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Posts Tagged ‘market’

Google Chrome OS Is a Direct Challenge to Microsoft in the Netbook Market

Research firm iSuppli is calling Googles Chrome OS a direct challenge to Microsofts growing market for netbook software. Prime for cloud computing, Chrome OS is targeted at netbooks which iSuppli expects to see grow to shipments of 36.3 million units by 2012.
– Google chief executive Eric Schmidt recently declined to discuss the possibility of a rivalry between Microsoft and Google, which will be shipping a new operating system, Chrome OS, later this year.

Analysts from research firm iSuppli, however, are predicting that
Google is ready to take on M…


Stephen Herrington: Healthcare and Government’s Role in the Economy

The unsung dirge of this health care nightmare is that health care increased in pricing even while their customers paychecks did not increase. And that is the real issue.

Orientalist art

Bidding rewards the brave

The market for Orientalist art has always been uneven. In the early 1980s prices soared for 19th-century pictures by European artists of deserts and camels and falcons and fairs. Works by Lord Leighton and John Frederick Lewis, so unfashionable in the 1960s, earned stratospheric sums. Then they tumbled, first in the early 1990s and then again now.

Christie’s Orientalist sale in London on July 9th did not go well. Of the 59 lots on offer, 27 failed to sell despite every effort by the auctioneer, Alexandra McMorrow, to squeeze bids out of those attending. It was an afternoon of thin trading, with reluctant bidders and bargain-hunting buyers. The entire sale was despatched to just 14 purchasers. …

Detroit seen through the eyes of money men

Breakingviews.com is an online publisher with a mission that can be summarised as getting the ‘what does it actually mean?’ area of news analysis as quickly as possible to its clients who are mainly made up of banks, financial institutions and hedge funds people. It has offices in New York and London. Their ‘views’ are a timely input to subsequent actions by people mainly working in or for the money markets.


We have had some contact with the guys there, prompted by seeing a few insightful articles related to the automotive industry. We republished an article from them on just-auto a couple of months ago: COMMENT: Fundamental problem


Anyway, they have bundled their articles written about General Motors over the last few years into a kind of   compendium – or pdf ‘book’. It’s an interesting read, chronicling GM’s slow descent into Chapter 11 and their take on it. Their financial world perspectives make for some interesting observations and deductions. And they write well and clearly.


Here’s an extract (the last para very neatly summarises Washington’s dilemma):


So for taxpayers to be made whole, the new mini-GM would have to produce earnings sufficient to support an enterprise value of at least $95bn – the sum of a $69bn market cap and its $26bn of consolidated debt and preferred stock. Using market valuation multiples of five times profits, that means New GM must generate ebitda somewhere in the order of $19bn annually.


That would require boosting annual sales to some $150bn – almost 50% more than the entire company is expected to generate this year – and matching the whopping 14% ebitda margin that Toyota achieved in its best year ever. It requires a vast leap of faith – or an audacity of hope – to believe that can happen.


Of course, the US government is not a professional money manager. The decision before it was not whether to invest either in GM or another business that would generate an acceptable return. It had to weigh up two unpalatable choices: throw taxpayers’ money onto GM’s bonfire in the hope an expedited trip through the Chapter 11 mechanic’s shop would produce a souped-up, successful carmaker; or risk having to mop up a bigger mess if a liquidated GM brought the entire US car sector down with it.


The full ‘Detroit Do-Over’ pdf is downloadable free-of-charge and in a jiffy by clicking the below link.

Detroit Do-Over pdf

The market and the internet don’t care if you make money

The title of this post comes straight from the mind-blowing mind of Seth Godin, preaching to the book industry (promoting his book Tribes), but he could just as easily be preaching to anyone in media:
[T]he market and the internet don’t care if you make money. That’s important to say. You have no right to make [...]

GateHouse Media Seeks to Disrupt Print-Only Batavia NY Newspaper Market With Online-Only Innovation

Newspapers face the challenge of ensuring that their websites don’t cannibalize more lucrative print audience and revenue — even as more and more people get their news online. Then there’s the challenge of  shrinking editorial staffs having to put out both a print paper and a website. It’s enough to kept many newspapers from innovating [...]

Changes To Listing Rules To Improve Market Efficiency

- Cheow Xin Yi

SHORTER trading halts and prompt disclosures of information relating to
employee share options are some of the key changes in listing rules
announced by Singapore Exchange (SGX) yesterday, in its bid to improve
market efficiency and transparency.

The revisions, following a public consultation in May, will take effect
from Dec 3.

Said Ms Yeo Lian Sim, SGX’s senior executive vice-president and head of
risk management and regulation: “These listing rule changes will not only
improve market efficiency and shorten trading halts, it will also add
clarity and promote accountability of listed companies.”

SGX said it would be shortening trading halts to a minimum 30 minutes,
instead of the current 60 minutes, to “minimise market disruption”, citing
“increasing familiarity with market practices and wider availability of
information”.

But Mr David Gerald, president of the Securities Investors Association of
Singapore, said the shorter minimum trading halt would make it harder for
retail investors to make informed decisions.

They would have to monitor the information more carefully, he added.

On employee stock options, SGX wants issuers to announce promptly each
grant of options as well as other information such as the date of grant,
the exercise price and the number of options granted to directors,
controlling shareholders and associates.

The distribution certificate for the year 2005 was presented to ASBIS “For Continuous Partnership with Transcend Information, Inc”

Having long and successful co-operation since year 2000 Asbis and Transcend are focused on developing the successful future partnership by adding new ASBIS markets and increasing Transcend market share in existing franchise territories. The distribution certificate for the year 2005 was presented to ASBIS by Transcend in early December this year.