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Showing posts with label us business and news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label us business and news. Show all posts

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Gold ends up, sets biggest weekly drop in 3 months

gold
Gold Bar
(Reuters) - A weakening dollar and short covering drove investors back into gold on Friday, lifting prices to end a sharp four-session pullback that still yielded the biggest weekly decline in almost three months.

Spot gold rallied as much as 1.7 percent to $1,600.49 per ounce, and steadied at $1,596.40 by 4 p.m. EST (2100 GMT,) up from a near 3-month low at 1,560.36 hit in the previous session.

U.S. gold rose 1.31 percent to close at $1,597.90 per ounce, after hitting a high at $1,598.10 per ounce.

David Lee, metals trader at Heraeus Precious Metals Management in New York said he thought gold's push higher on Friday was a function of the yellow metal being temporarily oversold after its nosedive from levels above $1,750 last week.

"Some people were taking the opportunity to scoop it up at lower levels. And, it's still up year to date. So, it wasn't surprising that people wanted to sell it off to raise cash for the year end," Lee said.

He warned, however, that the 1 to 2 percent rebound was not significant relative to the high priced of the yellow metal, adding that prices could come off again if the crisis in Europe worsens before year end.

"If comes back down to the day's low on Sunday night, for example, I'd say dump it really fast. I think it will continue to go down to around $1,550," said Lee.

A slightly weaker dollar against a basket of currencies also

helped boost precious metal prices .DXY. A softer U.S. currency makes dollar-priced commodities, such as gold, more affordable for holders of other currencies.

For the week, bullion lost around 6.60 percent, its biggest fall since late September. It remains vulnerable to a deepening euro zone debt crisis and rising funding stress.

"Gold took a beating this week and today bounced a bit as investors see this as a good moment to buy, but it is still vulnerable," Credit Agricole analyst Robin Bhar said.

"I expect gold will stay under pressure as the funding stress is increasing the need for liquidity, and gold is seen as one of the assets to liquidate."

The need for cash has overwhelmed gold's traditional status as a safe haven in the past few months, putting the metal on course for its first quarterly fall since end-September 2008 when the global credit crunch was at its worst.

Gold has, therefore, benefited recently from developments that have reduced risk aversion and the flight to cash.

It got a boost after Spain attracted solid demand for its bonds on Thursday, helping to ease concerns the country could be among the next to fall in the euro zone's debt crisis.

"At the moment a lot of people are resting their hopes on the fact that physical demand will pull gold back up again, but because of the amount of speculative investment that has gone into this market over the last years, it is obviously exposed on that basis," said Ole Hansen, a senior manager at Saxo Bank.

FUNDING STRESS


Gold benefits when central banks print money or cut interest rates or when money managers diversify assets.

"With access to liquidity being constrained, market participants have increasing problems to refinance," Credit Suisse said in a research note.

"As a result they have to sell their assets - including precious metals - to raise the much-needed cash. This is the main reason why gold prices fall on days of increasing funding stress."

In other precious metals, spot silver gained as much as 2.68 percent to trade at $29.97 an ounce, before pulling back to $29.64 per ounce late in the session.

Spot platinum rose to a high at $1,436.25, then changed hands at $1,415.24, up from $1,404 at Thursday's close.

Palladium climbed to a session high of $632.52 an ounce and then steadied around $620.72, higher than the previous close at $614.25 per ounce.

"As well as tracking gold, for platinum and palladium there are fears over weak industrial growth, and they may be hit harder as people look to liquidate risk," Bhar said.

"Some support however comes from costs. These metals are already trading very close to their costs."


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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

The 4 Best Rewards Credit Cards You've Never Heard Of

credit card
Credit Card
Looking for a credit card that pays better rewards for putting purchases on plastic? You may be shopping the wrong category of cards.

Rewards offered on traditional credit cards have been shrinking. Yet there is a certain class of cards that offers consumers a better deal: business credit cards.

A Small-Business Proposition

Small-business credit cards offer some special business-oriented benefits, such as the ability to track your expenses closely and the ability to issue cards to employees (and set limits on them). They also often offer rewards, many of which have been increased recently. While your trusty personal credit card may no longer pay you 2% or 3% on most purchases, you may be able to get that on a business card.

There are some caveats to switching your spending to a small-business credit card. The big one to remember is that the card is typically tied to you personally and not to your business -- like a regular credit card. (In other words, you are on the hook for purchases.)

Also, since these cards are not regulated by the CARD Act, banks have more freedom to boost their interest rates, according to Odysseas Papadimitriou of CardHub.com. (They also tend to be higher overall, on average.) But CARD Act protections may get applied to business cards in the future, in order to draw more customers away from personal cards.

As long as you don't plan to carry a lot of revolving debt on them, those with small businesses should consider the perks of business credit cards when shopping for a rewards program.

