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Posts Tagged ‘lion’

Lion of Vienna passes

Chatting to Vauxhall managing director Duncan Aldred, whose “monumental” sponsorship of all four UK home nations football teams is reputed to be worth around GBP100m (US$159m), the chief revealed he was a Bolton fan.

“My team is Bolton and I grew up there,” he said, while echoing the perennial hope of all football fans and why the sport will always have willing, if ultimately frustrated supporters. “It would be good to think we could get into Europe,” he added.

Well, Bolton are having something of a stellar season this year and if they do find themselves at the top table of European football, they could well dedicate the achievement to one Nat Lofthouse who sadly passed away this week.

Lofthouse OBE – the ‘Lion of Vienna’ – was a colossus of the Bolton and English game and a far cry from the pampered millionaires of today.

Here’s one quote from current Bolton manager Owen Coyle that seems to sum the man up: “It was never about Nat and always about Bolton Wanderers,” he said.

STI down 0.1%; buy blue chip laggards -Julius Bar

Singapore shares are down 0.1% at 3239.68 with 1.27 billion shares traded worth $1.06 billion, suggesting that lower liners are seeing the lion’s share of interest; the most active stock remains Bio-Treat (B22.SG), flat at $0.050.

Directionless, rangebound trade looks likely to persist, with few solid cues from offshore, while the benchmark remains above 3220 support, and below resistance at 3250, 3280 and 3300.

Read more…

Lion Global says Gerard Lee to join as CEO

Singapore-based money manager Lion Global Investors said on Tuesday Gerard Lee is joining as CEO with effect from Nov 16.

Lion is an arm of Singapore’s second largest lender Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC.SI) with total assets under management of about $29.4 billion.

 
Its previous CEO Daniel Chan resigned in July but was staying on until a replacement was chosen.
 
Lee was previously CEO of Fullerton Fund Management, a unit of state investor Temasek.
 
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New Hardware and OS from Apple Don`t Solve Existing Problems

Do we really need a new way to buy applications, or is Lion just papering over deeper problems? – Apple may not have invented the notebook computer, but it certainly is
pushing the envelope. Wednesdays announcement of new models of its MacBook Air–which
include the debut of a new release of its iLife application suite and a preview
of the forthcoming “Lion” release of Mac OS X–appears to soli…


Mac OS X Lion Is a Must-Have: 10 Reasons Why

News Analysis: Mac OS X Lion won’t be released until summer 2011. But the operating system is shaping up to be a must-have for enterprise customers and consumers. – Apple
CEO Steve Jobs took the stage on Oct. 20 to discuss, among other things,
Mac OS X 10.7 Lion. Although the software won’t be available until summer 2011
and there are still a slew of features that the company has yet to reveal, the
items that Jobs did show off seem to have some promise.


Apple MacBook Air Notebooks Feature iLife ’11, OS X Lion

Apple CEO Steve Jobs took to the stage at Apple’s Cupertino, Calif., headquarters Oct. 20 and introduced two updates to the MacBook Air that he said will "change the way we think about notebooks." Like the iPad, the new notebooks rely on SSD (solid-state disk) flash storage, which is 90 percent smaller and lighter than a hard drive and enabled Apple to build notebooks more robust than a typical netbook. They also have instant-on capabilities, a weight of just 2.3 pounds in the case of the 11-inch model and a body that’s just 0.11 inches at its thinnest point. Included in both models are Intel Core 2 Duo processors and Nvidia graphics. Jobs saved the MacBook Air introductions for last, however, using the first hour of the event to introduce iLife ’11; the next version of the Apple operating system, OS X Lion; and FaceTime for Mac. Within the next 90 days, Apple will also launch The Mac App Store a desktop-geared version of the app-buying experience that has become an industry standard for mobile devices. Gushing over the MacBook Air, which he called "gorgeous," "stunning" and "amazingly thin," Jobs said, "It’s like nothing we’ve ever created before." –  …


Apple Intros MacBook Air Laptops, FaceTime for Macs, OS X Lion

Apple CEO Steve Jobs showed off two super-skinny MacBook Air laptops at todays event, as well as OS X Lion, iLife 11 and FaceTime for Macs. The MacBooks are available now. – At Apple’s much-hyped event Oct. 20 at the company’s Cupertino, Calif., campus, CEO Steve Jobs offered attendees an early look at Mac OS X Lion, introduced updates to iLife 11 and announced that FaceTime, a capability previously only available on the iPhone 4 and iPod touch, is now available for Mac…


Apple Gives Sneak Peek of Mac OS X Lion

Apple today gave a sneak peek of Mac OS X Lion, the eighth major release of the world’s most advanced operating system. Shipping next summer, Lion is inspired by many of iPad’s software innovations. Features include the Mac App Store, a new way to discover, install, and automatically update desktop apps; Launchpad, a new home for all of your Mac apps; system-wide support for full-screen apps; and Mission Control, which unifies Exposé, Dashboard, Spaces, and full-screen apps into an innovative new view of everything running on your Mac, allowing you to instantly navigate anywhere.

