Sunday 30 December 2012

Top Marques 2013 in Monaco

Ecole_boulle_3

http://www.topmarquesmonaco.com/news/newsletter/

PRESS RELEASE - December 17, 2012 

It’s that time of year to muse on what one has done the past 12 months. In contrast, Top Marques Monaco, although still giddy from an excellent show this April, is firmly focused on the future – our 10th anniversary edition taking place 18-21st April 2013. We’re proud to have in our pocket four pioneering supercar brands who will host their world premiere launches next year. More launches to be announced early next year as the leading engineers finish the final touches to their visionary designs for the next generation of high performance supercars. 

Success breeds success and so at the risk of being too pretentious we are delighted to end the year on a high and start 2013 running. Tongues are wagging as word spreads of new supercars and new test drives on the closed Monaco Grand Prix circuit scheduled during for the four days of Top Marques Ten. We reign supreme as the industry choice for launching cutting-edge new models because the show is the only car exhibition where visitors can: See it, Drive it and Buy it in such prestigious and thrilling surroundings. Top Marques is also an event for luxury products that excel in their domain and for our 10th anniversary we promise a myriad of exceptional lifestyle objects and services in the special dedicated space the Diaghilev in the Grimaldi Forum including Linley Furniture, Franck Muller, Boulle Rough Diamonds, Harold Scherman, Chapal, Mercedeh-Shoes, Savoir Beds and ArteinMotion. 

We are delighted to welcome onboard our new Gold Partner, LINLEY, the distinguished British design company founded by Chairman David Linley, which prides itself on its dedication to the pursuit of excellence in the design and creation of fine furniture, interior design and accessories. Also, fittingly with our history of superboat exhibitors we welcome to the event Liveras Yachts, the number one superyacht ‘owner-operator’ charter company, with 25 years’ experience in vacations and recommended by the world’s leading travel agents and media. 

Someone who is reminiscing about the past is our founder Lawrie Lewis who recently left the company to appreciate the delights of retirement. We wish him our very best for the future and offer our thanks for creating this ground-breaking show and for his hard work which has resulted in the show attaining the reputation it enjoys today. 

Over the holidays think about booking your hotel to ensure your visit to the most exclusive live supercar show in the world: With one click our official partner Monaco Check In will handle arrangements for your stay. Visitors to the show as well as our exhibitors can take advantage of specially negotiated packages for hotels during a stay in the Principality of Monaco. It’s surely a wish come true for someone you know. 

Season’s Greetings from the Top Marques team! 

Saturday 29 December 2012

Partridge 1885 at the Monaco Boatshow - Mining The Rarest Diamonds

Partridge

MINING THE RAREST DIAMONDS

The Boulle Mining Group

For decades, the name ‘Boulle’ has been synonymous with mining minerals, metals and precious stones. Boulle Rough Diamonds marks the latest venture for the renowned Boulle Mining Group, the diversified investment group founded by Jean-Raymond Boulle. Known for its dynamism and expertise, Boulle Mining Group partners with some of the largest global institutions and conglomerates to discover, finance and develop mineral deposits throughout the world.

Such a rich and illustrious mining heritage gives Boulle Rough Diamonds pride of place in the industry, with direct access to the world’s primary diamond mines, either directly or through its mining partnerships.

Our unbeatable global reach means we have the finest resources available to find our clients the gem of their dreams.

Saturday 22 December 2012

'Marikana' Ramaphosa gets Mandela marketing by South African Press

Marikana_ramaphosa-and-jacob-0

'The blight on Ramaphosa's reputation now is his conduct around the events building up to the massacre at Marikana in August. Ramaphosa is a shareholder in Lonmin, whose workers embarked on a wildcat strike for higher wages, which then led to the police shooting of striking mineworkers. Early next year he is set to testify before the commission of inquiry into the massacre after his communication with government leaders and Lonmin executives was revealed at the commission. In one damning email, he called for "concomitant action" against the "criminal" protesters, which is perceived to be one of the reasons the police reacted with excessive force against the strikers, leaving 34 of them dead and 78 injured.

Ramaphosa also courted controversy by bidding R18-million for a buffalo, which was perceived to be a crass display of his affluence. He has since apologised for this...'

Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/dec/20/cyril-ramaphosa-return-nelson-man...

Tuesday 11 December 2012

Reuters : Where are We with Too Big To Fail?

