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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 ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The US stock markets show stocks displaying a herd behaviour, with stocks going up on good days and going up on bad days in a flock pattern. This leaves little room for individual stock picking. Institutional investors with strategies to buy a broad range of stocks in large blocks, trading in and out based on indexes, now dominate the market.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Fiat plans to expand manufacturing in Italy by making the Panda small car in Italy instead of using a plant in Poland. This would expand production by Fiat in Italy from 650,000 to 900,000 cars, with an investment of 8 billion euros in 2 years. One of 5 unions gets 40% of the vote at the Fiat plant in southern Italy that will make the Panda. Fiat had asked for new working conditions at the plant in exchange for its investment and a new social pact with the unions.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
John Malone offers some frank comments on the economy, on the dollar and the Obama administration. He has little confidence in America's future. The dollar is strengthening he says only because of the situation in Europe in the Mediterranean countries. He says the Obama administration consists mainly of lawyers and advisers, people who are better at dividing the pie, not enlarging the pie, the kind of thing we need so much now. He sees the risks to his company Liberty coming mainly from the economy. He has big concern about the retail side, consumers and the larger economic conditions, the macroeconomic picture. He draws attention to the fact that nobody will make it if America doesn't, and that for the next year or two things will be tough.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The wounds left behind in S. Korea from the 1997 Asian financial crisis when the IMF imposed conditions for $21 billion in loans as part of a $60 billion loan package to prevent a sovereign debt default. The conditionality imposed for loans led to layoffs and economic hardship for the working class. S. Koreans remember the crisis as the "IMF crisis." It also has a particular stigma in S. Korea which the IMF is now trying hard to erase. One laid off employee from an automobile plant describes the period as a hard hitting IMF typhoon. So struck are S. Koreans with the term that it has become synonymous with financial hardship. In the 12 years since the crisis the IMF itself has changed. It is now trying to provide help to countries on better terms and is conscious of the problems of austerity policies. During the 2008 financial crisis Seoul stayed away from the IMF. Seoul is host to the G-20 in 2010 and now has a participatory role in international meetings. The IMF has created a emergency loan facility that could be useful for Asian countries and wants to change the perception of the IMF in Asia....
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Statistics show small investors are shifting away from stocks. The charts also show less buying on dips in the market. US mutual funds that invest in stocks saw net inflows in January, but net withdrawals in May, resuming a trend that is in place for several years. There is a growing loss of confidence in the market among small investors and a cautious approach is taking hold.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
BP is in negotiations with Apache Corporation to sell assets, including assets in its Alaska operation. This could raise upto $10 billion, to help pay costs of cleanup and compensation arising from the Gulf Oil Spill.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
New York Times Original article ›

The Feckless Fed

New York Times Original article ›
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Krugman sees Japanese style deflation as a plausible threat in 2011. He says that there is a very real possibility that the US would be seeing deflation in 2011.
New York Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The government of Mr Kan and his Democratic Party won 44 seats in the Upper House elections, compared to the opposition LDP's 51 seats. Kan will continue as Prime Minister but will control only the Lower House of Japan's parliament.
New York Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
A worldwide trend to shorter term borrowing means that institutions and sovereign governments will compete in the capital markets, as they try to roll over existing borrowing by 2012. The US has $1.3 trillion to roll over by 2012. Worldwide about $5 trillion has to be rolled over, and of this $2.6 trillion is in Europe. With the European financial crisis which started in Greece it is becoming harder for sovereign governments to borrow in capital markets at favorable rates. A former economist of the Bank of England says this is of the highest importance for lending and for growth. The implications are reduced lending by banks to businesses and consumers, reducing output and growth, and limiting reductions in unemployment. It is a big issue say analysts, as debt needs to be rolled over over shorter periods. Moody's study shows new bond issues by banks during the last 5 years matured at an average 4.7 years. The stress say experts is likely to be on the less healthy banks like the savings banks in Spain, Landesbanks in Germany. Stress tests on European banks will be out July 23, 2010....
New York Times Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Liverpool has depended more on government help for its revival than other cities in Britain. The austerity budget will have a serious impact on Liverpool. The Northwest Regional Development Agency will be affected by cutbacks. About an eighth of all public sector jobs may be lost, and this could wipe out the 37% increase in public sector jobs gained in the 13 years before 2008.
Economist Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The Economist points to a second hit from bad debt in the post 2008 stimulus binge of spending in China. This is after an earlier hit, that was absorbed as a result of high growth rates and high savings. About $420 billion was injected into 5 state owned banks since 1998, according to one estimate, as a result of the first hit to China's banks from bad debt. In this second round of bad debt, covered in more detail by David Barboza in the New York Times, and merely alluded to here, many bad loans to infrastructure projects were rushed through by local governments. The Economist considers this one of the successes of the state directed banking system, that loans were quickly made and projects started in the post 2008 crisis period; and expresses the view that this hit will be absorbed just like the last hit. However the more detailed account by David Barboza and in Business Week, points to the working of a system of incentives gone astray in a capitalist system without the necessary controls or regulation. Local governments used investment companies to take on loans, which were then used to prepare properties to be auctioned off at a profit and speculative prices to state owned companies in different industrial sectors. This is part of rampant speculation in China in real estate markets. Can China with its high savings and growth absorb a second hit? This depends on the magnitude of the hit and the size of the bad debt, which depends on how long this speculative market continues to operate, and how bad debt is hidden in the books. The difference this time is that large state owned companies in different industrial sectors are engaged in this speculation. The other difference is that the high growth rates in China depend on continued large trade deficits with the USA and Western Europe, something which is not likely to continue for long, as consumers in Europe and the USA with high debt are becoming cautious spenders. This suggests that China, like the US with the mortgage crisis, faces the same effects of unregulated or uncontrolled speculative behaviours, that can endanger the banking system....
Economist Original article ›

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