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LyrArc brings in selected articles from many of the world's top publications.

Articles are selected by experts and you can see the gist of the important articles.


Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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The Case-Shiller quarterly U.S. housing price index for the 1st quarter of 2012, shows annual declines in housing prices for 13 of 20 cities. The national numbers for all metro areas in the U.S. showed a 1.9% decrease on an annual basis from the prior year, and decline by 2% for the 1st quarter of 2012 compared to the prior quarter.
New York Times Original article ›
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Reagan's speech on June 12, 1987 at the Berlin Wall. Reagan saw some graffiti on the wall that day and read it for all to hear: "This wall will fall. Beliefs become reality." It took 2 more years but Reagan is remembered for the speech and for the fall of the Berlin Wall, even though it was Mr. Gorbachev who guided the process.
New York Times Original article ›
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Former Russian finance minister, Alexei Kudrin, tells a news confrence at the St. Petersburg Economic Forum, that Russia should brace itself for an extended period when oil prices drop from $90 in June to $60. Russian finances are based on oil prices at $117 per barrel. He cautioned against the high military and social spending planned by the Putin administration.
New York Times Original article ›
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The rate rigging for foreign exchange rates by major banks leads to a legal settlement in Nov. 2014. The Financial Conduct Authority of Britain fines major banks 1.1 billion pounds. CFTC of the U.S. fined the banks $1.4 billion, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency imposed a fine of $950 million, and Swiss regulators a fine of $138 million.
New York Times Original article ›
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Adam Bryant's interview with Brad Smith, CEO of Intuit. Smith describes an experience about starting an internet division for a company during the dot-com boom that failed to sign up more than 15 customers, and how he handled this failure. He asks prospective candidates what it is that they learned from a mistake, and areas for improvement that they have focussed on.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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High youth unemployment at an estimated 40.5% for persons ages 15-24- which includes persons in school who cannot find jobs- is a priority for the Letta administration in Italy in 2013. The government is investing 1.5 billon euros in a program that would help about 200,000 young people gain jobs, and seeks additional funding from the EU to address this problem.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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GM's handling of the recall for 114,000 Chevrolet Tavera sports utility vehicles in India in July 2013. 10 employees including GM's vice president for global engine engineering were fired by CEO Dan Akerson because of misleading Indian government officials about the result of emissions tests on the Tavera. The Tavera is a $15,000 sports utility vehicle designed for the Indian market.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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In a major turnaround yields on the 10 year bonds of Italy and Spain declined significantly on Nov. 29, 2012 to 4.55% for Italy and 5.32% for Spain. Risks remain especially if Spain needs a bailout from the EU in early 2013, or Spanish yields rise with an increase in the bonds issued to 125 billion euros for 2013, say analysts.
New York Times Original article ›
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As Goldman Sachs is about to report its first quarterly loss since 1929 of $2 billion it finally ends its long profit making run. In a Bloomburg interview on December 14, Ace Greenberg an old investment bank hand at Bear Stearns, says the days of investment banks like Goldman Sachs are now past. The old model investment banks are gone.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Many established airllines spend about 2.5-3 % of their revenue on on IT and have large IT staffs. Virgin America has just 15 IT staffers and a IT budget of less than $5million a year. It uses inexpensive servers that run on Linux instead of large mainframes, and build many homegrown applications including its website using low cost modifiable open source software.