Thursday 17 October 2013

Esther George: Fed Should Start to Cut Bond Buying, but Gradually

 The Wall Street Journal reports that Kansas City Fed President Esther George renewed her attack on the central bank’s aggressively easy monetary policy, saying the institution should start cutting its bond-buying stimulus.
“The benefits of quantivative easing have been quite small, and the potential costs of the program grow each month as we buy those assets,” Ms. George said Thursday.
It would be important to start  now tapering the bond buying program,slowly  "to allow markets time to adjust, to recognize this is likely to be a long process in terms of unwinding” the bond purchases.
Ms. George has feared for some time that Fed bond buying is creating risks of a future inflation surge. She also worries that the bond buying, which is designed to lower the unemployment rate and boost growth, will create new bubbles in financial markets". 

WSJ: Potential Deal in SAC's Insider-Trading Case Could Top $1.2 Billion

The Wall Street Journal reports that "Hedge-fund group SAC Capital Advisors LP and federal prosecutors have agreed in principle on a penalty exceeding $1 billion in a potential criminal settlement that would be the largest ever for an insider-trading case", according to people familiar with the matter.

The payment by SAC, run by star manager Steven Cohen, is expected to be roughly $1.2 billion to $1.4 billion, according to these people.
The penalty means SAC would pay the U.S. government a total of nearly $2 billion, including a $616 million penalty the firm agreed to in a civil insider-trading settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission in March.
The firm didn't admit or deny wrongdoing in the civil settlement, which is awaiting approval by a federal judge.
The penalty SAC agreed to pay in the SEC matter is the largest to date in an insider-trading case.
SAC has denied the criminal charges. The firm says Mr. Cohen, who hasn't been accused of criminal wrongdoing, has done nothing wrong. Any settlement wouldn't affect a continuing criminal investigation into Mr. Cohen's trading activities, the people said.
Spokespeople for the Manhattan U.S. attorney's office, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the SEC and SAC declined to comment.

Guerre euro-américaine de l'agroalimentaire: libre-échange et mimolette

En juillet 2013, aux Etats-Unis, la Food and Drug Administration (FDA, l'autorité de santé) a pris la décision d'interdire l'importation de mimolette au motif du trop grand nombre de mites présentes sur la croûte du fromage.
Selon les termes de la FDA, "cet article semble être, en totalité ou en partie, composé d'une substance dégoûtante, putride, ou décomposée, ou autrement inadaptée comme nourriture", ce qui provoque la colère des fromagers français qui nient, avec raison, la dangerosité de ces mites.
D'ailleurs, cette guerre de la mimolette rappelle étrangement les guerres du roquefort de 1999 à 2011, ouvertes par une taxe américaine de 100 % en 1999, triplée en 2009 pour abattre ce fleuron de la gastronomie française et l'affubler d'une image de mets pour nantis. Tant et si bien que le principal obstacle à la reprise des exportations de roquefort est de retrouver une image positive auprès du grand public.
"Ce ne sont que des mesures protectionnistes dont les chantres du libéralisme américain ont le secret", pourrions-nous dire. Pas de quoi en faire un fromage, dans ce cas. Mais ces deux drôles de guerres contre le fromage français sont révélatrices d'un malentendu fondamental entre l'Europe (et plus particulièrement la France) et les Etats-Unis.

Le Monde

Corporate Japan to hunker down and save gains from tax cut - Reuters poll

More than 40 percent of Japanese companies surveyed have no plans to spend or invest funds generated by an expected cut in the corporate tax rate, a reflection of the deep-seated risk-aversion in corporate Japan and a challenge to the success of Abenomics.
The result of the Reuters Corporate Survey of 400 companies taken in late September and early October stands in contrast to other recent indicators of a thawing in corporate risk-aversion on signs of continued recovery in Japan's economy.
In the monthly Reuters survey, 30 percent of companies said they would bank any savings from a lower corporate tax rate and build up internal reserves, which now total more than $2 trillion (1.23 trillion pounds) for Japan's corporations taken as a whole.
Another 12 percent of companies responding said they would use any cash generated by a corporate tax cut pledged by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to offset the expected higher costs from a sales tax increase set to take effect in April.                                                                                                   Source: Reuters



Le fondateur d'eBay financera le nouveau média de Glenn Greenwald

Le fondateur d'eBay, Pierre Omidyar, a annoncé mercredi 16 octobre qu'il financerait le nouveau média du journaliste Glenn Greenwald, qui a contribué à la publication des révélations sur le vaste système de surveillance américain, afin d'œuvrer à la "recherche de la vérité".

Né en France, ce multimilliardaire irano-américain veut "préserver et renforcer le rôle que le journalisme joue dans la société", a-t-il expliqué dans un communiqué, confirmant son association avec le journaliste derrière les révélations de l'informaticien américain Edward Snowden.
Installé à Rio, M. Greenwaldavaitannoncé mardi qu'il démissionnait du quotidien britannique The Guardian pour créer un nouveau média "d'envergure", couvrant lesport comme la culture et portant une attention particulière à la politique. Ce projet devra "soutenir [les journalistes] et leur permettre de rechercher la vérité", a précisé le fondateur du géant du commerce en ligne eBay, qui figure parmi les 50 plus grandes fortunes du globe. "Cela ne veut pas dire simplement du journalisme d'investigation", ajoute-t-il.
Dans son communiqué, M. Omidyar dit également partager "beaucoup d'idées"avec M. Greenwald, chantre de la transparence et grand défenseur des libertés civiles. "On a décidé d'unir nos forces", a-t-il insisté.

