Showing posts with label america. Show all posts
Showing posts with label america. Show all posts

Monday, August 12, 2013

NEWS,12.08.2013



Investors see riches in luxury US homes


Jan Brzeski stands in a sun-filled, beautifully refurbished living room high in the Hollywood Hills, looking out at a swimming pool and, miles (km) below, stunning views of Los Angeles.
Brzeski is a private money lender running an investment firm in Los Angeles that provides loans to house flippers investors who buy a home, refurbish it, and sell it at a profit. Many flippers turn to money lenders because they cannot get banks to provide such short-term, quick financing.
Standing with Brzeski is Scott Ryan, the realtor who bought this four-bedroom, five-bathroom house in December 2012 for $1.5m  with money lent by Brzeski and has transformed it with another $600 000. This week the property will go on the market at $3.295m.
"People will come in here and fall in love," Ryan said, with a house flipper's standard issue optimism. "This is an emotional sale. If it takes a week to sell, I will be surprised. There are a lot of young, wealthy people here, and a lot of money out there."
Eighteen months ago Brzeski and his firm, Arixa Capital Advisors, were lending investor money to flippers on very different properties: $250 000 single family homes in southern California's up-and-coming lower- to middle-class blue-collar neighborhoods. Most of the deals involved foreclosed homes that were totally refurbished, and then sold quickly.
No more. Brzeski now focuses on developers working on high-end flips of mansions and townhouses in exclusive neighborhoods, such as the Hollywood Hills and Bel Air.
And he is not alone. There has been a surge in high-end and luxury flipping nationwide. Between 2011 and today, flips of homes valued at $1m or more have risen almost 40% across the United States, according to RealtyTrac, the housing data company.
Between 2011 and 2012, high-end flipping soared 456% in Phoenix (150 properties from 27); 867% in Orlando (29 homes from 3); and to 73 properties from 10 in Las Vegas, according to RealtyTrac. To qualify as a flip for the figures, a home has to be bought and sold within six months.
Brzeski says two main factors combined to send him upmarket in the projects he lends on.
Newly flush Wall Street investors moved into the mid-market with so much money that they bought nearly every foreclosure in sight, mostly to rent.
The Blackstone Group, for example, spent $5.5bn on 32 000 homes across America, according to the firm.
American Homes 4 Rent, the California-based real estate investment trust founded by self-storage billionaire Wayne Hughes, spent $3.3bn, on more than 19 000 houses.
"These Wall Street guys employed huge dollars," Brzeski said. "These firms came to the courthouse steps and bought everything in sight. So the low- to mid-market dried up."
Brzeski said he had originally been wary of the high-end market, because of the much bigger sums involved and thus greater risk. But then in 2011 he financed the purchase of a house in West Hollywood for $1.425m. Another $1.175m was spent on a total refurbishment.
"When the developer put it on the market, they had multiple, all-cash offers," he said. "There was a line out the door to buy it. It sold for $3.5m. This was an incredibly profitable project. This really opened my eyes."
The house was bought by actress Sarah Gilbert, who became famous on the television sitcom "Roseanne."
Daren Blomquist, RealtyTrac's vice president, said: "Flippers are getting more confident that the market is really recovering, and therefore are more willing to go high-end, even though it's more risky."
Blomquist said with the stock market doing so well, there is a lot of investor cash out there, and a huge amount of wealth and pent-up demand at the high-end of the market. When a beautifully refurbished mansion hits the market, they are snapped up, often with all-cash offers, he said.
Foreign investors are also spending billions on the US property market. Last year, Chinese investors spent $12bn on US real estate, making the country the second-biggest foreign investor, just behind Canada, according to the National Association of Realtors.
Blomquist also sounded a warning for anyone who thinks flipping is easy. Many who try, suffer catastrophic losses.
"It's 10 times as risky doing high-end flips. Unfortunately what happens a lot of times, flippers have a property, then they can't find a buyer to purchase it."
Brzeski's business model is simple. Using a fund of investor money he lends 75 percent of a project's "hard costs" - that is money used for the purchase and refurbishment - and collects interest at an annual rate of approximately 10%.
Usually the loan is repaid within six to 12 months. He does not share in the profit made by the flip. Brzeski loans between $1m and $4m on each project.
Another factor, unique to California, helps him fund luxury flips, said Brzeski. Because of a 1978 voter initiative law knows as Proposition 13, the tax assessments of California houses have increased dramatically less than home values since the law was enacted, as long as the home has remained unsold.
Now, owners who had been reluctant to part with their large homes since the early 1970s because of "Prop 13" are dying, or are finally ready to downsize.
"Almost all our homes in these A and A-plus neighborhoods have something in common. You look at the appliances in the kitchen. If they are from the 1960s or 1970s, that's the house to flip," Brzeski said.
Across the country, close to Washington, DC, Chris Haddon works for Hard Money Bankers. They provide money for investment deals on "fix and flip" projects in Washington, Maryland and Virginia.
Haddon says he, too, has seen a surge in deals involving high-end properties.
"A few years ago, you would look at a $2m property and have no idea how long it would take to sell. The high-end market is always the last to rebound. But it's now rebounded and DC is hot."
In Miami, Mark Black, a realtor, said people with cash have been moving into the high end of the market in the past year.
"The market has gone through the roof. You see people buying properties one year ago and selling them at 20, 30% profit. Some of these are no more than paint jobs. The ones that are doing big rehabs are making huge profits."
In Manhattan, Tim Desmond, a realtor with luxury realtors Stribling, said high-end flips in New York are not for the faint of heart, but the profits can be huge.
He cited a 12 000-square-foot (1 115-square-meter) home on Manhattan's East 56th Street that was bought by an investment group for $10m. It took two years to convert it into two, three-story, 6 000-square-foot (557-square-meter) condominiums. The first is now on the market with a $17m price tag.

US clown with Obama mask draws criticism



A clown wearing a President Barack Obama mask appeared at a Missouri State Fair event this weekend, and the announcer asked the enthusiastic spectators if they wanted to see "Obama run down by a bull".

