30.1.09

Japan slips deeper into recession, says no end to slump in sight

Japan announced a triple slump in key economic data Friday and said there was no end to the bad news in sight, as US President Barack Obama blasted Wall Street bonuses handed out amid the financial crisis. Taking on one of the most politically explosive issues of the economic downturn, Obama expressed outrage over a report that Wall Street firms gave out more than US$18 billion in bonuses last year. "That is the height of irresponsibility. It is shameful," the president said, calling on US financial firms to "show some restraint and show some discipline and show some sense of responsibility." Just months after major Wall Street firms asked for billions of dollars in government aid, the report will give ammunition to critics of federal bailout measures as well as Obama's proposed US$819 billion stimulus package.
"The problem is very serious," Economics Minister Kaoru Yosano said. "As to when the economy will bottom out, it is impossible to predict at this time as the problem is not only domestic but global." Japan's unemployment rate jumped to 4.4 per cent in December, the country's highest rate in three years, while household spending meanwhile tumbled 4.6 per cent as consumers tightened their belts. Analysts say Japan's economy now looks set to log its worst quarter since the oil crisis in 1974.
“The labour market remains extremely weak, with very few signs that things are starting to improve," analysts at Goldman Sachs said. The jobless rate in Germany, Europe's largest economy, meanwhile jumped to 8.3 per cent, significantly higher than had been forecast.

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/

29.1.09

IMF Sees $2.2 Trillion in Losses Slowing World Growth

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- The global economy will slow close to a halt this year as more than $2 trillion of bad assets from the U.S. help sink economies from Russia to the U.K., the International Monetary Fund said. Bank losses worldwide from toxic U.S.-originated assets may reach $2.2 trillion, the IMF said in a report released today, more than the $1.4 trillion that the fund predicted in October. World growth will be 0.5 percent this year, the weakest postwar pace, the fund said in a separate report. The reports signal that writedowns and losses at banks totaling $1.1 trillion so far are only half of what’s to come and that contractions may deepen. Losses on that scale would leave banks needing at least $500 billion in fresh capital to restore confidence in their balance sheets, the IMF said. The IMF’s latest forecast revises its estimate of world growth down from 2.2 percent in November.
Global growth this year will come to a “virtual standstill,” said Olivier Blanchard, the IMF’s chief economist, in a press conference in Washington. “We need stronger policy on the financial front.”
In the U.S., President Barack Obama is negotiating with Congress on a plan worth $825 billion that includes tax cuts and spending projects to pull the world’s largest economy out of a 13-month recession. The Federal Reserve meets today in Washington to decide how to use emergency credit programs, rather than interest rates, to arrest the financial crisis. The European Central Bank has cut its benchmark interest rate by more than half since early October to 2 percent, matching a record low. Governments are also beginning to ease fiscal policy as the 16-nation euro-region suffers its worst recession since the single currency began trading a decade ago.
China’s economy will likely expand 6.7 percent this year, the IMF said, reducing its estimate for the world’s fastest- growing major economy from 8.5 percent in November. Russia will contract 0.7 percent this year, compared with a 3.5 percent expansion the IMF predicted in November, today’s report showed.
The IMF report said inflation in advanced economies may fall to a record low of 0.3 percent this year, from a prediction in November of 3.6 percent. The average price of oil may be $50 a barrel this year, the IMF said, less than the $68 a barrel forecast it made three months ago.

