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January 16, 2011

Taiwan removes US beef with residue of banned drug

Filed under: business, houses — Tags: , , , — Gladiator @ 1:36 pm

Taiwan says two hypermarkets have removed 3,300 pounds (1,600 kilogram) of boneless U.S. beef because a banned growth drug was found in the meat.

Taiwan’s Department of Health said residue of beta agonist was detected in the three shipments of beef ordered by Costco and local hypermarket chain RT-Mart. The statement issued Saturday said all the beef has been removed.

The drug, under the trade name Paylean, makes pigs and cows develop muscle tissue faster.

It is banned in Taiwan but allowed in several countries including the United States and South Korea.

Source

January 14, 2011

Ask the expert: Hazardous material needs careful protocol by developer

Filed under: business, mortgage — Tags: , , , — Gladiator @ 10:40 pm

What are a real estate developer’s responsibilities upon discovering hazardous material on a project site?

When that happens, the developer should consult an environmental lawyer because numerous consequences and responsibilities are a likely result.

When hazardous materials are discovered, protecting the health and safety of workers, safeguarding the environment and minimizing detriment to the project are imperative. The hazardous materials may be localized and constitute an environmental concern as opposed to being an immediate threat to the environment, which requires immediate action and notification of authorities. Construction should stop until the hazardous materials have been identified and a plan for removal or treatment has been developed.

If a release of a reportable quantity of hazardous materials happens, the developer is obligated to notify immediately the appropriate authorities verbally and follow up with a written notification. Failure to provide required notices can result in fines and criminal liability fast cash.

Contractors who encounter unsuspected hazardous materials may cease work until the materials have been removed or otherwise contained. The contractors may be entitled to delay damages.

Financial documents will need to be reviewed, and lenders may be entitled to notification of the discovery of hazardous materials. The cost to deal with the management and removal of the hazardous materials may result in direct financial obligations for the owners of corporate developers.

An environmental lawyer will help craft a response that assures that the developer who discovers hazardous materials is in compliance with all reporting requirements and protects workers and the environment while minimizes expenses required to address the presence of hazardous materials. Further, the environmental lawyer will protect any cost recovery or contribution claims the developer may have.

Source

January 13, 2011

Indonesia wants slice of Blackberry pie

Filed under: business, term — Tags: , , , — Gladiator @ 7:44 am

After threatening Research In Motion Ltd. with expulsion if its fails to immediately scrub its web browser of pornography, Indonesia

October 9, 2010

Washington’s top Influential Women named

Filed under: business — Tags: , , — Gladiator @ 4:38 am

The Puget Sound Business Journal has named its 2010 Women of Influence.

Each year the Business Journal honors women who are leaders in their company, their industry and their community and mentor others. Those selected are nominated by members of the community and evaluated by a select panel of judges. This year more than 130 women were nominated for the honor. To see the full list of women and past honorees click here.

The Business Journal will profile those selected for the 2010 awards in its November 19 issue and honor them at an awards dinner November 18 at the Hyatt Regency Bellevue. To attend the awards dinner and meet the 2010 Women of Influence in person, register here.

The 2010 Women of Influence are:

  • Renee Behnke, President Emeritus, Sur La Table

  • Paula Boggs, Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary, Starbucks Corp.

  • Lisa Brummel, Senior Vice President of Human Resources, Microsoft Corp. and co-owner Seattle Storm

  • Patricia Buchanan, Founding Principal, Patterson Buchanan Fobes Leitch & Kalzer Inc. PS

  • Sylvia Mathews Burwell, President of the Global Development Program, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

  • Diane Cecchettini, President and CEO, MultiCare Health System

  • Karen Daubert, Executive Director, Seattle Parks Foundation (retired)

  • Maud Daudon, President and Chief Executive Officer, Seattle-Northwest Securities Corporation.

  • Dr. Patricia Dawson, Surgeon/Medical Director True Family Women’s Cancer Center/Swedish and Medical Director of Swedish Cancer Institute Breast Care Program

  • Kimberly Harris, President, Puget Sound Energy

  • Diane Irvine, Chief Executive Officer, Blue Nile Inc.

  • Jane Jones, Co-artistic Director, Book-It Repertory Theatre

  • Myra Platt, Co-artistic Director, Book-It Repertory Theatre

  • Judith Runstad, Of Counsel and former Managing Partner, Foster Pepper PLLC

  • Jill Wakefield, Chancellor, Seattle Community Colleges

  • Luly Yang, Designer and Founder, Luly Yang Couture

Source

September 14, 2010

Joyent closes $15M round led by Intel Capital

Filed under: business — Tags: , — Gladiator @ 3:09 pm

The cloud computing company Joyent Inc. has raised $15 million in Series C funding led by Intel Capital, the company said Tuesday.

Also participating in the round were Greycroft Partners, an existing investor and Liberty Global, a new investor.

The San Francisco company will use the funds to expand its international operations and to build its cloud computing technologies.

Joyent said it has recently expanded operations in Europe, the Middle East and Africa fast cash.

Founded in 2004, Joyent provides cloud computing services and infrastructure for customers ranging from startups to Fortune 500 companies, including companies such as LinkedIn and Gilt Group.