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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A $37 billion deal over 15-20 years for Australian LNG between Woodside Energy, Royal Dutch Shell and PetroChina, China's biggest oil and gas company. The is shows a shift to natural gas in the urban coastline areas of China such as Shenzen and Shanghai, a shift away from the dirter but cheaper coal based fuels as urban incomes rise and preferences change.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Unibail Rodamco a French property company sold the Coeur Defense complex of two 39 story office towers in the business district of Paris, France, to Lehman Brothers Holdings, for euros 2.11 billion in 2007. Now with property values falling Unibail is offering to buy it back from Lehman which filed for bankruptcy Sept 15, for euros 1.2 or 1.3 billion.
New York Times Original article ›
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The Us rejects call for additional help to automaker GM for upto $10 billion for merging Chrysler and GM, to let a new administration make such a controversial decision which would mean layoffs for half of Chrysler employees. Instead it will speed up the $25 billion already approved by Congress for all automakers to improve fuel efficiency by retooling plants.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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WSJ's CEO council advocates a goal of 10% electric cars by 2020 and upto 50% of the fleet by 2030. Other top priorities of the CEO's from Google, Intel, Time-Warner, Fedex and other companies at a recent 1 day conference were obesity, a stimulus program in excess of $300 billion, and restarting the Doha round of talks for global trade.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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The view on the oped pages of WSJ ask why Bush supports the bailout being negotiated between Congress and the White House on December 10 and being put to a House vote on that day followed by a Senate vote. Almost all Republicans oppose the plan with a supposed government appointed czar to run things and other aspects of the bailout.
New York Times Original article ›
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A small tax on the $800 trillion foreign exchange industry of 0.005%- with the tax on currencies where the leaders of these countries approve like Merkel of Germany and Sarkozy of France- would generate much needed money to help the word's poorest, says Philippe Jouste-Blazy, a former foreign minister of France. For instance he says tuberculosis killed nearly 1.8 million people in 2007, and caused the GNP of some countries to fall as much as 7 %. THis would bring serious gains to economic growth in the poorest countries. Look at the $1 to $5 tax imposed on airline tickets in France and 10 other countries since 2005.It has raised $700 million and financed three quarters of the AIDS treatment now being received by the world's HIV positive children. Unitaid, is an organization Blazy leads. It manages the money from the airline tax, and has negotiated 50 to 60% reductions in the price of pediatric anti-retroviral drugs in low income countries. The reason why the banking community should support this tax. One it is tiny, 0.005% on a foreign exchange transaction, and should not affect the flow of transactions. It is done automatically by computer systems. The currency trading system right now is untaxed. More importantly the bankers says Blazy have been benficiaries of taxpayer money. Isn't it time to give back to those worst affected by the global crisis the bankers helped create? Does'nt it create more credibility for the global financial, monetary and trading systems? He says the tax money could be managed by the Global FUnd to fight AIDs Tuberculosis and Malaria, with upholds programs in 100 countries to high performance standards....
http://www.hindustantimes.com/ Original article ›
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Ram Nath Kovind has 16 years of experience practicing law before the High Court of Delhi and the Supreme Court. In 2002 he represented India at the UN General Assembly. As Governor of Bihar since 2015 he has worked well with the Chief Minister Nitish Kumar and helped passage of the Lokyukta legislation. He is widely seen as a good choice. Remaining out of the spotlight he has stood up for Dalits by pointing out to members of his community that the Constitution provided Dalits with right to education and representation, which provided the means to give the next generation better opportunities in life. He got his first experience in public life as personal secretary to Moraji Desai in 1977, when Desai became prime minister and leader of the Janata government.