Linked exchange rate serves Hong Kong well for 30 years: financial chief

Hong Kong's Financial Secretary John Tsang Thursday said the government sees no need and has no intention to change the Linked Rate System, which has been tested through different economic cycles and financial crises, and has continued to work well for the city.
Releasing an article on Thursday when the 30th anniversary of the system was marked, the city's financial chief said the Hong Kong dollar's peg to the U.S. dollar has been the cornerstone of Hong Kong's monetary and financial stability.
In 1983, when Hong Kong had a floating exchange rate system, the Sino-British negotiations on the future of Hong Kong were going, and there was rapid deterioration in market confidence over the Hong Kong economy and the Hong Kong dollar, Tsang recalled the picture of the panicked society at that time, when he was a green civil servant working for district community development.
It was against this background that the peg was introduced, he said, the community calmed down after the system was put in place and the Hong Kong dollar was effectively stabilized.
"The system has successfully maintained exchange rate stability in the past three decades and has provided a stable monetary and financial environment that is crucial to the trade-dependent Hong Kong economy," he said.
The stable exchange rate has provided a favorable environment for Hong Kong to develop into an international trading hub, and an important platform for our development as a financial center.
The stable monetary environment provided by the system has also been crucial to supporting economic growth in the past three decades, with Hong Kong's GDP increased by nearly 10 times during this period and our per capita GDP has reached 290,000 HK dollars (about 37,000 U.S. dollars) per annum.
"With the upgrading of our credit rating to AAA in 2010, Hong Kong is one of the 14 economies in the world to have achieved that grade," he added.
While some people think the system is the main culprit in Hong Kong's recent asset price inflation brought about by the quantitative easing in the US, Tsang said, no exchange rate regime is perfect, but the linked rate system has helped minimizing the shocks brought about by the spillover effect of the monetary policies of the major economies.
He said, Hong Kong still faces many external challenges ahead. In particular, the exit from quantitative easing in major economies may result in volatile fund flows.
"We are upholding the system not because we just want to maintain the status quo. More importantly, we are doing so because we strongly believe that it is still the most appropriate monetary system for Hong Kong in light of the challenges ahead," he said. ( 1 U.S. dollar = 7.8 HK dollars)
Source: Xinhua

China's business climate index rebounds in Q3

China's business climate index, a major gauge of the country's macroeconomic outlook, rebounded slightly in the third quarter, according to data released on Friday.
The business climate index was 121.5 points for the third quarter, up 0.9 points from the previous quarter, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said in a statement.
The figure continued to stay above 100 points, indicating that Chinese enterprises were still operating in an upbeat climate, the statement said.
The index ranges from zero to 200 points, with a reading of more than 100 indicating a sound and optimistic climate, while a reading below 100 is a sign of a pessimistic business environment.
The indices for large, medium-sized and small enterprises were 135.6, 123.7 and 110.4 points, respectively. All indices have rebounded from the second quarter of the year, the statement said.
On Friday, the NBS also released other key economic figures. The country's gross domestic product grew 7.8 percent in the third quarter over the previous year, up from 7.5 percent in the second quarter.
Source: Xinhua

China responds to Abe's Yasukuni Shrine offering

China's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying on Thursday responded to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe making an offering to Tokyo's war-linked Yasukuni Shrine by urging Japan to properly deal with the issues surrounding the controversial site.
Hua's remarks came as the shrine marked its annual autumn festival. Abe paid for a "masakaki" tree offering traditionally used in Shinto rituals at the shrine on Thursday morning but refrained from visiting.
The shrine, which honors Japanese war dead, including 14 class-A war criminals, is considered a symbol of Japan's past militarism.
Hua said China has repeatedly stated its attitude and position on the Yasukuni Shrine issue.
"We again urge the Japanese side to face up to and make real introspection for its history of aggression, respect the feelings of people in war-victim Asian countries, including China, and properly deal with relevant issues," she said.
Repeated visits to the shrine by Japanese cabinet ministers and lawmakers have been a major obstacle for Japan to mend ties with China and the Republic of Korea.
Abe also made offerings during the shrine's spring festival in April and on the anniversary of Japan's World War II surrender on Aug. 15 this year. 