The state's second highest-ranking official, Lieutenant Governor Peter Kinder, denounced the performance in a tweet on Sunday. He said it was "disrespectful" to the president.

"We are better than this," the Republican tweeted.

State Fair officials on Sunday said the show was "inappropriate" and "does not reflect the opinions or standards" of the fair.

It wasn't clear if any action will be taken against the performers.

Perry Beam, who was among the spectators, said "everybody screamed" and "just went wild" as the announcer talked about having the bull run down the clown with the Obama mask.

'Klan rally'

"It was at that point I began to feel a sense of fear. It was that level of enthusiasm," Beam said.

He said another clown ran up to the one wearing the Obama mask, pretended to tickle him and played with the lips on the mask. About 15 minutes into the performance, the masked clown had to leave after a bull got too close, Beam said.

"They mentioned the president's name, I don't know, 100 times. It was sickening," Beam said. "It was feeling like some kind of Klan rally you'd see on TV," he said, referring to the Klu Klux Klan, which terrorised African-Americans for decades.

Officials with the
Missouri Rodeo Cowboy Association, the organisation that co-ordinated the rodeo, did not return phone calls seeking comment on Sunday.

After Beam and his family returned home, he posted a photo of the clown in the Obama mask on his Facebook page. The photo and the posting were then promoted online by a blog, Showmegrogress.com, which elicited a huge response Sunday on Twitter.

Scott Holste, spokesperson for Missouri's Democratic Governor Jay Nixon, said on Sunday in an e-mail that Nixon "agrees that the performance was disrespectful and offensive, and does not reflect the values of Missourians or the State Fair".

Gibraltar: UK mulling action against Spain


The British government is considering taking legal action against Spain over stringent border checks imposed at the border with Gibraltar, a spokesperson for Prime Minister David Cameron said on Monday.

The spokesperson said the checks by Spanish guards, which have caused tailbacks of several hours at the border of the British-held territory, were "politically motivated and totally disproportionate".

"Clearly the prime minister is disappointed by the failure of
Spain to remove the additional border checks this weekend," the spokesperson told reporters.

"We are now considering what legal action is open to us.

"This would be an unprecedented step so we want to consider it carefully before a making a decision to pursue."

Britain and Spain are embroiled in an increasingly tense diplomatic spat over Gibraltar, a tiny self-governing British territory at the southern tip of
Spain.

Gibraltar has accused Madrid of imposing the checks in retaliation for its construction of an artificial concrete reef off its coast, which it says is aimed at stopping alleged incursions by Spanish fishing boats.

Madrid claims the border checks are necessary to combat smuggling and that the reef is a deliberate impediment to Spanish fishing vessels in a dispute over territorial waters.

A handful of British warships began setting sail for the
Mediterranean on Monday on what the defence ministry stresses is a routine exercise that was planned months ago.

But one of the ships is set to dock in
Gibraltar later this week in a move that is being seen by Spanish media as an act of intimidation.

Cultural Revolution: Ageing Chinese sorry


As a teenager radicalised by China's Cultural Revolution, Zhang Hongbing denounced his mother to the authorities. Two months later a firing squad shot her dead.

Now after more than 40 years of mounting guilt, Zhang has ruffled the silence that cloaks
China's decade of turmoil with a public confession.

Such rare apologies have been welcomed as a potential gateway to the collective soul-searching that could bring healing  but is blocked by a ruling Communist Party whose critics say is unwilling to confront its own responsibility.

"Back then everyone was swept up and you couldn't escape even if you wanted to. Any kindness or beauty in me was thoroughly, irretrievably 'formatted'," Zhang told the
Beijing News last week.

"I hope that from my self-reflection other people can understand what the situation was like at that time."

The 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, unleashed by then-leader Mao Zedong to reassert power after the famines caused by his disastrous Great Leap Forward, inflicted myriad personal tragedies and threw society into chaos.

Winds of change

"Red Guard" youths abused their elders - officials, intellectuals, neighbours, relatives - dragging them into "struggle sessions", ransacking their homes and driving some to suicide.

Many targets were jailed or killed, and while no official figure has been issued, one Western historian estimated half a million people died in 1967 alone.

Zhang reported his mother in 1970 for criticising Mao, and military officials came to their home, assaulted her and took her away.

But as the political winds changed - a few years after the Cultural Revolution ended, a court in his native central
Anhui province recanted his mother's sentence - Zhang began to rethink as well.

"I will never forgive myself," he said.

Only a handful of public confessions have appeared, mostly in recent years as the Revolution's once-heady teenagers enter their 60s.

Embracing apologies

Wen Qingfu from the central
province of Hunan cited age as a spur for admitting in an essay in June that, following orders, he once led a mob to storm the home of a teacher whose son he often played with.

"When people get old they look back and reflect," he told a provincial newspaper. "If I didn't apologise now we would both get too old."

Wen acted in time to see his victim's daughter reply in a public letter on behalf of her frail mother: "You can let go of your guilt."

Many Chinese have embraced these apologies, even though wide airing of past wrongs might invite a spate of legal action, said Ding Xueliang, a Cultural Revolution expert at
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

In a rare trial stemming from the era, a court in
Zhejiang province in April sentenced a man in his 80s to 42 months in prison for a 1967 murder.

Still, Ding said, "the positive consequences would go far beyond the negative ones... to collective soul-searching, to build a more law-based society".

Basics

But
China's ruling party prohibits such discussion, which would inevitably broach the question of its own ugly role. Any trial or apology tends to skirt around this central issue, say academics.

"Individual responsibility is one part of this," said Xu Youyu, a researcher at the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

"Some things are basic, for example, you can't hit people or humiliate or persecute them."

But the confessions "have not touched on the more important or fundamental issues", he said, and if they did, "there might be a question of whether the discussion could continue".

