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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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Spain's borrowing costs increase reaching a high of 7.180% on yields for 10 year Spanish government bonds. There is considerable uncertainty about the bad loans in Spain's banking system and fears that the bad loans could be much larger than previously expected. Consultants hired by the Spanish government of prime minister Mariano Rajoy are expected to report on their findings this week about the extent of bad loans.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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The impact of HSBC's large deposit base on the banking operations. HSBC has $1.2 trillion in deposits and $1 trillion in assets, and $100 billion still there for lending before it hits the 90% loan to deposit ceiling set by the bank. Nixon says this large deposit base may have led HSBC into a badly planned international expansion and the disastrous acquisition of Household Finance leading to loss of $15 billion.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Societe Generale has total loans in Russia of 13 billion euros, mostly mortgage and car loans, which is only 3.7% of all lending. Loan loss provisions were increased 63% in 2014 to 243 million euros. BNP Paribas has reduced its lending to the energy industry, with market share declining from 6% in 2010 to 2.6%. ING Bank is also cutting back with Russian loans only 1.4% of total loans.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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S. Korea's Ministry of Science, ICT, and Future Planning setup in 2013 and the 15 year plan to promote internet startups. The purpose of the plan is to persuade new graduates that opportunities exist outside the big conglomerates like Samsung and provide new resources for startups. Five ministries in S. Korea are engaged in this effort and have budgeted a total of $3 billion to help tech developers.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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A Jakarta corruption court gives a 10 year prison sentence to a high ranking police official, Djoko Susilo. Susilo headed the traffic police and then the police academy. He was convicted for taking $3 million in kickbacks for procurement of driving simulators used in driver license testing. President Yudhoyono had to intervene to let prosecutors question Mr. Susilo. The Indonesian president made anti-corruption promises during his election campaign in 2004.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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According to the American Society of Civil Engineers over 10% of the 607,000 bridges in the U.S. are structurally deficient. And 42% of U.S. highways are congested. A poor transportation system makes the U.S. less competitive. The cost to U.S. businesses from a poorly funded and maintained transportation system is about $430 billion more in operating expenses by 2020 and $1.7 trillion in lost opportunities, according to ASCE.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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The Congressional Budget Office estimate is for the U.S. federal deficit thorough the first 7 months of the fiscal year beginning in October to be $231 billion lower than the deficit a year ago, because tax revenues are 16% higher. In addition to higher tax revenues Fannie Mae will contribute $59.4 billion to the Treasury in payback for bailout loans. This pushes the debt ceiling deadline from May to October 2013.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Unemployment in Fort Wayne, Indiana, is 6.8%, and 14,600 workers are looking for a job. Peters and Wessel talk to employers in this midwestern U.S. city and find that employers are looking for people in manufacturing with just the right set of skills, in other cases the benefits and parttime local school system jobs paying $8-$12 per hour with no benefits go unfilled because of the lower wage.
New York Times Original article ›
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Feniosky Pena-Mora originally of the Dominican Republic, came to the USA in the 1980's with a degree in engineering at the age of 21. He now becomes dean of the Colombia University Fu Foundation School of Engineering. He wants to integrate the "biological, physical and digital worlds of engineering." He also wnats to set up faculty led trips and internships abroad in order to give students more international exposure.
New York Times Original article ›
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Nearly half the adults in five counties in the Huntington-Ashland area are obese. This area includes five counties, tow in West VIrginia, two in Kentucky, and one in Ohio, and the area leads the nation in heart disease and diabetes. Poverty rate is 19%. In the old days all those extra calories were used up in work in the coal mining industry and in the locomotive plants and factories.