28.1.09

It’s the Economy, Girlfriend

The economic crisis came home to 27-year-old Megan Petrus early last year when her boyfriend of eight months, a derivatives trader for a major bank, proved to be more concerned about helping a laid-off colleague than comforting Ms. Petrus after her father had a heart attack.
For Christine Cameron, the recession became real when the financial analyst she had been dating for about a year would get drunk and disappear while they were out together, then accuse her the next day of being the one who had absconded.
Dawn Spinner Davis, 26, a beauty writer, said the downward-trending graphs began to make sense when the man she married on Nov. 1, a 28-year-old private wealth manager, stopped playing golf, once his passion. “One of his best friends told me that my job is now to keep him calm and keep him from dying at the age of 35,” Ms. Davis said. “It’s not what I signed up for.”
They shared their sad stories the other night at an informal gathering of Dating a Banker Anonymous, a support group founded in November to help women cope with the inevitable relationship fallout from, say, the collapse of Lehman Brothers or the Dow’s shedding 777 points in a single day, as it did on Sept. 29.
In addition to meeting once or twice weekly for brunch or drinks at a bar or restaurant, the group has a blog, billed as “free from the scrutiny of feminists,” that invites women to join “if your monthly Bergdorf’s allowance has been halved and bottle service has all but disappeared from your life.”
Theirs is not the typical 12-step program.
Step 1: Slip into a dress and heels. Step 2: Sip a cocktail and wait your turn to talk. Step 3: Pour your heart out. Repeat as needed.
About 30 women, generally in their mid- to late-20s, regularly post to the Web site or attend meetings.
“We do make light of everything on the blog and it’s very tongue in cheek,” said Laney Crowell, 27, who parted ways with a corporate real estate investor last month after a tumultuous relationship. “But it all stems out of really serious and heartfelt situations.”
When she introduces other Wall Street widows to the group, Ms. Crowell added, “They call their friends and say, ‘You’re not going to believe what I just read. It’s going to make you feel so much better.’ ”
Once it was seen as a blessing in certain circles to have a wealthy, powerful partner who would leave you alone with the credit card while he was busy brokering deals. Now, many Wall Street wives, girlfriends and, increasingly, exes, are living the curse of cutbacks in nanny hours and reservations at Masa or Megu. And that credit card? Canceled.
Raoul Felder, the Manhattan divorce lawyer, said that cases involving financiers always stack up as the economy starts to slip, because layoffs and shrinking bonuses place stress on relationships — and, he said, because “there aren’t funds or time for mistresses any more.”
(One such mistress wrote on the blog that when she pouted about not having been taken on a trip lately, her married man explained that with money so tight, his wife had taken to checking up on his accounts.)
Harriet Pappenheim, a psychotherapist at Park Avenue Relationship Consultants who wrote “For Richer or Poorer,” a 2006 book on money in marriage, said that the repercussions could be acute for Wall Street wunderkinds who define their identities through their job titles and the size of their bonuses.
“It’s a big blow to their egos and to their self-esteem,” she said of the endless stream of economic bad news, “and they may take it out on their partners and children.”
Ms. Petrus, a lawyer, and Ms. Crowell, who works for a fashion Web site, started the support group when they realized that they were facing similar problems in their relationships with bankers last fall.
“We put two and two together and figured out that it was the economy, not us,” Ms. Petrus recalled at a recent meeting in the lobby bar of the Bowery Hotel. “When guys in banking are going through this, they can’t handle a relationship.”(She and her boyfriend split up last year; he declined to discuss it.)
Many of the women said that as the economic crisis struck last fall, they began tracking the markets during the day to predict the moods that the men they loved might be in later. On big news days, like when the first proposed government bailout failed in Congress, or when Lehman went belly-up, they knew that plans to see their partners would be put off.
I was like, ‘O.K. I signed up for that, it’s fine,’ “ said Ms. Cameron. “But all of a sudden,” she said, her boyfriend “couldn’t focus. If he stayed over he’d be up at some random hour checking his BlackBerry, Bloomberg and CNBC.”
Ms. Cameron said that she and her boyfriend broke up at the end of November but that they still saw each other occasionally.
One frequent topic among the group is the link between the boardroom and the bedroom. “There’s actually the type of person who has a bad day on the trading floor and they want to have sex more,” Ms. Spinner Davis offered as she sipped a vodka gimlet, declining to say how she knew.
Ms. Petrus chimed in.
“If you’re lucky you’ll get that guy,” she said, not revealing whether she considered herself lucky. “Middle-case scenario: It gets relegated to the weekends.
“Worst-case scenario,” she began, and then took another sip of her drink.
Brandon Davis, Ms. Spinner Davis’s husband of almost three months, acknowledged in a recent telephone interview that his new job was “certainly more stressful and there’s certainly more pressure” because of the economy, but disagreed that such stresses had affected his home life. He did not want to talk about golf.
Some women in the group said the men in their lives had gone from being aloof and unattainable to unattractively needy and clinging. Others complained of being ignored — one, who called herself A.P., wrote on the blog that three weeks had passed without her boyfriend “asking a single question” about her life. Another wrote, fearfully, that her beau had told her to make a list of their favorite New York restaurants before the bad market forced a move to the Midwest.
“Next time you are stressing over some finance guy, remember that he is just a math-club nerd,” one woman wrote after recounting a breakup. “This recession just bought everyone an extra two years of the single life.”
Another, though, seemed chagrined, after her boyfriend told her to “grow up” and stop “complaining about vacations and dinner” since he had to “fire 20 people by the end of the week.”
Wat u think about this ???

