference-of-municipalities-towns-too-dependent-on-local-taxes-09f97896

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People Are Calling For This Apple Executive's Head - Business Insider

Who's to blame for Apple's disappointing Maps experience?

Fingers are pointing at Apple iOS software Vice President, Scott Forstall, and some say he should be fired over the mess.

Fortune's Philip Elmer-DeWitt asks, "Does Apple have a Scott Forstall problem?"

Forstall eloquently introduced Apple Maps to the world at its conference a few weeks ago. There was no mention of the service having any limitations.

Former Apple executive and venture capitalist Jean-Louis Grassee writes of the deception:

"[Forstall's] demo was flawless, 2D and 3D maps, turn-by-turn navigation, spectacular flyovers? but not a word from the stage about the app's limitations, no self-deprecating wink, no admission that iOS Maps is an infant that needs to learn to crawl before walking, running, and ultimately lapping the frontrunner, Google Maps. Instead, we're told that Apple's Maps may be 'the most beautiful, powerful mapping service ever.'"

Maps isn't Forstall's first let down either. Last year he unveiled Siri on the iPhone 4S, another Apple embarrassment. But at least Siri was clearly label "beta."

Other reports say Forstall has issues internally at Apple too. Last year Bloomberg Businessweek reported that he doesn't get along well with other Apple executives; designer Jony Ive and Bob Mansfiled avoid meeting with Forstall unless Apple's president Tim Cook is there.

"He routinely takes credit for collaborative successes and defelcts blame for mistakes," Bloomberg wrote of Forstall.

But then Forstall has done a lot for Apple. He's been at the company for nearly two decades and joined the company when NeXT was acquired in 1997. He was one of the original architects of the Mac OS X operating system and has headed up iPhone and iPad software since 2006. In that same Bloomberg article he was dubbed "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" under Steve Jobs. He's long been considered Apple's "CEO-in-Waiting."

Is it fair to blame Forstall for everything and are Apple Maps really that big a deal? Probably not. But some Apple fans are really upset.

A reader wrote to Elmer-DeWitt, "There's no excuse [for Apple Maps]. Quality control on Apple Maps had to have been terrible to not get this right. Bluntly, Scott Forstall should be fired over this mess."

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/people-are-calling-for-this-apple-executives-head-2012-9

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Source: http://703m.blogspot.com/2012/09/product-type-sale-on-internet-can.html

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