Shortly after Mao died in 1976 the campaign was ended, and the authorities hung blame on the controversial Gang of Four leaders headed by Mao's wife Jiang Qing, jailing them in 1980.

The following year the official party line declared that the Cultural Revolution had dealt
China "the most severe setback and the heaviest losses" since the founding of the People's Republic in 1949.

No museums

Mao was deemed to have been 70% right and 30% wrong, having made "gross mistakes" but far greater contributions.

And with that a curtain over the matter was drawn.

Former premier Wen Jiabao briefly referenced the period last year, warning that
China should never retread such "historical tragedies".

The remark - seen as a rebuke to the recently disgraced leader Bo Xilai who had championed "red revival" - heartened those who support freer discussion of the decade, but the impact of Wen's words ended there.

Virtually no museums, memorials or films in
China explore the Revolution, except for little-known private efforts such as one museum in southwestern Sichuan province that refers discreetly to a "Red era".

In a public apology published in June, Liu Boqin of
Shandong province in the east detailed his crimes and listed his victims, but only vaguely referenced the political directives that drove him.

Instead he cited "youth and ignorance, being incited, wicked, not distinguishing right and wrong" for having hounded teachers and vandalised homes.

"Although being swept up in the environment of the Cultural Revolution was one reason," he wrote, "I as an individual bear responsibility for my evil actions."

Chilly reception for Kerry?


US Secretary of State John Kerry's trip to Colombia and Brazil this week builds on efforts to deepen relations with Latin America, but he can expect a curt reception from the two US allies after reports that an American spy programme widely targeted data in emails and telephone calls across the region.

On Kerry's first visit to South America as the Obama administration's chief diplomat, the disclosures by National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden could chill talks on trade and energy, and even discussions about the 23 October state dinner that President Barack Obama is hosting for Brazil's president, Dilma Rousseff.

"I don't think this is going to be a warm 'abrazo'," said Michael Shifter, president of the Washington-based Inter-American Dialogue, using the Spanish word for "hug". ''I think it will be businesslike."

Kerry arrived late on Sunday in
Bogota, the Colombian capital. The country is holding peace talks to end a half century-old conflict with the Western Hemisphere's most potent rebel army, a rebel force diminished in strength thanks in considerable measure to US military and intelligence support.

The
US wants to show its support for the peace talks between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or Farc, which are taking place in Cuba.

Colombia is one of the United States' closest allies in the region, but the reports about the spying programme have rankled Colombian officials.

Clarification on intelligence-gathering

Brazil's O Globo newspaper reported last month that citizens of Colombia, Mexico, Brazil and other countries were among the targets of a massive NSA operation to secretly gather information about phone calls and Internet communications worldwide. The reports were based on information provided by Snowden.

Colombia's president, Juan Manuel Santos, said on Thursday that he wanted clarification from
Washington on whether US intelligence-gathering in Colombia had overstepped the countries' joint operations against drug traffickers and illegal armed groups. The US has supplied Colombia with eavesdropping equipment, technicians and aerial surveillance.

Santos said in an interview with The Associated Press that Vice President Joe Biden called him about the issue following revelations by Snowden that US digital snooping has targeted allies as well as foes. Santos said Biden offered a series of technical explanations. Asked if he was satisfied with them, Santos replied, "We are in that process."

Biden also called Rousseff to express what Brazil's communications minister, Helena Chagas, said was "his regret over the negative repercussions caused by the disclosures". Biden invited Brazilian officials to
Washington to get details about the spy programme.

Rousseff told Biden that the privacy of Brazilian citizens and the country's sovereignty cannot be infringed upon in the name of security, and that
Brazil wanted the US to change its security policies and practices.

Last week,
Brazil's Foreign Minister Antonio Patriota was at the United Nations with counterparts from other South American nations to express their indignation about the spy programme to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

Anti-government protests

The Obama administration has worked to forge stronger ties with
Latin America. In May, Obama took a three-day trip to Mexico and Costa Rica. Biden has visited Colombia and Brazil, where he said stronger trade ties and closer cooperation in education, science and other fields should usher in a new era of US-Brazil relations this year.

Brazil has received much attention in recent months because of Pope Francis' visit and preparations for the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics to be held in Rio de Janeiro.

Thousands of demonstrators have staged anti-government protests since June demanding better public services in return for high taxes they pay. Under considerable domestic pressure, Rousseff announced a $4bn programme to improve transportation, sewage and public housing in
Sao Paulo, Brazil's largest city.

The protests have weakened her domestic support, but she can bolster her poll numbers with a strong stand against the US over the spying allegations, said Carl Meacham, former Latin America adviser on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and director of the Americas Programme at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

"I think the tone of the visit will be a bit tense because of these issues raised by the surveillance [programme] and I think Secretary Kerry will have to speak to that," he said.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

