Interesting
Nigeria's Sanusi scoops global cenbank award - IndependentNG
Nomura appoints female finance chief The Japanese bank has promoted former senior Lehman manager Jesse Bhattal to deputy president and named Junko Nakagawa its first female chief financial officer
IMF: Signs of overheating in emerging markets
Reuters Tuesday 8 March 2011 05:21
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Emerging market economies that powered the global recovery may be growing too fast for their own good as inflation pressures build, a top International Monetary Fund official said on Monday. China, Brazil and other fast-growing nations have struggled to contain inflation and control heavy inflows of investment money. Although the IMF has been warning for months of the risks of price pressure, the comments by the Fund's first deputy managing director, John Lipsky, suggested the IMF is growing increasingly concerned.
Ivory Coast move sparks cocoa fears
Laurent Gbagbo announces he would nationalise the cocoa sector in a surprise move that threatens to drive the cocoa price sharply higher
Foreign & Colonial axes performance fee
Amid the debate about costs in the fund management industry, the move will make the UK investment trust cheaper for investors and will bring it in line with low-cost funds
UK’s 3 fights to stay in bandwidth race
Mobile network operator calls for a cap on how much spectrum its rivals can own, warning that it will get swallowed up in a consolidation if it fails to secure airwaves being sold off
China Guangdong Nuclear plans $1.2bn bid for Kalahari
China Guangdong Nuclear Power Group Co., the nation’s second-largest reactor builder, made a 756 million-pound ($1.2 billion) bid for Kalahari Minerals Plc (KAH) as the Chinese government seeks uranium to boost atomic generation, Bloomberg reports. The proposed acquisition would give the state-owned company access to Extract Resources Ltd. (EXT)’s Husab uranium project in Namibia. Kalahari owns about 43 percent of Australia’s Extract, which calls its venture the fifth-biggest uranium deposit.
Nomura appoints female finance chief The Japanese bank has promoted former senior Lehman manager Jesse Bhattal to deputy president and named Junko Nakagawa its first female chief financial officer
IMF: Signs of overheating in emerging markets
Reuters Tuesday 8 March 2011 05:21
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Emerging market economies that powered the global recovery may be growing too fast for their own good as inflation pressures build, a top International Monetary Fund official said on Monday. China, Brazil and other fast-growing nations have struggled to contain inflation and control heavy inflows of investment money. Although the IMF has been warning for months of the risks of price pressure, the comments by the Fund's first deputy managing director, John Lipsky, suggested the IMF is growing increasingly concerned.
Ivory Coast move sparks cocoa fears
Laurent Gbagbo announces he would nationalise the cocoa sector in a surprise move that threatens to drive the cocoa price sharply higher
Foreign & Colonial axes performance fee
Amid the debate about costs in the fund management industry, the move will make the UK investment trust cheaper for investors and will bring it in line with low-cost funds
UK’s 3 fights to stay in bandwidth race
Mobile network operator calls for a cap on how much spectrum its rivals can own, warning that it will get swallowed up in a consolidation if it fails to secure airwaves being sold off
China Guangdong Nuclear plans $1.2bn bid for Kalahari
China Guangdong Nuclear Power Group Co., the nation’s second-largest reactor builder, made a 756 million-pound ($1.2 billion) bid for Kalahari Minerals Plc (KAH) as the Chinese government seeks uranium to boost atomic generation, Bloomberg reports. The proposed acquisition would give the state-owned company access to Extract Resources Ltd. (EXT)’s Husab uranium project in Namibia. Kalahari owns about 43 percent of Australia’s Extract, which calls its venture the fifth-biggest uranium deposit.
Comments
Post a Comment