The thing about Too Big to Fail financial firms is that they tend to be Too Big to Fail in several countries at once. Hence, the "shared strategy" laid out in a new joint paper from of the FDIC and the Bank of England that aims to protect taxpayers from paying for the rescue of gigantic multinational corporations.

Even if it’s just a set of principles, any sort of action on cross-border resolution has been a long time coming. As Simon Johnson has pointed out, the IMF has been pushing for at least a decade for some method of unwinding international financial firms.

The new strategy, summarized in this FT op-ed, has some clear improvements over crisis-era handling of TBTF firms. The company's home regulator would take control of the firm (lucky them), shareholders and unsecured creditors would be forced to take losses (slow clap), and senior management would be removed (rousing applause). Liquidity would be parceled out by regulators to newly spun-off divisions and any taxpayer losses could be recovered from the financial sector -- though it's not quite clear how.

The FDIC-BoE approach -- like this 2010 IMF proposal -- also calls for something like a Pause button for derivatives contracts; a "stay of termination rights" would temporarily prevent counterparties from being paid out after a TBTF firm fails.

Regulators are taking another welcome step to protect taxpayers from TBTF: enforcing existing regulations on foreign companies. Shahien Nasiripour and Brooke Masters pick up on a recent speech by the Fed's Daniel Tarullo which suggests regulators may soon force foreign subsidiaries to actually obey local capital requirements. The idea is to keep banks’ subsidiaries from posing a risk to domestic taxpayers. Larry Fink, the CEO of BlackRock, apparently isn’t happy about this:

 “If that is the new strategy among regulators, it really throws into question this whole globalisation of these firms,” he said at a conference last week. “It also means each country for themselves. I wouldn’t call it a trade war, but I would certainly call it a high level of protectionism.”

None of this is going to be easy, especially if more than one TBTF firm fails at once. As one former Fed regulator said last year: “Citibank is a $1.8 trillion company, in 171 countries with 550 clearance and settlement systems”. Try resolving that in the middle of a crisis. -- Ryan McCarthy

On to today’s links:

Liebor
The EU is expected to accuse multiple banks of fixing LIBOR’s “lesser known cousin” - WSJ

Tax Arcana
Google saves about $2 billion per year using Bermuda tax shelters - Jesse Drucker

Billionaire Whimsy
3 people say Bloomberg is pondering buying the “bisque-colored” FT - NYT

The Singularity
The Robot Economy and the new rentier class - Izabella Kazminska

Hard Landings
China is the world’s new Rust Belt as it faces “decades of de-industrialization” - Forbes
On the other hand, China’s factory output just hit an 8-month high - Reuters

Wonks
Goldman’s top economist talks about the coming US rebound - Joe Weisenthal

Failure
The world’s deadliest road got even worse when the World Bank stepped in - Guardian

Your Retirement Plans
"Work is wage slavery and...retirement is freedom" - Stumbling and Mumbling

Cartography
Where the pirates are - Business Insider

Awesome
Paul Krugman on Isaac Asimov and the promise of social science - Guardian

Wonks
Chinese corruption in a (US) historical context - Tyler Cowen

Old Normal
When the US Army settled labor disputes - Bloomberg

Alpha
"The best-case scenario for bonds is the worst-case scenario for stocks" - Whitebox Advisors

Charts
The labor force is shrinking because of demographics - Calculated Risk

New Normal
"Sperm counts are plummeting across the industrialised world" - Economist

Apple
Apple's new map system sends travelers to Australian National Park instead of city - Victoria Police News

Revealed
The secret sex of cheese - Molecular Love

 

 

Follow us on Twitter and FacebookAnd, of course, there are many more links at Counterparties.

 

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Monday 3 December 2012

FSA delays platform rule changes

Investors_europe_stock_brokers

'The FSA has delayed the implementation of rule changes for platforms amid concerns over the tax treatment of rebates.

In June, the FSA confirmed its intention to ban cash rebates and payments between fund managers and platforms but said unit rebates will be allowed to continue...'

Source : http://www.moneymarketing.co.uk/1062660.article?

Friday 23 November 2012

UK Govt set to impose fiduciary duties on investment advisers

Investors_europe_stock_brokers

The Government is set to impose fiduciary duties on investment advisers as part of plans to rebuild trust in financial services.

Speaking at the National Association on Pension Funds corporate governance conference yesterday, business secretary Vince Cable set out the Government’s response to economist John Kay’s review into long-term decision making in business, published in July.