WSJ Original article ›
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For readers who heard about the restoration of U.S. relations with Cuba this may come as a surprise to know that the Cuban trade embargo by the U.S. is still in place. President Trump plans to reverse the steps take by president Obama for better relations. This story in the WSJ is unusual showing how much Cubans are looking for consumer goods so that they make a 13 hour trip to Russia for this. It is hard to believe after all the media coverage on restoration of relations with the U.S..  Cuba remains economically stuck in the past in the range of consumer goods available, and this looks likely to continue even after all the publicity following president Obama's trip there in 2016.

WSJ Original article ›
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Rachel Reeves plan to cut disability benefits was very unpopular with Labor voters. You.Gov poll showing Reform UK Nigel Farage party winning more seats than Labor was the last straw. As a public defender Keir Starmer was a lawyer for the Crown, and lacked the confidence to try to understand macroeconomics delegating it to Rachel Reeves. Starmer made the kind of decision that Scholz made that led to disaster for Scholz in Germany. He promised the voters to invest in the economy yet gave the finance minister post to Christian Lindner of the Free Democrats who was openly blocking every move to invest in Germany. Starmer was making the same mistake in UK having Rachel Reeves block every effort for commonsense and honest decisionmaking. DJT in the US is not the old conservative Republican he is commonsense and straightforward. Starmer could not simply cut disability and other benefits after 15 years of Consevatives austerity budget. DJT's cuts come after liberal some could say overspending by 4 years of Biden, so that Labor had to think carefully.  Nigel Farage of UK was simply going to use Reeves cuts to appeal to Labor voters, and to move to show he would support working class voters in different ways, which is why You-gov showed him beating Labor last week. Reeves would prove a disaster waiting to happen for Labor that it did not need particularly as Farage does not have the grasp of the economy that DJT with Bessent at Treasury and Powell at Fed has. ...
The Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Brazil's ever increasing production of soyabeans and investments in Brazil by China and US's Cargill ADM result in a oversupply of soyabeans in world's markets leading to lower prices for American farmers. 70% of soyabeans imports by China were from Brazil in 2024 and Cofco state owned agricultural company in China is building a large port terminal on Brazil's coast to handle soyabeans and other exports. Trade tensions with the US mean there are no written agreements farmers can count on for soyabean exports to China. China purchased 13 million metric tons from Argentina last month and committed to buying 25 million metric tons in 2026-2028. Argentina lifted its 26% export tax for the first $7 billion in agricultural exports to bolster it's peso recently. US is turning to other markets in Turkey, Egypt, Morocco, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Thailand and Europe to make up for volume lost to Brazil. For September and October there is a 45% increase in US exports in 2025 resulting from these non-Chinese buyers. No mention is made of India, yet India could in future be a significant buyer of soyabeans because of thenutritional value of soyabeans in an anti-cancer diet and the high protein content which would make Indian diets healthier. In agriculture farmers are not the ones who develop new tastes and new trends in new markets, yet this effort should be part of farmer's outreach to other nations and other cultural food habits with shifts to healthy nutrition. ...
New York Times Original article ›
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Friedman on the $110 billion to fight wars in Afghanistan and Pakistan that does little to advance American interests and values. Especially today when the peoples of the Middle East are struggling to be free of the corrupt military regimes that have ruled their countries, and are trying to setup democratic processes in their countries. The pressing needs at home which are better attended to with these funds. The need to redirect some of this to help young people in the Muslim world bring new hope, development and democratic processes to their countries.
BusinessWeek Original article ›
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James Pressley reviews Simon Johnson and James Kwak's new book - "13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown. " He suggests reading the first and last chapter for what the authors recommend, limiting banks to no more than 4% of GDP in assets or $570 billion maximum, and investment banks to 2% of GDP or $285 billion. Pressley agrees that incremental steps are not going to change the situation. And the authors have thought this thing through, with Simon Johnson, a former chief economist at the IMF and writer of the Economix columns in the New York Times on the current crisis in Greece, Portugal and Spain. Some of their analysis on that crisis has been borne out by developments, as Greece lurched towards default with the slow response of Germany enlarging the dimensions of the crisis, and requiring a larger bailout for Greece of $160 billion in late April.
Washington Post Original article ›
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A review of the aid program for Greece done for European leaders meeting in Brussels on October 23, 2011, shows that most of the money sent to Greece has gone to pay off bondholders (mostly European banks that lent to Greece). For the initial bailout program of the European Union and the IMF in May 2010, international loans amount to $91 billion. Of this $52 billion has gone to repay bonds that came due between May 2010 and September 2011, according to this review. The report was prepared by the European Commission in coordination with the IMF and the ECB. Greece owes over $300 billion dollars and Greece's borrowing extends far beyond the country's size and ability to repay, creating extraordinary risks to the financial system in Europe. The initial bailout program based its lending on little or no haircuts for the bondholders, who are mainly the European banks (mostly French and German banks) that loaned the money, which creates another set of risks, and a logjam, because taxpayers in the stronger financial countries such as Germany are equally adamant on not paying for the excess lending of the French and German banks. The financial leaders in Germany, Finance Minister Schauble, Axel Weber, the former head of the Bundesbank, and other prominent financial experts have also adamantly insisted on following prudent financial practices, and are opposed to using the European Central Bank to buy the sovereign bonds of France, Italy and Spain....
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Philippines finance secretary, Cesar Purisima, says the country should reduce its dependence on foreign remittances and prepare for a prolonged period of US dollar weakness. Foreign remittances support a large proportion of household spending in the Philippines. With the appreciation of the peso, the dollar and euro remittances translate into fewer pesos. In 2009 the 10 million or so foreign workers sent back about $18 billion. In an interview with the WSJ, he said that the Philippines is trying to reduce its dependence on foreign denominated debt and will continue efforts to replace it with Philippine peso bonds. Refinancing the Philippines debt in pesos provides the economy with more stability and less foreign exchange risk.
WSJ Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Honda will invest $750 million in the GM Cruise LLC, followed by $2 billion invested in development of self-driving autonomous cars over 12 years. Honda takes a 5.7% stake in GM Cruise, with Softbank having a 19.6% stake after investment of $2.2 billion in June 2018. Honda's investment with GM Cruise LLC which is a separate entity created by GM to develop autonomous self-driving cars, is a culture change for Honda. In the past Honda prided itself on its tech prowess, now this is changing. Automakers are likely to team up as they face competition from Waymo, a unit of Google's Alphabet, setup in 2016.


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