NEWS,23.11.2012



US can't afford Obamacare - Boehner


New comments from top Republican lawmaker John Boehner slamming healthcare reforms illustrate how hard it will be for Washington to reach a deficit reduction deal when talks resume next week, analysts say.President Barack Obama and the US Congress will begin negotiating next week on a plan that could avert tax hikes and spending cuts due to begin in January that economists worry could push the US economy over the "fiscal cliff" and into recession.Boehner did not explicitly mention the "fiscal cliff" talks in an opinion piece published in the Cincinnati Enquirer this week. But he argued the nation cannot afford the costs of Obama's 2010 healthcare reform law, given America's sluggish economy and massive $16 trillion (NZ$19.6 trillion) debt."That's why I've been clear that the law has to stay on the table as both parties discuss ways to solve our nation's massive debt challenge," said Boehner, who is a key player in the talks.Boehner's comments show it won't be easy to reach a deal on the thorny tax and spending issues, said Greg Valliere, chief political strategist at Potomac Research Group in Washington."There's an enormous gulf between the two parties on the details," he said, noting it is still possible that Obama and Congress may agree by January to broad spending and tax measures, and then take months afterwards to iron out details."Plunging off the cliff, then passing a tax cut in January that excludes the rich  is still a very live option," Valliere said. Analysts said Boehner's renewed critique of the healthcare law is designed to appeal to Republicans in the House of Representatives who have voted more than 30 times to repeal it.The law aims to extend health coverage to more than 30 million uninsured Americans starting in 2014. It also contains measures designed to contain the costs of America's $2.6 trillion (NZ$3.18 trillion) healthcare system, the most expensive in the world.Republicans promised to repeal the law, which they call "Obamacare", if they won the November presidential elections.But Obama's victory meant the Democrats kept their majority in the Senate. Last June, the US Supreme Court upheld the reforms.Boehner's comments were "not constructive" for the fiscal talks ahead because there is little chance negotiations will lead to changes in the healthcare law, said Jim Kessler, senior vice president for policy at centrist think-tank Third Way."This is a complete non-starter and a clumsy starting point for negotiations," Kessler said.Larry Sabato, political scientist at the University of Virginia, said he thought Boehner's comments seemed like a "bargaining chip" for the talks ahead."Just as President Obama is insisting that taxes must go up for everyone making $250,000 or more, the Republicans are saying that Obamacare is on the table," he said, noting he expects the income trigger for tax increases will end up being much higher and that the healthcare law will stay untouched.After the election, Boehner acknowledged in an ABC News interview that "Obamacare is the law of the land", although he also said the law had to be "on the table" as legislators work toward balancing the nation's budget.Julie Barnes, director of healthcare policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, said the costs associated with getting the new health reforms in place pale in comparison to the much-larger costs of tax and spending issues before lawmakers."Small businesses and large businesses are not going to view Obamacare as what's really causing the problem for their competitiveness. The problem is healthcare costs," Barnes said.

German business sentiment surprises


German business morale surprised with its first rise in seven months in November as exports outside the euro zone and the prospect of strong Christmas sales offered hope Europe's largest economy can regain some momentum.The Munich-based Ifo think tank said on Friday its business climate index, based on a monthly survey of some 7 000 firms, rose to 101.4 from 100.0 in October, far surpassing even the highest estimate in a Reuters poll.Germany proved largely immune to the first two years of the European debt crisis but recent data has suggested its resilience is wearing thin, with growth slowing to 0.2% in the third quarter.Yet while economists expect the economy to contract in the fourth quarter, they had already expected the first quarter to be better and the IFO numbers added to hopes that it could stave off the recession plaguing euro zone members further south."That was a positive surprise," said Ralph Solveen of Commerzbank. "The brightening climate raises hopes that the economy will stabilise after what will likely be a weak fourth quarter. (One) increase now is nevertheless not a sign of a turnaround."He pointed to reduced fears of a euro-zone break-up as well as positive signals from Asia and the United States, where Germany's strength in high-added value exports like cars, electronics and machinery make it well-placed to take advantage of any economic improvement.The euro rose to a three-week high against the dollar and European stocks trimmed losses after the IFO numbers.Asia-basedFirms were more upbeat about their business outlook, with an IFO sub-index rising to 108.1 from a revised 107.2 in October. They were also less pessimistic about current business, with the current conditions index up to 95.2 from 93.2.That came as a surprise after data this month showed the private sector shrinking, unemployment up, industrial orders and output down and exports falling at their fastest pace since late last year.IFO economist Klaus Wohlrabe said exporters' outlook had improved but firms were still delaying investment due to the uncertainty caused by the unresolved euro zone crisis."Export expectations rose strongly and are back in the positive area now. The orders situation and demand are stabilising. Exports to the United States and Asia seem to be going well,". "The uncertainty (on investment) is still present. ... There has been no turnaround yet. "Seasonally-adjusted GDP data showed gross capital investment made no contribution to growth while investment in plant and equipment fell by 2.0%.Chipmaker Infineon has already said it will cut planned investments. "Businesses are investing less in machines and other equipment. The only explanation for that is a crisis of confidence - which means the German economy will lose more speed," said economist Holger Schmieding of Berenberg Bank.Europe has been unable to contain the euro zone crisis with no agreement yet on how to get Greece's debt down to sustainable levels. France, Germany's single largest trading partner, lost a second AAA credit rating on Monday on concerns over its fiscal outlook and deteriorating economy.



Greece says lenders closer to compromise

 

The International Monetary Fund has relaxed its debt-cutting target for Greece and only a €10bn gap remains to be filled for a vital aid tranche to be paid, Greece's finance minister said on Friday.But other sources involved in the talks cautioned that the funding gap was far bigger than that suggested by Greece and that the two sides were not on the verge of striking a deal to resolve the euro zone's most intractable problem.Greece's finance minister signalled that a compromise was near by saying the International Monetary Fund had agreed to deem the country's debt viable if it falls to 124% of GDP in 2020, giving ground on its earlier target of 120%.The Eurogroup has already agreed on measures to reduce Greek debt to 130% of GDP in 2020, Yannis Stournaras said."That leaves a gap of 5-6 percentage points of GDP to be covered  about €10bn," he told reporters in Brussels.The EU and IMF are considering bringing the debt down through a combination of interest rate cuts and extension of maturities on the country's loans, a debt buyback and having the ECB forego profits on its Greek bond holdings, a Greek finance ministry official told Reuters.Teetering on the verge of bankruptcy, Greece is increasingly frustrated that its lenders are still squabbling over a deal to unlock fresh aid despite the country pushing through unpopular austerity cuts that brought thousands on to the streets.Athens says time is running out and that it needs its next tranches of almost €44bn in aid to recapitalise banks and stabilize its recession-hit economy. Its next big debt repayment falls due in mid-December.It expects the aid to be paid out in one installment, Greece's government spokesman told Greek radio, playing down recent speculation that it could be dribbled out in bits.The euro hit a three-week high against the dollar on growing optimism that Greece's lenders were close to an agreement."Too optimistic"Euro zone finance ministers, the IMF and European Central Bank failed earlier this week to agree how to get the country's debt down to a sustainable level and will have a third go at resolving the issue on Monday.A senior source involved in the negotiations confirmed that the IMF would now accept 124% as a target but was dismissive of the gap amounting to only €10bn."There are still things missing to an agreement," the source said. "The 10 billion is too optimistic."A Greek finance ministry official said the ECB could relinquish €9bn of profits on the Greek bonds it holds, as part of the measures to bring debt in 2020 down from a previous estimate of 144% of GDP.Other options include saving €8bn from cutting the interest rate, extending maturities on Greek debt and spending €10bn to buy back around €30bn of debt.Greece has already begun preparations for the debt buyback, which could be completed by the end of the year if euro zone finance ministers approve the move, the official said.According to current government projections, Greek debt is seen at €340.6bn, or 175.6% of GDP at the end of 2012. It is expected to peak at €357.7bn, almost 191%, in 2015.According to a document circulated at the Eurogroup meeting, Greece's debt cannot be cut to 120% of GDP by 2020 unless euro zone member states write off a portion of their loans to Greece, which Germany has said would be illegal.The document prepared for the meeting of euro zone finance ministers and seen by Reuters spelled out several options now cited by Greek officials - including using about 10 billion euros to buy back bonds at between 30 and 35 cents in the euro.Many Greek retail bondholders are still angry from a debt restructuring earlier this year that imposed heavy losses on private holders of Greek debt.About 40 retail bondholders pushed past security at the co-ruling conservative New Democracy party's offices in Athens on Friday, defaced a portrait of party founder Constantinos Karamanlis and scuffled with guards.