Source: Xinhua

China: Developing countries should gain more opportunities from cyberspace

Developing countries should enjoy more opportunities from the cyberspace and receive further help from the international communities, a Chinese official said on Thursday at an ongoing international conference on cyberspace in South Korea's capital Seoul.
"We should attach great importance to and enhance capacity building in developing countries, narrow down the digital divide, and promote balanced progress in global informatization," said Huang Huikang, legal advisor and Director-General of the Department of Treaty and Law under Chinese Foreign Ministry.
Huang said the international community should make sure the lawful rights and interests of developing countries are not compromised because of disparity in capacity.
He noted that it is the first time that the cyberspace conference of this kind was held in Asia, a region with nearly half of the global internet users and a region with dynamic economic and profound history, which make Seoul conference a bit different from the previous ones held in Budapest in 2012 and in London in 2011.
Huang added that he was happy to see more delegates from developing countries in Asia and the Middle East share their own opinions at the conference this year.
He emphasized China's standpoint of building a peaceful, secure, open and cooperative cyberspace, eliminating all forms of "hot war," "cold war" or "cool war" from it.
"International cyberspace governance must follow the principle of state sovereignty and non-interference in other's internal affairs enshrined in the UN Charter," said Huang, adding that China hopes the cyberspace can be a platform for various countries and peoples to carry out equal-footed exchanges and learn from each other.
Considering there are no universally recognized rules for combating cybercrimes or an international code of conduct in cyberspace, or an international mechanism for cyber governance, Huang also called for strengthening international cooperation on the establishment of new legal rules and regulations.
The two-day Seoul Conference on Cyberspace 2013 kicked off on Thursday, gathering more than 1,000 representatives from some 90 countries and international and regional organizations.
Under the theme of "Global Prosperity through an Open and Secure Cyberspace -- Opportunities, Threats and Cooperation," the forum focuses on a wide range of cyberspace issues such as cybersecurity, cybercrimes and the Internet economy and social benefits of cyberspace.

Source: Xinhua

Japan:Controversial visit to Yasukuni Shrine

Japanese internal affairs minister Yoshitaka Shindo visited the controversial Yasukuni Shrine for war dead on Friday, a move likely to anger Asian victims of Japan's past aggression.

The visit came a day after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe made his third ritual offering to the shrine since returning to office in December. Abe has not visited the shrine in person to avoid further straining ties with China and SouthKorea.
Shindo's visit came after China's Foreign Ministry admonished Abe on Thursday, telling him not to go there in person out of respect for China and "other victimized countries".
As well as Japan's war dead, Yasukuni also honours Japanese leaders convicted as war criminals by an Allied tribunal.
Sino-Japanese ties have been overshadowed for years by what China says has been Japan's refusal to admit to atrocities committed by Japanese soldiers in China between 1931 and 1945.
Memories of a brutal Japanese occupation also remain strong in South Korea, where the Foreign Ministry expressed "deep concern and regret" that Abe had made his ritual offering.
Source: Reuters

Abe sends offering to Yasukuni Shrine, refrains from visiting

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe sent an offering Thursday to the war-linked Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo for its annual autumn festival but refrained from visiting amid frayed ties with China and South Korea.

Abe paid for a "masakaki" tree offering traditionally used in Shinto rituals, and presented it as prime minister, by proxy, the shrine and people close to him said.
Abe apparently treaded carefully not to exacerbate ties with China and South Korea further, while taking heed of his conservative support base.

NewsOnJapan

Japan: SoftBank's Son vs. Rakuten's Mikitani

The Japanese are witnessing a rare spectacle: two of the country's business titans, both with global ambitions, openly jabbing at each other.
In one corner is Masayoshi Son, Japan's second-richest man and president of SoftBank (9984:JP). Besides being the No. 3 mobile carrier in Japan, SoftBank is also the leading shareholder in Chinese e-commerce powerhouse Alibaba Group and owns stakes in more than 1,000 Web businesses around the world, including BuzzFeed and Zynga (ZNGA) in the U.S. This summer SoftBank took control of mobile carrier Sprint (S) in a $21.6 billion deal. In the latest sign of Son's determination to expand his reach beyond Japan, SoftBank announced on Oct. 15 it was paying $1.53 billion for 51 percent of Supercell, the Finnish developer of the popular Clash of Clans mobile game. Son is also in talks to buy a stake in Brightstar, a distributor of handsets based in Miami.In the other corner is Hiroshi Mikitani, Japan's third-richest man and founder and chairman of Rakuten (4755:JP), a vast online marketplace that's far bigger in Japan than Amazon.com. (AMZN) A Harvard Business School graduate and former investment banker, Mikitani understands that Rakuten has no future if it remains solely focused on a home market with a rapidly aging population. That's why Rakuten bought U.S. shopping portal Buy.com for $250 million in 2010 and has snapped up other online retailers in Europe, Latin America, and Southeast Asia. Rakuten acquired Kobo, a Canadian maker of e-readers, in 2011 and last year led a $100 million investment group buying a minority stake in Pinterest, the Silicon Valley startup that allows user to create digital scrapbooks. Son and Mikitani have billionaire-size egos-and unlike many Japanese businessmen, don't stick to bland talking points. Discussing his motivation for the Sprint takeover, Son told reporters in Tokyo: "I am a man, and I think every man wants to be No. 1." Mikitani, for his part, has made no secret of his desire to take down Jeff Bezos, and before the Japan launch of the Kindle last year, he presented a Japanese publishing executive with a T-shirt emblazoned with the words "Destroy Amazon."

Source: NewsOnJapan

Mixed reactions to Koizumi's view on nuclear power

Former prime minister Junichiro Koizumi's call for Japan to end its reliance on nuclear power is causing a stir as the country discusses future energy policies.