Lion Global Investors CEO Chan resigns

Money manager Lion Global Investors, with $28 billion under management, announced on Friday its CEO Daniel Chan Choong Seng had quit to spend time with his family and pursue other personal interests.

Chan, who helped Lion win 77 fund awards for its performance since 2006, agreed to continue in his role until his successor is appointed, the fund said in a statement.

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Lion Global Investors CEO Daniel Chan resigns

Lion Global Investors Chief Executive Officer Daniel Chan has resigned to devote more time to his family and other personal interests, according to a statement to the Singapore stock exchange. Chan will continue his role until a successor is found, the statement said.

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Lion Asiapac +25% on 10 cents/share dividend

Lion Asiapac (L08.SG) gaps up at open, last +25% at almost 3-month high of $0.325 on above-average volume, as investors flock to otherwise thinly-traded stock after company declares interim dividend of $0.10/share to be paid July 29, says Dow Jones.

Together with special dividend of $0.15/share issued in April, total yield so far for FY ended June comes to a whopping 96.1% based on yesterday’s closing price.

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Lion Asiapac gains 29.6% on $0.15/share payout

Lion Asiapac (L08.SG) is up 29.6% at multi-year high of $0.46 on firm volume as supplier of semiconductors and quicklime offers special dividend of $0.15/share to be paid April 26, reports Dow Jones.

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Lion Global favours Singapore banks; wary on Malaysia

Money manager Lion Global is betting Singapore banks will benefit from a resurgent economy and rising interest rates but warns that Malaysia may not push through much-needed reforms, the manager of its Singapore/Malaysia fund said today.

Lion, an arm of Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp’s (OCBC.SI) insurance unit Great Eastern (GELA.SI), is also bearish on palm oil stocks and has cut its exposure in recent months, fund manager Kelvin Wong told Thomson Reuters in an interview.

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Democrats, Republicans rejoin fight after Kennedy farewell

With bipartisan farewells to liberal lion Edward Kennedy still in the air, Democrats and Republicans rejoined the fight Sunday over the health care reform that the late senator called “the cause of my life.” The bitterly-divided US political world closed ranks during four days of mourning

Trying to Inflate Our Way Out of Debt Is Like a Monkey Trying To Outrun a Lion

Commonly-accepted wisdom says that we can inflate our way out of our debt crisis.Ben Bernanke and Paul Krugman apparently think we should force inflation on the economy. University of Oregon economics professor Tim Duy thinks the U.S. will ultimately…

Man battles mountain lion with chainsaw

‘Starving’ mountain lion attacks man camping with his family in Wyoming but he fights back

A man used a chainsaw to fight off an apparently starving mountain lion that attacked him during a camping trip in north-western Wyoming with his wife and two toddlers.

Dustin Britton, a 32-year-old mechanic and ex-US marine from Windsor, Colorado, said he was alone cutting firewood about 100ft from his campsite in the Shoshone national forest when he saw the lion staring at him from some bushes.

Britton said he raised his chainsaw and met the lion head-on as it pounced – a collision he described as feeling like a grown man running directly into him.

“It batted me three or four times with its front paws and as quick as I hit it with that saw it just turned away,” he said.

Wildlife officials said the attack on Sunday evening was highly unusual because mountain lions are generally reclusive by nature. Only eight cases of mountain lions acting aggressively toward humans have been documented in Wyoming over the last decade.

“It’s very, very rare” for lions to attack, said Wyoming game and fish spokesman Warren Mischke. “We’re still trying to investigate why this lion would behave this way.”

The wounded animal retreated after Britton inflicted a gash on its shoulder, leaving him with only a small puncture wound on his forearm.

“You would think if you hit an animal with a chainsaw it would dig right in,” he said. “I might as well have hit it with a hockey stick.”

After Britton’s confrontation, he and his wife, Kirsta, decided to spend the night in their pop-up camper with their two children.

The lion was shot and killed on Monday after it attacked a dog brought in to track it. Authorities say it was in poor physical condition and appeared to be starving.

Tests for rabies and other diseases came up negative, but officials said they were continuing to analyse the animal for other potential diseases.

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