EU budget summit edges towards collapse


EU leaders looked set to throw in the towel Friday as talks on a trillion euro budget for the 27-member bloc faltered over tensions between rich and poor states and Britain's "virulent" demands for austerity.British Prime Minister David Cameron kept up his defiant stance as he arrived for a second day of bitter negotiations on the European Union budget for the seven years from 2014-2020."There really is a problem that there hasn't been the progress in cutting back proposals for additional spending," Cameron, who back home has to pander to the powerful eurosceptic wing of his Conservative party, told reporters.Britain, like many countries across Europe, is responding to economic crisis with major public spending cuts and Cameron argues that at a time of austerity at home the EU must also make deep cuts.His bleak assessment of the state of the budget talks was shared by other EU leaders, who arrived one by one at European Council building in Brussels for bilateral meetings before the summit proper resumed at midday."I believe that also in this round, we won't be where have to get to, which is a unanimous decision," said German Chancellor Angela Merkel, repeating a line she had taken even before arriving in the Belgian capital."If we need a second round, then we will take the time necessary for it," se added, referring to the prospect of a second summit in the coming months to nail down a deal.Nearly a year after he angered his European counterparts by vetoing a pact to resolve the eurozone crisis, Cameron was again at odds with them by demanding cuts to the perks enjoyed by so-called "eurocrats" the well-paid EU civil servants who are frequently targeted by the British press. British officials insisted that other countries including Sweden, the Netherlands and Germany largely backed Cameron's position for a reduction in the planned trillion dollar budget for the seven years from 2014-2020.But an EU diplomat said the main obstacle was Cameron's demand for cuts adding: "The most virulent were the British, the Swedish and the Dutch."Cameron had vowed to bring down the budget from a proposed €1.047 trillion to €886bn.The summit was scheduled to resume at 11:00 on Friday once delegates from the 27 member nations have had time to examine new proposals on the budget submitted by EU President Herman Van Rompuy.The proposals reintroduce his own earlier figure of €972bn in spending, which comes to just over one percent of the EU's total economic output, the usual benchmark used in Brussels budget talks.The latest blueprint which negotiators will work from Friday spreads the funds more generously to sensitive envelopes like the "cohesion" funds for regional development, and the Common Agricultural Policy, the farm subsidy programme cherished by France that is the budget's biggest single item."We will not accept the unacceptable," warned Prime Minister Mario of Italy, which like France defends farm subsidies, but also backs cohesion funds which have vastly aided Italy's less developed south.Italy is among the countries that contribute more to the EU budget than they get back, known as the "net contributors", while once mighty Spain, rocked by the eurozone debt crisis, rejoined the camp of those who get more cash than they put in.Cohesion funds billions of euros outlayed each year to the EU's poorer members so they can catch up with richer neighbours are being defended tooth and nail by the 15 "Friends of Cohesion" nations, led by Poland and Portugal."Cohesion is an issue of competitiveness and growth for the whole European Union, not just for the countries with the greatest needs," argued Prime Minister Antonis Samaras of debt-stricken Greece.


Volkswagen to invest €14bn in China


Volkswagen AG plans to invest €14bn in China over the next four years, its China chief was quoted by the China Daily newspaper as saying, as it speeds up its expansion in the world's largest autos market. Volkswagen, which produces cars in China in partnership with SAIC Motor Corp and FAW Group, is building four plants in the country, the newspaper said, citing the German automaker's China chief Jochem Heizmann. Volkswagen sold 2 million cars in China in January-September, up 18.3% and more than double the overall industry growth.By 2018, Volkswagen's China annual capacity will reach at least 4 million vehicles, Heizmann told the China Daily, adding the group's workforce, including those at joint ventures, would rise to 85 000 within 3-5 years from 50 000 now. Heizmann was at the Guangzhou autoshow on Thursday.The German automaker will also build plug-in hybrid cars in China within 2-3 years and make plug-in hybrid powertrains, he added. Encouraged by Beijing's initiative to put 5 million electric and plug-in hybrids on the road by 2020, foreign automakers are gearing up to tap the potential for green cars in China.General Motors Co, which already sells its plug-in hybrid Chevrolet Volt in China, this week rolled out its first China-developed electric car, the Sail Springo EV. Nissan Motor Co Ltd is also promoting its Leaf electric car with local governments and will expand the effort to include its Venucia e30 China-only electric car  made at its joint venture with Dongfeng Automobile Co Ltd - next year.Globally, Volkswagen, jostling with Toyota Motor Corp as the world's number-one automaker, is expected to increase spending by 12% to as much as €70bn for its 12 brands over the next five years, compared with €62.4bn for 2012-16 agreed a year ago, analysts have said.That would be a record, but also represent a slowdown. The €62.4bn target was more than a fifth higher than over the 2011-15 period.