27.1.09

Are my lucks coming ?

Feel so surprised that i have wont a lottery on the 1st day of Lunar New year this year 26 jan :)
I dont no whether it is a sign of my lucks or not !!!
Jus pray to the God, Pls bless me n bring me LUCKsssss !
My greatful to u, God !

Here is a lottery from Caltex, A can of Fanta :):):)
p.s: oh i dont intend to advertise for Caltex tei, as i havent gained anything from it, heheheh :)

26.1.09

UPDATE 12-Oil settles 6 pct higher as OPEC output drops

NEW YORK, Jan 23 (Reuters) - Oil prices rose more than 6 percent on Friday as mounting evidence that OPEC is complying with the bulk of its record output cuts countered gloomy economic data that further dimmed the outlook for global energy demand.
U.S. crude CLc1 settled up $2.80 at $46.47 a barrel, while London Brent LCOc1 rose $2.98, to $48.37 a barrel.
The gains came after oil consultant Petrologistics estimated OPEC production would fall by 1.55 million barrels per day in January as part of the cartel's efforts to meet a 2.2 million bpd reduction agreed in December.
"I think this represents anticipation that the OPEC production cuts are really happening after the Petrologistics estimates on January OPEC production," said Tim Evans, energy analyst for Citi Futures Perspective.
Members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries are cutting output in reaction to a slide of more than $100 in oil prices since July as global economic weakness slams energy demand.

source: www.uk.reuters.com

Happy Lunar New Year 09



Terrific Tiger
The sky is the Limit for TIGER like you !
This year LOVE/CAREER are both looking as Sparkling
as you roar in 4707 !
Shin Nian Kuai Le!!
Wish u all the BEST :)
p.s: jus copy from Zodiac sign from ecard.

22.1.09

Treasure Ur TIME

Wat a time ? It Flies... This is my first post of the year 09, I dont realize it moves so fast like that ! however, New year, it is supposed to get some changed and betterment of my stuffs; hwever, til now i havent seen sth had changed to be wonderful yet ! Hop it wil be very sooner !

Jus let me say Congr. to my friend who had jus got a very best news for his very begining of New year 09 that he won a Master scholarship in Japan. (Actually, I felt that he would pass since he had pass the 1st test.) Wish u all the best luck in ur Future study na, Panha :) cheer

Jus have noticed that, Valen has got marriaged for 1month hoy... hhehehe congr !!!
hope to hear good news from Sweet Couple soon :):):)

By passed had TIME, now CPA class is resumed... Breaking time flied so fast, Yet, I havent enjoyed as i wish to. By the way, I was so glad to hav known and welcomed a friend from Vietnam, who visited Cambodia for her Job Mission for 1 month. I can say that it was a great time during my breaking time from school. I had joined dinner with her and other friends n went to sing together ! Now she went back to her sweet country, remained us wonderful memories for the begining of New Year 09 :):):) ; she had promised us that she would drive us for a visit in Hanoi, If we hav chanced to visit there :) ; I wish i could visit her in Vietam. hehehhe :)
Wish u BEST Luck, TRANG :):):)


Thank, Chamnap for taking this photo for me





After having small snack, jus take photo leng tov !


Wish u all hav a good time from now on (">)
Jus Remember that Wonderful time flies so FAST...
Treasure ur times... Forget all the worse time u had !
Enjoy urself !
Be FANTASTIC 4urself :):):)