Koizumi, who is retired from politics, has recently been voicing his views against nuclear power in public.
In a speech on Wednesday, he reiterated his position.
Koizumi said if the government and the ruling Liberal Democratic Party decide that Japan should end nuclear power generation and use renewable energy instead, most of the Japanese people would endorse the policy.
LDP members are troubled by their former leader's remarks.
Some say Koizumi's position is incompatible with the party policy to promote the resumption of the country's idled nuclear plants while respecting the nuclear regulation body's safety assessments. Others worry that Koizumi's remarks could give the impression to the public that the party is divided on the issue.

Source: NewsOnJapan

Brazil:Setor de serviços esfria pressionado pela menor demanda das empresas

A perda de ritmo do setor de serviços em agosto foi ditada pela menor demanda das empresas, que contrataram menos profissionais terceirizados e serviços de setores como o de transporte, comunicação e consultoria.
"Os dados de agosto mostram que a demanda das empresas está mais desaquecida", disse Roberto Saldanha, coordenador da pesquisa de serviços do IBGE.
Em agosto, o faturamento do setor creceu 6.6%, a segunda menor taxa do ano. O resultado revela uma desaceleração frente à expansão registrada em julho (9,1%) e junho (8,8%).
A freada da demanda das empresas fica clara, diz Saldanha, pela perda de fôlego de atividades como transporte (8,4% em agosto, abaixo dos 12,5% de julho), com destaque para atividade de armazenagem e transporte terrestre.
O crescimento dos serviços profissionais desaceleraram de 8,6% em julho para 6,6% em agosto.
Segundo Saldanha, o maior consumo das famílias por serviços foi decisivo para manter o dinamismo do setor, com crescimento de 11,3% do segmento de serviços prestados às famílias, com destaque para áreas como alojamento e alimentação e outros serviços. O setor, porém, havia crescido mais em julho: 12,8%

Fonte: Fohla de Sao Paulo

Crise budgétaire : un accord in extremis à Washington

Le Congrès américain a finalement abouti à un accord, mettant un terme au shutdown qui paralysait l'Etat fédéral depuis plus de deux semaines et relevant par la même occasion le plafond de la dette, mercredi 16 octobre, évitant in extremis un défaut de paiement. Le président américain, Barack Obama, a promulgué le texte peu après.

Le plafond de la dette, actuellement de 16 700 milliards de dollars, n'a été relevé que jusqu'au 7 février, tandis que la réouverture des agences fédérales est prévue jusqu'au 15 janvier seulement.
 Les élus de la Chambre, à majorité républicaine, ont voté par 285 voix contre 144 en faveur du texte, adopté peu avant par le Sénat, grâce à l'appui d'environ un tiers des républicains, profondément divisés, et à l'unanimité des démocrates.
Intransigeant depuis deux semaines, le chef des républicains à la Chambre, John Boehner a reconnu sa défaite. "Nous nous sommes battus pour la bonne cause, mais nous n'avons pas gagné", a-t-il dit sur une radio de son fief de l'Ohio, promettant de continuer à lutter contre "la catastrophe que représente la loi sur la réforme de la santé".
En définitive, cette crise budgétaire aura coute 24 milliards de dollars au pays, selon les estimations de l'agence Standard & Poor's.L'agence concurrente Moody's arrive à peu près aux mêmes conclusions – une réduction de 0,5 point de croissance –, en affirmant que l'accord conclu entre républicains et démocrates a évité une "catastrophe", et que les dommages seront "limités" aux Etats-Unis.

Le Monde

China's third quarter economic growth quickens to 7.8 percent year-on-year

China's annual economic growth quickened to 7.8 percent between July and September from 7.5 percent in the previous three months, the fastest growth this year and in line with expectations, official data showed on Friday.
Many investors have been concerned about the fragility of China's economic revival, especially after a surprise fall in export growth in September.

The world's second-largest economy grew 7.7 percent in the first nine months of 2013 from a year earlier, the data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed.
Other data released alongside the gross domestic product data showed industrial output grew 10.2 percent in September from a year ago, versus expectations of 10.1 percent showed in the Reuters poll.
Retail sales in September rose 13.3 percent on a year ago versus an expected 13.5 percent.
Fixed-asset investment grew 20.2 percent in the first nine months from a year earlier, versus an expected 20.3 percent. The government only publishes cumulative investment data.
Source: Reuters

Brasil: Ibovespa fechou quinta feria com queda de 1.10%,fica o problema fiscal americano

Depois de seis altas seguidas, o Ibovespa (principal índice da Bolsa brasileira) fechou esta quinta-feira (17) em queda de 1,10%, a 55.358 pontos, com a avaliação de que a lei sancionada nesta madrugada pelo presidente Barack Obama é apenas um adiamento do problema fiscal americano, e que a imagem do governo dos EUA ficou abalada por isso.
"É aquela velha história do 'sobe no boato e cai no fato'. As Bolsas globais subiram nos últimos dias, com os investidores apostando que os EUA não dariam calote e, agora que isso foi confirmado, há espaço para queda"
Nos EUA, os investidores receberam a solução temporária ao problema fiscal do governo com otimismo, e o índice Dow Jones fechou praticamente estável, com leve queda de 0,01%, enquanto os indicadores Nasdaq e S&P 500 mostraram avanços de 0,62% e 0,67%, respectivamente.
Já a agência internacional de classificação de risco Standard & Poor's disse que o impasse no Congresso sobre o Orçamento federal e o teto da dívida dos EUA custou  a o pais  US$ 24 bilhoes, e que o episódio deve derrubar a confiança do consumidor e provocar crescimento menor do PIB.