Brits top the whisteblowers list

 

More than one in ten tip-offs about corporate wrongdoing received by the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) came from overseas, with British whistleblowers topping the list, said a global investigations firm on Thursday.Nearly one in four of the 324 overseas tip-offs came from Britain with Canada second and India third, according to Kroll's analysis of the annual report from the US body responsible for regulating the securities market.Under new US regulation introduced in 2010, the SEC starting paying whistleblowers, both at home and abroad, for coming forward with information that results in successful prosecutions."The bounties offered to whistleblowers by the SEC are likely to have huge repercussions for companies, particularly international ones, as they mean whistleblowers based anywhere in the world are more likely to go to the regulator rather than their company," said Kroll Managing Director, Benedict Hamilton.Britain's 74 tip-offs were well above second-placed Canada which had 46, according to data from the fiscal year 2012.Regulators in Britain do not offer similar rewards at the moment but Kroll said Britain's Parliamentary commission on banking standards has asked the Financial Services Authority regulator to consider the move.Data released last month showed the number of whistleblowing cases reported to the FSA were up 276% in four years.The SEC received nearly 1 000 calls to its helpline from June 2007 to May 2008 compared to 3 733 in the same 2011 to 2012 period.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

NEWS,13.11.2012



Latin America's middle class now rivals poor, study finds


Rapid economic growth and more inclusive social policies in Latin America in the last decade have lifted 50 million people into the middle class, which for the first time rivals the poor in number, the World Bank has said in a new study.Rising income levels have also created a 'vulnerable' class, which at 38% makes up the largest income group.These people hover just above poverty, living on a daily income between $US4 and $US10 per person."As poverty fell and the middle class rose... the most common Latin American family is in a state of vulnerability," the World Bank, the global development lender, said in a report looking at the middle class and economic mobility in Latin America and the Caribbean . The World Bank measures the middle class as people who have economic security, facing less than a 10% chance of falling back into poverty.For the region, that translates into a daily income of $US10 to $US50 ($12 and $61) per person.Roughly 30% of the population now falls into that category, equal to the third of people still in poverty a remarkable shift in a continent that has been known for its vast income inequalities, dominated by the poor and a narrow slice of the rich.With global economic expansion, and redistributive policies in some countries, at least 40 percent of the region's population has moved to a higher economic class between 1995 and 2010.In Brazil, the region's largest nation and the world's sixth biggest economy, booming commodity-led growth and conditional cash transfers helped pull 30 million people out of poverty under left-leaning former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.Across the region, the rise of the middle class has had clear effects, helping countries like Brazil become less reliant on foreign assistance and less amenable to foreign pressure.Latin America is now the only region in the world with narrowing income inequality, the World Bank said in a report last month, though the rich-poor divide remains higher than in most developed countries.It has nudged some countries toward greater democracy, and raised hopes for businesses eager to take advantage of the growing consumer tastes for everything from the Internet to financial services.The question is whether this rapid rise can continue, especially with the global slowdown.While families have improved their situation in the last decade, children are often still bound by the incomes and education of their parents, meaning mobility between generations remains low, the World Bank said.It is unclear whether the middle class's rising expectations can by themselves create a society of more equal opportunities.Traditionally in Latin America the middle class has opted out of public services like education and health if they can afford to do so, creating a fragmented society where the poorest members are stuck with subpar social protection. Low taxation has also exacerbated the problem of low-quality services, the World Bank said."The middle classes may not automatically become the much-hoped-for catalytic agents for reforms," the Bank said.


US re-elected to UN Human Rights Council


The United States was re-elected on Monday to another three-year term on the UN Human Rights Council in the only contested election for the organisation's top human rights body.The US was competing with four countries for three open seats belonging to the Western Group on the council. Germany and Ireland were also elected by the 193-member General Assembly. Greece and Sweden lost out.US Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice said her country was "pleased and proud to have been re-elected to a second three-year term"."I'm proud to say that, today, the Obama administration's leadership of the Human Rights Council has delivered real results. Today's vote affirms that active US leadership in the Human Rights Council and throughout the United Nations system will continue to pay real dividends for Americans and for the rest of the world," Rice said following the voteGermany's UN Ambassador Peter Wittig also praised the vote, thanking member states for their support."It was a good sign that we had a healthy competition at least in the Western Group, we could explain and promote our human rights agenda and we believe this also should also be an example for other regional groups," Wittig said.African, Asian, Eastern European and Latin American countries put forward uncontested slates, meaning candidates were virtually certain of winning one of the 18 open seats up for grabs in this year's election on the 47-member council.Several human rights groups have criticised a number of the candidates as unqualified, including Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Gabon, Kazakhstan, Pakistan and Venezuela.On Monday, Venezuela's UN Ambassador Jorge Valero said his country's efforts to become a member of the council had "unleashed a truly unusual campaign"."It's important to emphasise that Venezuela has committed itself to defend the sovereignty and liberty of people," Valerio said in an apparent allusion to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's comments that Venezuela would oppose any actions or aggressions against allied countries such as Syria or Cuba.The five Western nations competing for seats were all deemed qualified by the rights groups as was Estonia, which was elected from the Eastern Europe groupAlso elected on Monday were Argentina, Brazil, Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Gabon, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Montenegro, Pakistan, South Korea, Sierra Leone and the United Arab Emirates. They begin three-year terms on 1 January 2013.Jamil Dakwar, the director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Human Rights Programme, welcomed the US re-election to the council."Despite an imperfect human rights record, US membership on the council helped turn the tide on key issues, especially in the area of LGBT [Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender] rights, freedom of speech and association, and women's rights," Dakwar said in a statement. "Now that the Obama administration has won a second term, human rights at home and abroad should be a high priority." The Human Rights Council was created in March 2006 to replace the UN's widely discredited and highly politicised Human Rights Commission. But the council has also been widely criticised for failing to change many of the commission's practices, including putting much more emphasis on Israel than on any other country and electing candidates accused of serious human rights violations.Former President George W Bush's administration boycotted the council when it was established because of its repeated criticism of Israel and its refusal to cite flagrant rights abuses in Sudan and elsewhere. But in 2009, then newly elected President Barack Obama sought to join the council, saying the US wanted to help make it more effective. Rice said Obama's decision was vindicated on Monday when the US was re-elected to serve on the council with 131 votes."The United States is clearly of the view that the Human Rights Council clearly has its flaws ... including its excessive focus on Israel, but it is also a body that is increasingly proving its value and we've been proud to contribute to some of what we think are some of the finer moments of the Human Rights Council it's approach to Syria, it's approach to Sudan, it's approach he situation in Libya with the commission of inquiry."