Economist.com

Economist Original article ›
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During the Ozzie and Harriet era of the 1950's Americans saved 8% of their disposable income. Now thrift is becoming popular again. And one estimate is that as Americans go back to saving like this again about 10% of disposable income may be saved. This is also because of the need to pay down debt. And this means consumption will be much lower and businesses slow to add jobs.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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The British pound fell 5% against the yen and to a 7 year low against the dollar, and the Lloyds Banking Group led stocks down with a drop of 31%. There is doubt that the government moves this week will work as the huge losses at RBS led to larger support from the government. On Tuesday JP Morgan and other bank stocks fell more than 20% in the US.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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The Saudi oil company is building a 400,000 barrel a day refinery at Jubail in the Persian Gulf in a collaboration with Total S.A. at a cost of $10 billion. Its also building a refinery in collaboration with Conoco on the Red Sea side of the Arabian peninsula which will be in production in 2013. This is part of the Saudi effort to buil 4 large refineries in Saudi Arabia.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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With 18% of GDP and 22% of wages coming from the insurance and financial sector, New York state is vulnerable to the downturn and its effects will trickle to all parts of the northeast region. And the pull of this sector which had GDP growth of 4.4% in 2007, for the second largest state in the USA after California and Texas, will be absent as the country faces a severe downturn.
Economist Original article ›
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How the deepening downturn is leading Brown and Labor and the liberal Democrats who had rejected tax cuts for so long to now advocate large tax cuts, with the Conservatives arguing for fiscal discipline when they had argued for taxcuts on principled grounds for most of the last decade. A tax cut of 15 billion pounds or $23 billion was mentioned by the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Strange things are happening.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
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This editorial in the Economist says China faces risks of a steep fall in the currency in its management of the currency. It suggests temporarily using capital controls to stabilize the currency and later gradually lift the controls. In any case it says the exercize will not be painless because of high debt of companies and in the Chinese economy.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The cost of the first bailout for Greece of May 2010 is 53 billion euros for eurozone funds and 20 billion euros for IMF funds, according to the European Commission. The cost of the second bailout for Greece of March 2012 is 142 billion euros for eurozone funds and 12 billion euros for IMF funds. The eurozone took back 11 billion euros following the failure of negotiations.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Greg Ip of the WSJ points to the economic changes in China's economy and the threat of deflation in 2016 with the large debt and slowing economy. For the last decade China was seen as a currency manipulator as it kept the value of its currency lower to increase imports. With the large changes in China's economic situation in 2015-2016 China may face a situation similiar to Japan with deflationary trends. China faces political pressures in 2016 with the U.S. presidential election in 2016 to not intervene with the currency. The goal of making the yuan a global currency adds to these pressures. Other factors are the need to service debt in dollars of Chinese property companies.
New York Times Original article ›
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The 2 tier wage system is scrapped at U.S. autoworkers Ford, GM and Fiat Chrysler after a vote following the Fiat Chrysler negotiations leads to a rejection of the system. This is a major achievement of UAW president Steve Williams and union members. All autoworkers can now have a path to the top factory wage of $29 per hour.
New York Times Original article ›
WSJ Original article ›
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Amazon is tackling the Indian market by addressing the need of rural shoppers in all parts of India- home to nearly 800 million people. Here WSJ shows how this works with a customer in Dhowachal, in the northeastern state of Assam, who had no access to stores except by travelling for hours to the nearest town.  The customer is a teacher who received an Amazon delivery of pairs of jeans, socks, curtains, glasses and other items. Rural shoppers in India spent about $400 billion in 2017. Barclays estimates Amazon had $7 billion in gross merchandise sales volume in India in 2017, about 2% of what it does worldwide. More than 80% of customers in 2018 are from outside India's largest cities.  To do this Amazon has changed its app to work on cheaper smartphones and patchy cellular networks, added hundreds of thousands of Indian language descriptions of products and videos. It has also opened physical Amazon stores to teach people how to order online. Tens of thousands of distributors were added to deliver packages and take cash or digital payment. Amazon is spending $5 billion in India to set up a logistics network and warehouses, including staff and content development for Amazon Prime. In doing this Amazon has learned from China where Alibaba and other online retailers have grown seven fold by reaching rural areas. Amazon could not compete with Alibaba in China. In India Amazon has no strong local competitors like Alibaba. It is learning how to operate in India. The app offer tips on how to order, no email is needed, only a phone number, machine learning translates all descriptions into Hindi. Icons work well. A digital wallet lets customers without bank accounts or cards to pay or get money back. Amazon is investing aggressively using an advertising campaign and discounts to pass Flipkart which WalMart bought for $16 billion in 2018. Amazon is trying new ideas in India's situation where small stores often closet sized sell a limited number of products often going through multiple middlemen resulting in high prices. Amazon is now enlisting these small stores as package depots in its own unique distribution network. The small store gets an 8-10% commission on sales for helping guide shoppers make a purchase. In Amazon's unique "I Have Space" program 20,000 mom and pop stores in remote areas of India offer to take packages and deliver in neighborhoods for a commission. They get a uniform, a bag and a week of training. Many of these store owners know the addresses in their neighborhood having lived there a long time. The entire effort shows Amazon has adapted its delivery effort, logistics and payment systems to Indian conditions in a well planned way. Compare this to the failed effort by Apple in India, with high management turnover and lack of understanding of Indian conditions and pricing, and no real plan to tackle the Indian market.     ...
New York Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The consumer confidence index of the Conference Board declined to 61% in September 2008 and to 38% in October 2008 in a survey of 5000 households. THe index reache 100 in 1985 and 38 is the lowest its recorded since the index was started in 1967. The survey showed more than half the respondents worried about the job market deteriorating further. About 760,000 jobs were lost for the 9 months to September 2008, the Labor Department reports. And home prices declined 16.6% in August compared with a year ago for 20 cities, the biggest annual drop in the history of the Case Shiller Index, for Home Prices released by Standard and Poors. Phoenix and Las Vegas declined by 30% and Los Angeles,Miami, San Diego and San Francisco decline by 25%.

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