Business vs. Personal

LowCards.com recently highlighted some notable small-business cards. Here are a handful, as well as a comparison to personal cards offered by the same issuers:

    * Capital One (COF) offers its business customers a Spark Cash card paying 2% back on all purchases, while its Spark Miles card offers two miles for every dollar you charge. Both offer a bonus if you spend $1,000 in the first three months and sport a $59 annual fee (waived the first year). In contrast, the Capital One Cash personal card offers 1% back on all purchases, with no annual fee, and tacks on 50% bonuses on your annual cash back.
    * J.P. Morgan Chase (JPM) offers an Ink Cash Business card paying 5% cash back at office supply, wireless, cable, and landline services; 2% cash back at restaurants and gas stations; and 1% cash back on all other business purchases. It charges no annual fee. Meanwhile, the personal Chase Freedom card offers 5% back on certain spending categories that change every three months, as well as 1% back on all other purchases. There's no annual fee.
    * American Express (AXP) offers a Plum Card that will give you a 1.5% discount if you pay your bill entirely within 10 days of its statement's closing date. Its annual fee is a steep $185 but is waived in the first year. For a $75 annual fee, its personal Blue Cash Preferred card is actually more enticing for many people, offering 6% back at supermarkets, 3% back at gas stations and department stores, and 1% back elsewhere. You can get 3%, 2%, and 1% back on those respective categories with a no-annual-fee Blue Cash Everyday card.
    * Citigroup's (C) CitiBusiness World card will pay you in points -- starting you off with 10,000 once you charge $300 in your first three months, and then one point per dollar spent on everything else. Certain expense categories will net you three points per dollar spent. There's no annual fee. The Citi Dividend World card offers 5% back on certain spending categories that change every three months, as well as 1% back on all other purchases. There's no annual fee.

Note that most of these cards also offer a few other things, as well as certain terms you'll want to examine before signing up.

For now, the best solution for many small-business owners may be to run their businesses on both personal and business cards. Revolving debt might be carried on the personal card, which should offer fewer nasty rate-hike surprises, while charging expenses you can pay off on business cards, for greater rewards.

Learn more about making the most of your plastic cards and the least of your debt at the DailyFinance Credit Center.

Longtime Motley Fool contributor Selena Maranjian owns shares of J.P. Morgan Chase and American Express, but she holds no other position in any company mentioned. Click here to see her holdings and a short bio. The Motley Fool owns shares of J.P. Morgan Chase and Citigroup. Motley Fool newsletter services have recommended writing a covered strangle position on American Express.

News by Huffingtonpost

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Small businesses hiring more online workers

small business
Small business
When Casey McConnell started text messaging marketing company Qittle he took the traditional route of hiring onsite employees. But he soon realized it was more advantageous to hire workers online.

“We found it was easy to find these specialists or people that we could hire for a certain amount,” said McConnell, the CEO of Qittle. “We didn’t have the extra overhead and we just got the project done. It’s really easy for us to ramp up our needs or pull back using contractors. If we had an internal staff it’s pretty hard to fluctuate like that.”

Qittle’s preference to hire workers in the cloud is reflected in Elance’s recent survey that shows 83 percent of small businesses plan to hire half their workers online within the next 12 months. Only 10 percent of those surveyed plan to hire predominantly onsite workers (90 percent).

Elance, a marketplace for online workers, has posted more than 600,000 jobs ranging from programers to virtual assistants. Small businesses prefer to hire online because of flexibility, speed and economy of the process cost, according to Fabio Rosati, the CEO of Elance.

“So if you’re a small business owner, you can think of a hybrid model of hiring (online and onsite workers),” said Rosati. “You can think about what skills and what talent you need onsite. You can also decide what skill set you need to be in the cloud which is much more cost-effective and much more flexible.”

Elance’s Online Employment Report shows the number of businesses hiring online has increased 107 percent since last year. Elancers earned 51 percent more last year and earned a record $38 million in Q3 2011.

Rosati said more and more companies will decide to hire in the cloud. “I predict that at some point 99 percent of businesses will have between 5-10 percent of their hiring done online because it makes so much sense.”

But for McConnell, hiring online is the only way to go. Qittle plans to only hire workers from the cloud. “As a business we’d rather stay small and nimble and we’d rather contract out through individuals or businesses.”

News By Reuters

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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Apple, with eye on media, names Disney's Iger to board

steve jobs
Steve Jobs are seen on Apple's Display
(Reuters) - Apple Inc moved to shore up its board after the death of Silicon Valley legend Steve Jobs, appointing Walt Disney Co chief executive Bob Iger to its board to propel its media ambitions.

Iger brings sector expertise and Disney's clout as the world's largest media and entertainment conglomerate to bear, as Apple prepares to step up a fight with the likes of Amazon.com Inc and Google Inc over content and its distribution.