Satellite shows N Korea missile activity


Satellite imagery indicates North Korea has been testing rocket engines, a sign it continues to develop its long-range ballistic missiles, a US academic institute said on Monday.The analysis provided to The Associated Press is based on satellite images taken as recently as late September of the Sohae site on the secretive country's northwest coast. In April, the North launched a rocket from there in a failed attempt to propel a satellite into space in defiance of a UN ban.The analysis on the website of the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, which is called "38 North", said it remains unclear whether the North is preparing another rocket launch but predicted it may embark on new rocket and nuclear tests in the first half of 2013.The analysis underscores the challenges posed by the North's weapons programmes to the United States and its allies as President Barack Obama heads into his second term. Washington's most recent attempt to negotiate a freeze in the North's nuclear programme and a test moratorium in exchange for food aid collapsed with the April launch that the US regarded as a cover for testing ballistic missile technology.In 2009, North Korea tested a long-range missile and its second nuclear weapon within months of Obama taking office, and the 38 North analysis says North Korea may conduct new tests in the aftermath of presidential elections recently completed in US and due in December in South Korea. That could be viewed as a tactic to exert more pressure on the close allies as the North seeks recognition as a nuclear power.Last month, Defence Secretary Leon Panetta said North Korea continues to prepare for such tests, and the North, angered by Washington's recent agreement to let Seoul possess missiles capable of hitting all of its territory, has recently claimed that the US mainland is within range of its missiles.According to South Korea's Defence Ministry, North Korean missiles are believed to have a range of up to about 6 696km, putting parts of Alaska within reach. But the North is not believed to have mastered the technology needed to hit a distant target and miniaturise a nuclear warhead to mount on a missile. The North has a spotty record in test launches, raising doubts about whether it is truly capable of a long-distance attack.The 38 North analysis concludes that since the failed launch on 13 April of the Unha-3 rocket that disintegrated shortly after takeoff, the North has conducted at least two, and possibly more, tests of large rocket motors at a test site less than a kilometre away. The tests are critical for the development of new rockets."Pyongyang's large motor tests are another clear sign that its missile programme is moving forward. Whether there will be another long-range missile test this spring remains unclear but is a distinct possibility," said Joel Wit, a former US State Department official and editor of 38 North.A 9 April satellite image shows what appear to be dozens of fuel tanks near a stand used for conducting tests of rocket engines. A 17 September image shows the tanks are no longer there, and a flame trench has been stained orange and surrounding vegetation has been burned from the exhaust of an engine. An image from 28 September indicates a further test has taken place.The analysis was written by Nick Hansen, a retired expert in imagery technology with a 43-year experience in national intelligence.He concludes the tests were likely of the first-stage engines of the Unha-3 or the new, bigger KN-08 long-range missile first viewed in a military parade in Pyongyang shortly after the April launch attempt.The capabilities of the KN-08 and whether it could pose a potential threat to the continental United States remains unclear. Some analysts have also questioned whether the half-dozen of KN-08 missiles shown at that parade were genuine or just rigged up for show.The analysis by 38 North says the 28 September images also show construction work on the upper platform of a launch tower at Sohae to enable it to accommodate even larger rockets than the Unha-3 or KN-08.



Monday, November 12, 2012

NEWS,12.11.2012



Brazil Violence: At Least 140 Murdered In Sao Paulo Over Past Two Weeks

 

At least 140 people have been murdered in South America's biggest city over the past two weeks in a rising wave of violence, Sao Paulo's Public Safety Department says.Killings in Sao Paulo began sharply increasing in September, a month in which 144 people were killed, the department's website says. It says a total of 982 homicides took place in the city during the first nine months of the year.The victims included 90 police officers, most of them gunned down while off duty.A Public Safety Department official said Saturday that the killings of police have been ordered by imprisoned leaders of an organized crime group called the First Capital Command in reprisal for a crackdown on the drug trade. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press.The First Capital Command is one of Brazil's most notorious organized crime groups. Based in Sao Paulo state prisons, the group allegedly was behind several waves of attacks on police, government buildings, banks and public buses in 2006. Those assaults and counterattacks by police in the slums killed more than 200 people.With the latest violence, shops and schools in some Sao Paulo districts closed early this past week as rumors of gang-imposed curfews spread. "In view of the wave of violence in the city's south zone, the school's directors decided to send staff and students home early so as to assure their safety," Eliane Valerio de Souza, administrative assistant at a professional training school, told the newspaper Folha de S. Paulo.Sao Paulo state authorities last week said incarcerated leaders of the First Capital Command suspected of using smuggled cellphones to order attacks and coordinate drug sales, murders of rival gang members and the purchase of weapons, would be transferred to a maximum security federal prison outside the state.On Thursday, one of the gang's lower echelon leaders was sent go a federal penitentiary in northern Brazil. Others are expected be transferred by the end of the month.