Source : http://www.moneymarketing.co.uk/1062105.article?


Friday 16 November 2012

You Heard it Here First : Shale Gas Will be the Next Bubble to Pop

Shale Gas Will be the Next Bubble to Pop – An Interview with Arthur Berman

The "shale revolution" has been grabbing a great deal of headlines for some time now. A favourite topic of investors, sector commentators and analysts – many of whom claim we are about to enter a new energy era with cheap and abundant shale gas leading the charge. But on closer examination the incredible claims and figures behind many of the plays just don't add up. To help us to look past the hype and take a critical look at whether shale really is the golden goose many believe it to be or just another over-hyped bubble that is about to pop, we were fortunate to speak with energy expert Arthur Berman. 

Arthur is a geological consultant with thirty-four years of experience in petroleum exploration and production. He is currently consulting for several E&P companies and capital groups in the energy sector. He frequently gives keynote addresses for investment conferences and is interviewed about energy topics on television, radio, and national print and web publications including CNBC, CNN, Platt's Energy Week, BNN, Bloomberg, Platt's, Financial Times, and New York Times. You can find out more about Arthur by visiting his website: http://petroleumtruthreport.blogspot.com/

In the interview Arthur talks about:

· Why shale gas will be the next bubble to pop

· Why Japan can't afford to abandon nuclear power

· Why the United States shouldn't turn its back on Canada's tar sands

· Why renewables won't make a meaningful impact for many years

· Why the shale boom will not have a big impact on foreign policy

· Why Romney and Obama know next to nothing about fossil fuel energy

Interview conducted by James Stafford of Oilprice.com

James Stafford: How do you see the shale boom impacting U.S. foreign policy?

Arthur Berman: Well, not very much is my simple answer.

A lot of investors from other parts of the world, particularly the oil-rich parts have been making somewhat high-risk investments in the United States for many years and, for a long time, those investments were in real estate.

Now these people have shifted their focus and are putting cash into shale. There are two important things going on here, one is that the capital isn't going to last forever, especially since shale gas is a commercial failure. Shale gas has lost hundreds of billions of dollars and investors will not keep on pumping money into something that doesn't generate a return.

The second thing that nobody thinks very much about is the decline rates shale reservoirs experience. Well, I've looked at this. The decline rates are incredibly high. In the Eagleford shale, which is supposed to be the mother of all shale oil plays, the annual decline rate is higher than 42%.

They're going to have to drill hundreds, almost 1000 wells in the Eagleford shale, every year, to keep production flat. Just for one play, we're talking about $10 or $12 billion a year just to replace supply. I add all these things up and it starts to approach the amount of money needed to bail out the banking industry. Where is that money going to come from? Do you see what I'm saying?

James Stafford: You've been noted suggesting that shale gas will be the next bubble to collapse. How do you think this will occur and what will the effects be?

Arthur Berman: Well, it depends, as with all collapses, on how quickly the collapse occurs. I guess the worst-case scenario would be that several large companies find themselves in financial distress.

Chesapeake Energy recently had a very close call. They had to sell, I don't know how many, billions of dollars worth of assets just to maintain paying their obligations, and that's the kind of scenario I'm talking about. You may have a couple of big bankruptcies or takeovers and everybody pulls back, all the money evaporates, all the capital goes away. That's the worst-case scenario.

James Stafford: Energy became a big part of the election race, but what did you make of the energy policies and promises that were being made by both candidates?

Arthur Berman: Mitt Romney, particularly, talked about how the United States would be able to achieve energy independence in five years. Well, that's garbage.

Anybody who knows anything about oil, gas and coal, knows that that's absurd. We were producing a little over 6 million barrels a day thanks to an all-out effort in the shale oil play. We consume 15 million barrels of oil a day and that leaves the gap of 9 million barrels per day. At the peak of U.S. production, in 1970, the U.S. produced 10.6 million barrels per day. Like I said, either the guy doesn't know what he's talking about, or is making a big joke of it.

Obama didn't talk so much . . . He's a hugely green agenda kind of president and I'm not opposed to that, but he's certainly not for the oil and gas business. It wasn't until he got serious about thinking about his re-election that he decided to take credit for what really happened.

James Stafford: Japan recently announced that they are going to be phasing out nuclear power. What are your views on nuclear? Are we in a position to abandon this energy source?