Fonte: Fohla de Sao Paulo

IMF: Cloudy with a Chance Of Rain for the Latin American and Caribbean Economies. Alejandro Werner

Problems ahead for many Latin-American Countries and Caribbean Economies. As the global growth shifts from the emerging to the more advanced economies, the former countries have to deal with lower commodity prices and a tighter global financial environment.
"Lower commodity prices have already started to affect the region’s commodity exporters. Even though prices remain high by historical standards, countries can no longer count on the tailwind from ever-improving terms of trade, which had propelled economic activity over the past decade.
Meanwhile, longer-term U.S. interest rates have started to rise, with knock-on effects for emerging markets. Across all of the financially integrated economies of Latin America, bond yields have increased, equity prices have fallen, and currencies have depreciated since May, when the U.S. Fed first mentioned the possibility of tapering its bond purchases later this year" says Alejandro Werner.
Because of that scenario is that the IMF projects a 2.75% growth for the region on this year. For 2014 the Fund projects a growth to about 3%.
"With less supportive external conditions in the offing, the strength of domestic economic policies will be crucial for how individual countries can cope. Fortunately, many of the larger economies in the region are in a good position to weather more challenging times, as policy frameworks and economic fundamentals have been strengthened over the past decade. Banking systems are generally healthy and well-funded; external debt is moderate; official foreign exchange reserves are sizable; and flexible exchange rates are acting as a useful buffer for shocks, while allowing countries to adjust monetary policy within their inflation targeting frameworks" says Mr A Werner
Source: IMF

Brazil: High mobile rates doesn't mean big profits for mobile carriers

"Mobile rates in Brazil are the world’s highest — but that doesn’t mean mobile carriers post amazing profits down here. Rather, Brazil is one of the countries with the lowest margin in mobile services — a sign of fierce competition. A study by Valor based on data from 2009 to 2012 shows the average margin in Brazil was 27%, only slightly above margins posted by US mobile carriers (25%) and the phone business as a whole in the United Kingdom (24%)".
"The landline margin in Brazil is higher: during the period studied, it stayed at 36% for the less competitive half of the sample".
"According to companies and industry observers, to understand the Brazilian situation one has to account for higher taxes, interconnection fees, a large base of pre-paid customers who use little data and bring in low sales per user, as well as fierce competition and a negative outlook for carriers that didn’t invest in infrastructure to offer pay-TV as part of a bundle.  One shouldn’t forget that 79% of mobile connections in Brazil come from pre-paid plans  a system that reduces the average client bill. Soummo Mukherjee, senior vice-president at Moody's, says that the number of pre-paid customers usually is high in developing countries — he says the market dynamics in South Africa are very similar to Brazil’s. The difference, Mr. Mukherjee says, is that South Africa does not have four strong competitors like Brazil".
Source: Valor International

UK :Tech City announces the first 25 IT companies to be given aid to grow their businesses

"Twenty five of the most promising UK-focused startups, including Zoopla, Moshi Monster creators Mind Candy and the taxi-hailing app Hailo are to receive targeted support from the UK government to help grow their businesses", it was announced today.
"The 25 companies were selected as part of the first Tech City “Future Fifty” project, which aims to find 50 high-growth companies with a substantial British interest and provide them the help they need to become the next Facebook.
Tech City, set up by the UK government in 2010 to help East London tech companies into an international competitor to Silicon Valley, argues that such companies are crucial to Britain’s development.
“Six percent of our companies generate 54% of our high-value jobs”, says Joanna Shields, the organisation's chief executive, “The tech sector is 8.3% of GDP, and it’s growing at 11% a year, the highest of any G20 country.”
The companies in the first cohort of the Future Fifty will received tailored support from Tech City, as well as the UK government more broadly, to help them scale up their business as rapidly as they can.
That could include advice on how to bid for government procurement contracts, or access to the network of British consulates and embassies to help overseas expansion.
“The Future Fifty programme is action that will help these businesses to grow and achieve their potential, and help us to compete and thrive in the global race,” said prime minister David Cameron.
Tech City, set up by the UK government in 2010 to help East London tech companies into an international competitor to Silicon Valley, argues that such companies are crucial to Britain’s development.
“Six percent of our companies generate 54% of our high-value jobs”, says Joanna Shields, the organisation's chief executive, “The tech sector is 8.3% of GDP, and it’s growing at 11% a year, the highest of any G20 country.”
The companies in the first cohort of the Future Fifty will received tailored support from Tech City, as well as the UK government more broadly, to help them scale up their business as rapidly as they can.
That could include advice on how to bid for government procurement contracts, or access to the network of British consulates and embassies to help overseas expansion.
The launch of the Future Fifty comes on the back of the news that Tech City is to welcome its first mainland China, mobile gaming business Rekoo. As the area matures, its make-up of company’s will naturally change, from mostly home-grown start-ups to a broader mixture of new, old, foreign and British".
the guardian