Greece Racist Attacks Increase Amid Financial Crisis

 

The attack came seemingly out of nowhere. As the 28-year-old Bangladeshi man dug around trash bins one recent afternoon for scrap metal, two women and a man set upon him with a knife. He screamed as he fell. Rushed to the hospital, he was treated for a gash to the back of his thigh.Police are investigating the assault as yet another in a rising wave of extreme-right rage against foreigners as Greece sinks further into economic misery. The details vary, but the cold brutality of each attack is the same: Dark-skinned migrants confronted by thugs, attacked with knives and broken bottles, wooden bats and iron rods.Rights groups warn of an explosion in racist violence over the past year, with a notable surge since national elections in May and June that saw dramatic gains by the far-right Golden Dawn party. The severity of the attacks has increased too, they say. What started as simple fist beatings has now escalated to assaults with metal bars, bats and knives. Another new element: ferocious dogs used to terrorize the victims."Violence is getting wilder and wilder and we still have the same pattern of attacks ... committed by groups of people in quite an organized way," said Kostis Papaioannou, former head of the Greek National Commission for Human Rights.As Greece's financial crisis drags on for a third year, living standards for the average Greek have plummeted. A quarter of the labor force is out of work, with more than 50 percent of young people unemployed. An increasing number of Greeks can't afford basic necessities and healthcare. Robberies and burglaries are never out of the news for long.With Greece a major entry point for hundreds of thousands of illegal migrants seeking a better life in the European Union, foreigners have become a convenient scapegoat.Some victims turn up at clinics run by charities, recounting experiences of near lynching. Others are afraid to give doctors the details of what happened and even more afraid of going to the police. The more seriously hurt end up in hospitals, white bandages around their heads or plaster casts around broken limbs."Every day we see someone who complained of (some form) of racist violence," said Nikitas Kanakis, president of the Greek section of Doctors of the World, which runs a drop-in clinic and pharmacy in central Athens that treats the uninsured.Racist attacks are not officially recorded, so statistics are hard to come by. In an effort to plug that gap and sensitize a population numbed by three years of financial crisis, a group of rights groups and charities banded together to document the violence.They registered 87 cases of racist attacks between January and September, but say the true number runs into the hundreds."Most of the time the victims, they don't want to talk about this, they don't feel safe," Kanakis said. "The fear is present and this is the bigger problem."Frances William, who heads the tiny Tanzanian community of about 250 people, knows the feeling well."People are very, very much afraid," he said, adding that even going next door to buy bread, "I'm not sure I'll be safe to come back home."The community's cultural center was attacked several weeks ago, with amateur video shot from across the street showing a group of muscled men in black T-shirts smashing the entrance. Earlier that day, children standing outside during a birthday party were threatened by a man brandishing a pistol, William said.The recent elections showed a meteoric rise in popularity of the formerly marginalized Golden Dawn, which went from less than half a percent in 2009 elections to nearly 7 percent of the vote and 18 seats in the country's 300-member parliament in June.Campaigning on a promise to "clean up the stench" in Greece, the party whose slogan is "blood, honor, Golden Dawn" has made no secret of its views on migrants: All are in the country illegally and must be deported. Greece's borders must be sealed with landmines and military patrols, and any Greeks employing or renting property to migrants should face punishment.The party vehemently denies it is involved in racist attacks."The only racist attacks that exist in Greece for the last years are the attacks that illegal immigrants are doing against Greeks," said Ilias Panagiotaros, a burly Golden Dawn lawmaker who divides his working time between Parliament and his sports shop, which also sells military and police paraphernalia.His party is carrying out a "very legitimate, political fight . through parliament and through the neighborhoods of Athens and of Greece," he said.The party's tactics handing out food to poor Greeks, pledging to protect those who feel unprotected by the police are working. Recent opinion polls have shown Golden Dawn's support rising to between 9 and 12 percent.In late August, the conservative-led coalition government began addressing the issue of illegal immigration by rounding up migrants. By early November, they had detained more than 48,480 people, arresting 3,672 of them for being in the country illegally.Rights groups also warn that what started as xenophobic attacks is now spreading to include anyone who might disagree with the hard-right view. Greek society must understand that the far-right rise doesn't just concern migrants, said Kanakis."It has to do with all of us," he said. "It's a problem of everyday democracy."



U.S. To Become World's Largest Oil Producer, Exceeding Saudi Arabia, By 2020: International Energy Agency

 

The United States will become the world's largest oil producer by around 2020, temporarily overtaking Saudi Arabia, as new exploration technologies help find more resources, the International Energy Agency forecast on Monday.In its World Energy Outlook, the energy watchdog also predicted that greater oil and natural gas production thanks partly to a boom in shale gas output as well as more efficient use of energy will allow the U.S., which now imports around 20 percent of its energy needs, to become nearly self-sufficient around 2035. That is "a dramatic reversal of the trend seen in most other energy-importing countries," the Paris-based IEA said in its report. "Energy developments in the United States are profound and their effect will be felt well beyond North America and the energy sector."Rebounding U.S. oil and gas production is "steadily changing the role of North America in global energy trade," the IEA said.For example, oil exports out of the Mideast will increasingly go to Asia as the U.S. becomes more self-sufficient. That will increase the global focus on the security of strategic routes that bring Middle East oil to Asian markets. Tensions between Iran and Western powers have raised concerns that oil exports from the Persian Gulf could be blocked in a potential conflict over Tehran's alleged plan to develop nuclear weapons.The IEA added that global trends in the energy markets will be influenced by some countries' retreat from nuclear power, the fast spread of wind and solar technologies and a rise in unconventional gas production.The agency concluded that despite the rising use of low carbon energy sources, huge subsidies will keep fossil fuels "dominant in the global energy mix.""Taking all new developments and policies into account, the world is still failing to put the global energy system onto a more sustainable path," the IEA said.Global energy needs are forecast to increase by a third by 2035, with 60 percent of the additional demand coming from China, India and the Middle East.