Source

September 10, 2010

U.S. losing competitive edge

Filed under: business — Tags: , , — Gladiator @ 11:39 pm

The United States continues to lose its edge in international competitiveness, according to a report released Thursday by the World Economic Forum.

The U.S. was overtaken by Sweden and Singapore, according to the Global Competitiveness Report for 2010-2011, partly because of the sluggish economy and political uncertainly that have weakened the private sector. Switzerland tops the list, with Sweden notching up to second place and Singapore moving up to third, knocking the U.S. down to fourth.

The U.S. has been incrementally moving down the ladder. In the prior release of the Global Competitiveness Report, the U.S. held second place. But even then, it had been knocked out of the top slot by Switzerland.

"Switzerland retains its first-place position, characterized by an excellent capacity for innovation and a very sophisticated business culture," read the report, co-authored by chief advisor Xavier Sala-i-Martin of Columbia University in New York.

The report pointed to the United States’ innovative companies, supported by a strong university system, as a strong driver of business competition.

But the nation was hampered by some weaknesses that caused it to lose ground in the ranking. They included the decline of private institutions, particularly in the weakening of auditing and reporting standards as well as corporate ethics, the report said.

The report also said the United States is hamstrung by its distrust of politicians.

"The business community remains concerned about the government’s ability to maintain arms-length relationships with the private sector and considers that the government spends its resources relatively wastefully," read the report guaranteed high risk personal loans.

Furthermore, the report said "a lack of macroeconomic stability continues to be the United States’ greatest area of weakness." The study pointed to "repeated fiscal deficits leading to burgeoning levels of public indebtedness" and said "this has been exacerbated by significant stimulus spending."

The remaining countries in the top 10 list of international competitiveness were Germany, Japan, Finland, the Netherlands, Denmark and Canada.

The Scandinavian countries performed well as a group. In addition to Sweden, Finland and Denmark all landed in the top 10, while Norway placed 14th.

Germany and the United Kingdom also showed signs of improvement. Germany moved up two notches to place fifth and the U.K. climbed one notch to place 12th.

Even though the People’s Republic of China lagged far behind the top 10, placing 27th on the list, it still managed to edge up two places. The report said that China "continues to lead the way among large developing economies."

The rankings were based on publicly available data and the Executive Opinion Survey of 13,500 businesses in 139 economies, which was conducted by the World Economic Forum. 

Source

June 22, 2010

Fed raps Peoples Bank with shape-up order

Filed under: business — Tags: , , — Gladiator @ 3:09 pm

The Federal Reserve is ordering Peoples Bank and Trust Co. to add capital and sort out its troubled commercial real estate loans.

In a written agreement with the bank, revealed Monday, the Fed also told the bank not to pay dividends without Fed permission or interest on its trust preferred securities, a form of long-term debt that allows temporary lapses in interest payments.

Peoples Bank and Trust is based in Troy, Mo., and has seven branches in Lincoln, St. Charles and Pike counties. It has $415 million in assets and lost $2.3 million in the first three months of the year. It holds less than half of one percent of the St. Louis region’s bank deposits. Peoples deposits are protected by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

In the March quarter, the bank dropped slightly below the level that regulators consider "well capitalized," a red flag in banking. The bank still meets the "adequately capitalized" standard.

Peoples Bank ran into problems with commercial real estate lending. About 4 percent of all the bank’s loans were "non-performing," generally meaning that payments are far past due.

A written agreement with the Fed is considered a serious enforcement action indicating problems at the bank. The Fed told the bank to reduce concentrations in commercial real estate lending and write off loans that federal bank examiners believe can’t be rescued.

"The economic conditions have caused a challenge for many and we are no exception," the bank said in a written statement. "Loan defaults and past due loans have mounted and the bank is moving forward to meet those challenges. The bank believes that it is well on its way to correcting regulatory concerns and returning to its usual profitable position."

Source

March 11, 2010

Natural gas crystals: Energy under the sea

Filed under: business — Tags: , , — Gladiator @ 12:39 pm

It looks like ice — but this ice could one day be used to heat your home.

It’s actually not ice at all, but crystallized natural gas, and if scientists can figure out how to harvest it cheaply enough, it could become a vast new source of energy available in just about every country in the world.

The big advantage to these crystals, known as methane hydrates, are their abundance. They are found beneath the sea floor off every continent, and under the arctic tundra.

Plus, they’re estimated to hold twice as much carbon as all the known reserves of oil, coal and natural gas combined.

"The potential is enough to power humanity from now until the asteroid hits," said Peter Tertzakian, chief energy economist at ARC Financial, a Calgary-based private equity firm.

But citing cost and the abundance of conventional natural gas, Tertzakian said this resource will likely "remain on the margins" for two or three decades.

Origins

The crystals are formed when methane gas, which results from the natural decomposition of animals and plants, comes into contact with water at just the right temperature and pressure.

Finding that sweet spot is actually much much more common than finding the conditions needed for the formation of conventional gas and oil, which require very specific geology. This is why oil is found in some places but not others.

Crystal gas forms almost any place there’s low temperature, high pressure and water, making the organism-rich continental slopes ideal spots.