Wolfram Alpha,the next Generation Search Engine, adds 649 Pokémon to its search database

Wolfram Alpha, the search engine which bills itself as a “computational knowledge engine”, has introduced information about all 649 Pokémon into its database.
The data includes the height, weight, and pokédex number of every Pokémon except those introduced in Pokémon X and Pokémon Y, the two games just released for the Nintendo 3DS console.
Writing on the Alpha Blog Michael, Feltes explains that the introduction was spurred by the popularity of the Pokémon 'planar curves' on the site.
Wolfram Alpha has long had a feature which allows users to generate polar equations which, when entered into a graphing program, will draw a picture. Characters such asBatman andSuperman, as well real individuals including Albert Einstein and Elvis Presley, can all be generated.
But Pokémon planar curves, from well-known species such as Picachu andMeowth to more obscure ones (only true fans will have much affection for Wailord) were consistently popular.
Source: theguardian

Columbia University students design Talos a low cost humanoid robot

A team of students at Columbia University, led by Jason Ravel, has taken inspiration from a number of sources, including the Turtlebot by Willow Garage, Boxie the Robot from MIT, and Rosie the Robot from The Jetsons, to design a human-sized general purpose robot called Talos. Built for just US$800, this low cost robot has arms, a face, and can answer voice commands.
  At the base of the Talos robot is an iRobot Create,which provides locomotion and an ability to sense walls and stairs. Above that is a standard laptop, while the body of the robot is a cardboard tube with a box on top that forms the robot’s head and face. Connected to its tubular body are two mechanical arms with hands from OWI Robots for picking up objects and shaking hands, while its face features lights in the eyes that change color in response to various commands. Sitting atop its head is a Microsoft Kinect 3D sensor for detecting 3D objects, walls, and doors.
This first version of Talos was designed to carry out several simple  functions. The original concept was to use the robot for telepresence operations, like guarding the lab at night. The robot can retrieve an object and bring it to a person; it can respond to several simple voice commands, like “follow me” or “shake hands”; it can be controlled by a remote application on a tablet computer; and it can dance, as an entertainment function.
 "The price of robot motors needs to come down," says Jayson Ravel.His team see Talos as a model for a lower-cost humanoid robot that can function in a home or office environment.
Next steps in the project will be improving the object recognition and retrieval capability. The team will also be working on new navigation functions that use landmarks and can make maps as the robot roams around.
Sources: Columbia University Robotics Group,Jason Ravel.
              Gizmag

Ministry of Commerce:China's exports to see slight gains in next months

China's exports are likely to see a slight increase in the next two to three months following a surprise year-on-year drop in September, an official said Thursday.
Shen Danyang, spokesman for the Ministry of Commerce (MOC), said at a monthly press conference that the country will still face inadequate demand from emerging markets in the next few months.
"Meanwhile, Chinese companies are confronted with rising export costs caused by the appreciation of the yuan and escalating labor costs, among other factors," Shen said.
A recent survey of some 1,900 foreign trade companies by the MOC shows that export orders have fluctuated in past months, especially orders from emerging economies.
However, thanks to the government's recent efforts in trade facilitation and upcoming policies to support exporters, Shen forecast that the country's exports will see modest growth in the next two or three months.
China's exports fell unexpectedly by 0.3 percent in September from a year earlier, ending two months of consecutive gains, customs data showed.
In the first nine months of the year, exports rose 8 percent from a year earlier, while total trade volume gained 7.7 percent year on year.
Source: Xinhua

An Innovation in Dram Memory Hybrid Memory Cube (HMC)

Hybrid Memory Cube is an innovation in DRAM memory that promises a new standard for reduced cost, memory performance, and lowered power consumption. HMC uses 3D packaging of multiple memory dies, typically four or eight, along with through-silicon vias (TSV) and microbumps. The result is more data banks than classic DRAM memory of the same size. In addition, the memory controller is integrated in a memory package as a separate logic die.
Each HMC package is called a cube. Cubes can be chained in networks of up to eight cubes with cube-to-cube links, some of which are pass-through links. A typical cube package with four links has 896 BGA pins and is 31 x 31 x 3.8 millimeters.
How fast should HMC be? The typical raw bandwidth of a single 16-lane link with 10 Gbps signalling is 40 GB/s (20 GB/s transmit and 20 GB/s receive).

CURTIS FRANKLIN JR.
Enterprise Efficiency
theguardian

A new 'invisible' skyscraper near Seoul is planned. Professor Ulf Leonhardt explains how it works

Interview By Nicola Davis The Observer

So how can we make objects seem almost invisible?

You need to have a material that bends light around an object. All transparent materials bend light. You can do that in a clever way so that the lightwaves that go around an object then go straight again so you are guiding light around the object as if the object isn't there. This is possible to do in principle, but in practice it's difficult to create these materials. So far it only works for very small objects.

o how can we make objects seem almost invisible?

You need to have a material that bends light around an object. All transparent materials bend light. You can do that in a clever way so that the lightwaves that go around an object then go straight again so you are guiding light around the object as if the object isn't there. This is possible to do in principle, but in practice it's difficult to create these materials. So far it only works for very small objects.