Arthur Berman: No. Japan is a special case. The disaster at Fukushima, the nuclear reactor, was right on top of a major fault. So, that was a dumb place to put it.

To wholesale abandon nuclear power because one reactor was incredibly stupidly planned, to me seems like a bit of a . . . well, I can't tell people how they should react, but if I were a Japanese citizen, and the truth was that we have no oil, we have no coal, we have no natural gas, the next question is, "Well, if we get rid of nuclear, what are we going to do?"

It's a really good question to ask. If you don't have anything of your own, how are you going to get what you need? The answer is that they have to import LNG and that's very expensive.

Right now, natural gas is selling in Japan for $17 per million BTUs. You can buy the same BTUs in Europe for $9 today, or in the US for $3.25

James Stafford: What about Germany's decision to also phase out nuclear power?

Arthur Berman: For Germany to abandon nuclear… that decision is truly delusional because they haven't had any problems over there. Nor is Germany particularly earthquake prone or tsunami prone. They have forced themselves into a love relationship with Russia.

James Stafford: What are your views on Canada's tar sands? Are they a rich source of oil that the U.S. needs to exploit? Or do you think they're a carbon bomb, which could do irreparable damage to the climate?

Arthur Berman: Well, that's a very good question. I suppose they're both, as are virtually all things that burn. Right? They're a very rich source of oil. And they're dirty. It requires a lot of natural gas heating to convert them into some usable form, a lot of processing, but here's the thing, if the United States doesn't buy that oil from Canada, do you think Canada's just going to say, "Oh. Okay. Nevermind. We'll forget about all this."

No. They're going to sell it somewhere else. They'll probably sell it to Asia. So, the issue of the carbon bomb doesn't get resolved by the United States not taking the oil.

So, to me, that's off the table. Yes. I think it's an incredibly sensible play to get your oil from a neighbour, and a neighbour who you trust, and it doesn't require overseas transport and probably getting involved in periodic revolutions and civil uprisings.

James Stafford: Is there any technology, any development you see coming in the future that can help us get where we need to be? Is conservation really the only answer or do you have any hopes for some of the alternative energy technologies, such as solar or, even, some of these more advanced technologies such as Andrea Rossi's E-cat machine?

Arthur Berman: Oh. I have all the enthusiasm for technology that you could ask for. I'm a scientist and I love technology but I heard a very good presentation several years ago on your exact question and the man who gave a talk said, "I'm going to give you a rule to live by. If it's not on the shelf today, then a solution is no sooner than ten years in the future." So, when you talk about E-cat and you talk about algae and all this kind of stuff, it's not on the shelf today. So, that means it's in some sort of pilot stage of testing.

Work harder guys. Work harder and faster because you've got a lot of work to do. So, yes, I'm enthusiastic. I think there are some great ideas out there but I don't see any of them helping us in the coming five to ten-year period.

James Stafford: Environmentalists talk about the evil of fossil fuels, but have they really done their research to see how vital it is to pretty much everything that we base our modern lives upon?

Arthur Berman: Well, that's exactly right. My oldest son and his family until recently lived in California, and in California people think electricity comes from the wall. They don't have any idea that most of their electricity comes from horrible coal-fired power plants in New Mexico and Arizona. As long as they don't have to see it, they don't have a problem.

But, in this world, and in this life, we're all connected and if you see something you don't like, there's a good possibility that whatever they're doing there has something to do with something you're using. So, this is an issue.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Interviews/Shale-Gas-Will-be-the-Next-Bubble-to-Pop-An-Interview-with-Arthur-Berman.html

By. James Stafford of

Oilprice.com
-----





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Spain: 'Back off over Gibraltar'

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'The Foreign Office has been swift to condemn recent Spanish naval incursions into British Gibraltar Territorial Waters. And rightly so. Gibraltar, like the Falklands, is a British Overseas Territory, with full internal self-government through an elected House of Assembly. Its 29,000 inhabitants, who overwhelmingly are British citizens, have no wish to be part of Spain, as they emphatically demonstrated in a referendum held in 2002. Britain’s relationship with Gibraltar dates back more than 300 years, and The Rock’s continuing success and prosperity is testament to its strong sense of sovereignty and self-determination.

The Spanish Ambassador has already been summoned to the Foreign Office in order to...'


  



Investors Europe
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Global Stock Brokers
745a Europort
Gibraltar
T +35020040303

http://bit.ly/client_trading_profile