Many on Wall Street also expect an attempt soon to shake up the fragmented television market, much as Apple did with iTunes and music years ago.

"Apple is going to get more into content distribution over time on the video side. That's where it makes sense for someone like Bob Iger from Disney to have that relationship with Apple," Morningstar analyst Michael Corty said.

Apple is taking the fight to Internet distribution and the so-called "cloud". It recently launched "iTunes Match", a service that for a fee of $24.99 scans the content of your music library and matches it with music available on its iTunes Store.

Google is expected to announce this week an online music service similar to iTunes.

In coming years, investors are betting that Apple will launch a full-fledged assault on TV, though skeptics say it will prove difficult to arrange distribution agreements with cable and content companies.

Jobs was himself a director at Disney, whose corporate empire encompasses TV network ABC, sports cable channel ESPN, movie studios and theme parks and resorts.

He and Iger forged a strong relationship after Disney bought Pixar -- which Jobs took over in 1986 -- for about $7.4 billion in 2006.

WHO WATCHES THE WATCHMEN?

Genentech Inc Chairman Arthur Levinson will become chairman, replacing Jobs, who died in October after a years-long struggle with cancer. Levinson had been a co-lead Apple director since 2005, alongside Avon Products Inc's Andrea Jung.

Apple had lacked a chairman until Jobs in August took the role, relinquishing his CEO duties at the same time because he could no longer fulfill them due to his worsening health. The company argued that co-lead arrangement enhanced its independence.

But analysts have said Jobs' exercised enormous influence over the board. They said his absence would trigger major changes for the board, elevating them beyond being merely advisors to a visionary leader.

The board may have to take more control, be less deferential to new CEO Tim Cook than it was to Jobs and meet more often, they said.

The naming of an independent chairman was welcomed by corporate governance experts.

"The board knows it's going to be under the microscope and Tim Cook knows that as well," said Jim Post, a professor of corporate governance at Boston University School of Management who called for an independent chairman. "The board has to move out of Steve Jobs' shadow and they have to act to like an independent board."

"The steps they have taken today move them in a better direction," he added.

Previously, some experts have raised concerns about how Jobs managed to keep his board in the dark about his health, which was a topic of constant speculation in the years before his death.

In Walter Isaacson's best-selling biography of the Silicon Valley icon, it was revealed the charismatic Jobs had sometimes lied about his condition.

Questions about the board's oversight had also arisen since Apple became one of many Silicon Valley corporations embroiled in the options-backdating scandals in the middle of the last decade.

In a fierce battle to attract and retain talent, Apple and others had resorted to backdating options -- attaching a retroactive validity date -- to make them more valuable. Apple and Jobs were eventually cleared of wrongdoing.

Apple shares were broadly unchanged at $389.12 in after hours trading. They have slid around 4 percent since the start of the month.

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Ex-Goldman director to face criminal charges: source.

goldman
Goldman

(Reuters) - Rajat Gupta, former Goldman Sachs director and former head of McKinsey & Co, will surrender to the FBI on Wednesday to face criminal insider trading-related charges, a person familiar with the investigation said.

Gupta was named by prosecutors as an unindicted co-conspirator in the criminal case against hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam earlier this year.

Rajaratnam was convicted in May by a New York federal jury after a two-month-long trial. On October 13, a judge sentenced him to 11 years in prison, the longest recorded for insider trading.

Gupta's attorney, Gary Naftalis, would not comment late Tuesday on possible criminal charges but issued a statement echoing his previous comments that Gupta committed no wrongdoing.

"Any allegation that Rajat Gupta engaged in any unlawful conduct is totally baseless. The facts demonstrate that Mr Gupta is an innocent man and that he has always acted with honesty and integrity. He did not trade in any securities, did not tip Mr Rajaratnam so he could trade, and did not share in any profits as part of any quid pro quo."

Ellen Davis, a spokeswoman for Manhattan U.S. attorney Preet Bharara, declined to comment on Gupta's surrendering to authorities or any possible charges.

The expected charges were first reported by the New York Times on its website.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Giland Shalit freed in exchange for hundreds of Palestinians.

giland shalit

TEL NOF AIR BASE (AFP) - Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, appeared frail but happy, was released Tuesday after more than five years in prison by Hamas in exchange for about 500 Palestinian prisoners, under an unprecedented agreement . Event "Gilad is returned home," said the spokesman of the army, General Yoav Mordechai, by calling it "good" health status of the soldier kept secret throughout his time in captivity at the hands the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas in power in the Gaza Strip. "I feel in good health" after the "long years," said Gilad Shalit himself in his first statement on Egyptian television, according to the Arabic translation of his words in Hebrew. Outlining a smile sometimes, it is nevertheless appeared pale and sometimes had to catch his breath.