How will Tower Infinity achieve invisibility?

This is a much simpler idea and an idea that is used by nature in many examples - it is camouflage. What happens is they record the image of the background scenery with detectors and then have light-emitting diodes on the other side that project that image onto the skyscraper.

What's the advantage of the light-bending approach?

There is something those devices could do that the skyscraper cannot do, and that is to really transmit a stereo-image. If you record the background scenery then you would lose the sense of depth and so if you look very carefully at the invisible skyscraper you would essentially just see the picture on the wall. If you were to look from the side or so, you would notice that it's just a picture.
There are also fish in the ocean that hide from predators coming from the depths. If you look from the depths, normally you would see the black shapes of the fish against the light coming from the sky. These fish have sensors on their backs and bioluminescent bacteria in their bellies and switch these bacteria on to give the same amount of light that the fish receive on their back. So they become invisible. They are no longer black, they are as light and blue as the sky looks from the deep.
  Source: theguardian

China responds to Abe's Yasukuni Shrine offering

China's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying on Thursday responded to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe making an offering to Tokyo's war-linked Yasukuni Shrine by urging Japan to properly deal with the issues surrounding the controversial site.
Hua's remarks came as the shrine marked its annual autumn festival. Abe paid for a "masakaki" tree offering traditionally used in Shinto rituals at the shrine on Thursday morning but refrained from visiting.
The shrine, which honors Japanese war dead, including 14 class-A war criminals, is considered a symbol of Japan's past militarism.
Hua said China has repeatedly stated its attitude and position on the Yasukuni Shrine issue.
"We again urge the Japanese side to face up to and make real introspection for its history of aggression, respect the feelings of people in war-victim Asian countries, including China, and properly deal with relevant issues," she said.
Repeated visits to the shrine by Japanese cabinet ministers and lawmakers have been a major obstacle for Japan to mend ties with China and the Republic of Korea.
Abe also made offerings during the shrine's spring festival in April and on the anniversary of Japan's World War II surrender on Aug. 15 this year.
Source: XInhua

Xinhua Commentary:No long-term remedy for U.S. fiscal crisis despite another temporary deal

Long-term remedy to cure the stubborn and chronic U.S. fiscal illness remains absent despite a last-minute yet still temporary bill that finally cleared the U.S. Congress late Wednesday.
That means politicians in Washington have done nothing substantial but postponing once again the final bankruptcy of global confidence in the U.S. financial system and the intactness of dollar investment, which has already been seriously shattered by the undying partisan struggle and the country's attested inability to fix its fiscal problems once and for all.
Such move of passing a transient bill was no more than prolonging the fuse of the U.S. debt bomb one inch longer.
Just as what recent history has taught us that it is expected the shenanigans and dramatic political infighting are definitively going to be put up again when the next deadline, which has already been set in motion, comes around in a few months' time.
If the U.S. government continues with its irresponsible dilatory approach over its debt disease, there will be a day when Uncle Sam busts his borrowing limit while the groaning U.S. economy drifting far beyond redemption.
Thus, even though it seems not quite possible, it is still urged that over the coming months the beltway politicians in the White House and both chambers of Congress could set aside their partisan gridlock and petty differences, and work out a way that may comfort the trembling world financial markets seeking further rehabilitation.
Amongst the effective cures available, the U.S. government has to rethink the way it spends its money considering its gigantic military expenditure, which accounts for almost half of the world's total.
In fact, Washington was once on its way to pay down its national debt and had budget surpluses when former president Bill Clinton left the White House in 2000.
Nevertheless, the succeeding U.S. administrations squandered the capital by waging wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, returning the country to fiscal quagmire and damaging its moral credibility worldwide.
With the protracted U.S. fiscal failure hanging high up there as a Sword of Damocles, the international financial stability and the lackluster global economic recovery are locked in an egregiously dangerous situation as the clock ticks.
While there is hardly any anticipated esperance for the recurring U.S. fiscal crisis to be terminated in a responsible and long-term fashion, it again prompts the international community to revisit the deficiencies perplexing the current global financial and monetary system with reigning greenbacks.
As for China, it is perhaps an opportunity to move faster and more resolutely on the track of internationalizing its RMB currency, so that it could move gradually away from the dangers posing by a troubling U.S. fiscal mechanism.
Great harm has already been done to the world economy despite an expedient reached between the Democrats and the Republicans, and the United States has to know that it is not doing the world a favor by solving its fiscal conundrums. In fact, self-salvation lies within.