The gas crystals are usually found between a few hundred feet to several thousand feet below the ocean floor and require deep drilling to bring them to the surface. They’re most prevalent in water over 1,000 feet deep, and up to about 200 miles offshore.

Although they’ve been known about since the early 1980s, only in the last 10 years has significant work gone into studying them and figuring out how to extract them.

The U.S. government currently runs a multi-agency research project with scientists from the Department of Energy, the U.S. Geological Survey and the Minerals Management Service, among others instant credit report. They’ve partnered with a few corporations, including BP (BP) at a site in Alaska’s North Slope and Chevron (CVX, Fortune 500) in the Gulf of Mexico.

Harvesting

Just because a huge amount of the gas exists doesn’t mean it all can be collected.

No one has figured out how much gas can be recovered using current technology, said Timothy Collett, a research geologist at the USGS.

But at the BP site in Alaska, Collett said using current technology to go after crystal gas would effectively double the known gas reserves there.

"We’re chipping away at the technical issue," he said. "We just have to get at the economics."

And it’s the economics that really hold this up.

There are several ways to bring crystal gas to the surface. But the most efficient seems to be to drill a well, like a conventional oil or natural gas well, then decrease the pressure inside. The decreased pressure will cause the crystals to revert to gas and flow out of the well.

But depressurizing a well requires creating a vacuum by continuously pumping the water out of it. That’s an expensive proposition.

Collett said in the Arctic, the cheapest place to extract this gas, costs vary. It can be just as expensive as it is now to produce conventional natural gas, to twice that amount. Going offshore gets even more expensive.

Furthermore, with all the gas currently coming online in the United States from the vast shale reserves, it’s doubtful crystal gas is going to see much investment in the near term.

"Why would anybody allocate money to gas hydrates, when there’s almost a gas glut emerging," said Tertzakian, the economist at ARC.

Yet once the shale gas begins to run out, or if there’s a significant increase in demand for cleaner burning natural gas plants, it may be nice to know this resource is available.  

Source

December 26, 2009

Treasury lifts aid cap, loosens timeline for Frannie, Freddie to reduce holdings

Filed under: business — Tags: , , — Gladiator @ 6:09 pm

The U.S. Treasury Department said Thursday that it will remove the caps on assistance to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for the next three years to alleviate market concern about the effect of limited government assistance.

The two companies, the largest sources of mortgage financing in the U.S., are currently under government conservatorship and have caps of $200 billion each in backstop capital from the Treasury. Under the new deal, these caps can rise as needed to cover net losses over the next three years.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac now are using a combined $111 billion of the total $400 billion in available assistance. Treasury Department officials said they did not expect the companies to need assistance beyond what is available under the current caps, barring significant deterioration in the economic outlook.

Thursday’s announcement "should leave no uncertainty about the Treasury’s commitment to support these firms as they continue to play a vital role in the housing market during this current crisis," the Treasury said in a statement in Washington.

The Treasury also relaxed its timeline for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to shrink their portfolio of retained mortgages. Previously, the companies were instructed to shrink their portfolios at a rate of 10 percent a year. Now, they will be required to keep their portfolios below a maximum limit, currently $900 billion, that will fall by 10 percent a year.

This means they will not need to take immediate action to reduce their holdings and could allow them to rise payday loans for bad credit. Fannie Mae’s portfolio ended October at $771.5 billion and Freddie Mac’s holdings at the end of November were $761.8 billion, according to the latest figures released by the companies.

The Treasury said Thursday that it is ending its mortgage- backed security purchase program as of Dec. 31, after $220 billion in purchases. The government also is eliminating a short-term credit facility for the two companies and the Federal Home Loan Banks that was never used.

EXECUTIVE PAY

The two chief executives of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could get paid as much as $6 million for 2009, despite the companies’ dismal performances this year, which cost taxpayers more than $100 billion.

Fannie’s CEO, Michael Williams, and Freddie CEO Charles "Ed" Haldeman Jr. each will receive $900,000 in salary, $3.1 million in deferred payments next year and another $2 million if they meet performance goals, according to filings with the SEC on Thursday.

The packages were approved by the Treasury and the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which regulates Fannie and Freddie.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source

December 4, 2009

Federal Reserve reports economic improvement

Filed under: business — Tags: , , — Gladiator @ 9:39 am

The economic recovery gained traction in late fall as shoppers spent a bit more and factories bumped up production. That assessment Wednesday by the Federal Reserve marked its most upbeat view since the economy tumbled into recession two years ago.

The Fed’s new snapshot of business barometers found that conditions generally have improved since the last report in late October.

Eight of the Fed’s 12 regions surveyed reported some pickup in activity or improved conditions, the Fed said. Those regions were: Boston, New York, Chicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Dallas and San Francisco payday loans. The new report adds to evidence that the economy is rebounding after the worst recession since the 1930s.

The main challenge for Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who will be on Capitol Hill today seeking a second term, is to sustain the fledgling rebound, especially after benefits of government support fade next year. To that end, the Fed is expected to hold a key bank lending rate at a record low near zero when its meets on Dec. 15-16.

Source

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