Transferred from Gaza to Egypt before returning home, he thanked all those who participated in its expansion adding: "I missed my family, my friends." He also hoped that his release against that of hundreds of Palestinians "would help to achieve peace." Aged 25 years, Gilad Shalit, who also French nationality, then arrived in Israel where he met his parents in the Tel Nof Air Force Base (South), in the presence of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Minister of Defense Ehud Barak and Chief of Staff, General Benny Gantz. "Gilad Hello, welcome to your return to Israel. It's good to have you home," he said Netanyahu quoting the words of a famous folk song, according to his office.

The Israeli authorities had promised a "discreet reception respecting the needs of the soldier and his family." Shalit, automatically recognized as a victim of post-traumatic stress, then return to his home in Mitzpe Hila in the Upper Galilee (north). "As good as you're back home," we read on the fronts of houses and trees in Mitzpe Hila, to celebrate the return of Gilad Shalit home. Several villagers broke into tears at the onset of its first images on television. Egyptian television was the first to show it at the time of transfer of Gaza to Egypt, wearing a cap and civilian clothes, surrounded by security personnel.

In a speech on the basis of Tel Nof, Netanyahu vowed that Israel would "continue to combat terrorism. Any terrorist who will resume its activities, the blood will fall on the head." Releasing a total of 1,027 prisoners, many with blood on his hands, Israel has agreed to pay the highest proportion to retrieve one of his soldiers. For the first time in 26 years that a captured Israeli soldier is brought alive in his country. Captured by a Palestinian commando June 25, 2006 on the edge of the Gaza Strip, the soldier was traded against a first group of 477 Palestinians - mostly lifers - including 27 women.

A second group of 550 Palestinian prisoners must be released within two months, in accordance with the agreement reached on October 11 through Egypt between Israel and Hamas. Just after the announcement of his transfer to Israel, the first group of prisoners were released in the West Bank and Gaza, welcomed by the Palestinian leadership and their families amid scenes of jubilation. A convoy of eight buses carrying some 300 Palestinian prisoners freed entered Rafah in the Gaza Strip from Egypt.

Hundreds of relatives and dignitaries, including the head of the Hamas government in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, welcomed them before they go to Gaza, where some 200,000 people were waiting as Hamas. In the West Bank, a convoy of buses carrying released Palestinians arrived in Ramallah, where ex-prisoners were welcomed by President Mahmoud Abbas. Of the 477 prisoners, 133 are allowed to return home in Gaza controlled by Hamas, and 15 117 in the West Bank to East Jerusalem. In contrast, 204 Palestinians will be banned: 164 to Gaza and 40 abroad (Turkey, Qatar and Syria).

Palestinians released, who had embarked in the convoy had been handcuffed hands and feet. More than 1,000 policemen were deployed along the routes of the convoys. Six right-wing activists who tried to stop the train by lying on the road to protest the release of "terrorists" were arrested, according to Israel Radio. In Paris, President Nicolas Sarkozy expressed the "immense relief" of France after the release of Gilad Shalit and announced that he would "soon" received in Paris. London, Berlin and Rome would also welcomed.
News by AFP

Monday, October 17, 2011

Now in his tour, Obama described the Republicans as the party of "no"


AFP - U.S. President Barack Obama immediately went on the offensive Monday against his Republican opponents, describing them as the party of "no" at the beginning of a three-day tour by bus in the American heartland. Responding to several hundred people at the airport in Asheville (North Carolina, southeast) where Air Force One touched down mid-morning, Mr. Obama has again defended the action plan for employment, which the review was rejected last week in the Senate because of blockage of the Republican minority. Republicans accused the president, in shirt sleeves and no tie, said "no to the idea to give teachers and construction workers at work," they said "no to the idea of ​​rebuilding our bridges and airports, "and they said "no to the idea of ​​cutting taxes for the middle class and small businesses. "

"In short, they told you no," Obama said, by taking advantage of a recent survey that 63% of Americans support the ideas of the plan of 447 billion, combining tax incentives and stimulus as assistance to local communities and infrastructure. "63% of Americans support the project for employment, 100% of Senate Republicans voted against it. It makes no sense, right? Indeed," exclaimed the President. While the anti-Wall Street is growing, Obama has ensured that his opponents "want to let Wall Street do what he wants." The idea of ​​Republicans is to "return to the good old days before the financial crisis, when Wall Street was writing his own rules" of operation, he said.

The bus tour of Obama will lead on the 900 km into the Richmond (Virginia,) Wednesday. During this trip, "I'll have the opportunity to listen to people on how they are going, know what direction they want to see the country," Obama promised. "I'll talk a little bit, but I'll listen to a lot especially because, in Washington, it seems that many do not listen to (the country) these days," he joked.

News by AFP