US power plants 'vulnerable to hacking'

 ''U.S. Powers Plants vulnerable to Hacking.If exploited, the vulnerabilities could be used to crash or potentially hijack the servers controlling electronic substations, water utilities and power plants.
Adam Crain, Chris Sistrunk and Adam Todorski, who are working with industrial consultants Automatak, found 25 zero-day vulnerabilities – flaws which have never before been seen in the wild – in the protocol by which power plants and other parts of the electricity grid communicate internally.
Such protocols are rarely examined by security researchers because they are isolated from the internet, the usual source of hacking attacks.
In addition, the specificity of the protocols, known as supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) systems, means that the are thought to have a sort of security through obscurity: if few know how they work, then it is hoped no one will have the knowledge to exploit them.
Crain warns this is a false comfort. “If someone tries to breach the control center through the internet, they have to bypass layers of firewalls,”he told  Wired's Kim Zetter But someone could go out to a remote substation that has very little physical security and get on the network and take out hundreds of substations potentially. And they don’t necessarily have to get into the substation either.”
Source: theguardian

China: Risks linger despite U.S. debt resolution

The U.S. decision on Thursday to once again lift its debt limit has been welcomed but risks remain, according to to Chinese financial experts.
The U.S. congress passed a deal to lift the U.S. government's borrowing limit, in an effort to pull the country from the brink of a debt default and end the protracted government shutdown.
With a mammoth 1.28 trillion U.S. dollars of U.S. treasury bonds in hand, China is the world's largest owner of U.S. debt and the risk it faces is possibly the greatest.
China welcomed the resolution of the U.S. debt ceiling deadlock, which Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said on Thursday "not only serves the United States's own interests but also contributes to world economic stability."
However, experts have taken the resolution with a pinch of salt and warned of future risks.
"How the fiscal showdown was played out has been within our expectations. After all, it is not the first time for the U.S. to raise the debt limit," said Tan Yaling, president of the China Forex Investment Research Institute.
"Recent years have witnessed such scenarios, with the American debt crisis in 2011, the so-called fiscal cliff and the recent debt default risk coupled with the government shutdown. These are but variations of the same theme -- the U.S. government is distracting the world's attention from its real intention to mobilize resources for its own development," Tan said.
"They always end up with an elevated ceiling," he added.
Over the past two weeks, the possibility of a default from the world's No.1 economy has created concern among the global community. Any economic upheavals on American soil are always likely to reverberate to other countries.
"A debt default would not only harm the U.S.'s reputation but also derail the global economic recovery. China hopes and believes that the U.S. is able to solve its debt crisis timely to aid the global recovery and financial stability," said Shen Danyang, spokesman of the Ministry of Commerce, in a separate briefing on Thursday.
Though the Democratic and Republican parties have made predictable compromises and reached an agreement, experts argue the U.S. debt risk will loom since its debt dependence system is unlikely to change.
The debt dependence is what has propped up its excessive consumption, said Zhang Monan, an economist with the State Information Center.
Such an over-dependence on foreign countries should be reversed if the U.S. cares about sustained development of its own and the world economy, analysts have said.
"The fundamental issue remains unsolved; a crisis like this could happen again in, say, three months," said Li Daokui, a former advisor to China's central bank, who predicted an imminent downgrade for the U.S. debt.
To avert risks linked to its weighty investment in the U.S., China should push for a diversified foreign exchange portfolio, according to financial expert Zhao Qingming.
Debt default could lead to a steep devaluation of the U.S. dollar and leave Chinese exporters exposed to greater risks, leading to a contraction in both imports and exports, Shen Danyang said.
"Every time, the mention of an American debt crisis invariably sends jitters to China, given China's huge export volume to the U.S.," Zhao said.
"A long-term solution for this conundrum lies in China switching from an export-reliant economy to one that is driven by domestic consumption," he added.
Source: Xinhua

UK will allow Chinese companies to take a stake in British nuclear power plants.

   According to an article published on the BBC "The Chancellor, George Osborne, has announced that the UK will allow Chinese companies to take a stake in British nuclear power plants''.
''The announcement also said that Chinese firms might eventually be allowed to take majority stakes in British nuclear plants.
Mr Osborne made the announcement on the last day of a trade visit to China.
The first China deal could be as early as next week, with the go ahead for a new £14bn plant at the Hinkley C site.
Also on Thursday, a report commissioned for the prime minister warned of a growing risk of power shortages over the next few years.
The Royal Academy of Engineering said the closure of older power plants and the slow progress in building news ones was likely to stretch the system "close to its limits".
Supply is expected to come under strain in the winter of 2014-15.
Most existing coal-fired plants are expected to be closed in 2015 to meet European Union pollution directives, while many gas-fired power plants are not being used at the moment because gas is so expensive''.

In China, the idea that girls can't or shouldn't do the same jobs as boys is passed on early.

   According to a report ON the BBC  ''In China, the idea that girls can't or shouldn't do the same jobs as boys is passed on early. It's a lesson that extends into university and beyond.
Six hundred kilometres south of Beijing, at the China Mining and Technology University in China's eastern Jiangsu province, a group of mining engineering students listen intently to their professor.
They're the envy of others at this school, since they belong to one of China's so-called "green card majors", courses that all but guarantee employment after graduation.
But this program has one clear entrance requirement: men only.
"China's labour law suggests mining work is unsuitable for women, so we ask women to refrain from applying to our major," explains one of the department's senior professors, Shu Jisen.
This university is not alone. Out of respect for women's safety, it says, China's education ministry bans girls from studying a variety of subjects across China, from tunnel engineering to navigation.
At one university in Dalian, northern China, females are barred from studying naval engineering - because months on board a ship would be tough for women to endure, one admissions officer explained to the BBC.
Slightly different reasons are given for severely restricting the number of women who can study at Beijing's People's Police University, which has a strict quota, limiting girls to comprise 10-15% of the student body".
Source: BBC

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