INDUSTRY. TRADE.
GOVERNMENT. CONSUMER. GIZMOS. GADGETS. SHOPPING. GIFTS. PUBLIC PRACTICES.
by maximillien de
lafayette
INDUSTRY. GOVERNMENT
U.S. housing construction
tumbles, adding more evidence boom is cooling
U.S.
housing construction and new building permits were down sharply in
October, providing fresh evidence that rising mortgage rates are beginning
to cool the five-year housing boom. The Commerce Department reported
Thursday that construction of new homes and apartments fell by 5.6 per
cent last month, the biggest decline in seven months. Applications for new
building permits, a good sign of future activity, fell by 6.7 per cent,
the biggest decline in six years. Analysts said these weaker-than-expected
figures, combined with evidence homes are staying on the market longer,
indicate the hot real estate market is cooling off. "We are likely to see
a steady downward trend in housing activity over the next few months all
tied to rising mortgage rates," said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at
Global Insight, a Lexington, Mass., forecasting firm. The fear is that
home values have soared to such high levels that a slowing in demand could
cause those prices to drop sharply, raising risks to recent purchasers who
could end up with mortgage burdens that are higher than the falling values
of their homes. Behravesh doesn't see that happening, saying higher
mortgage rates "should serve to cool the market down without precipitating
any kind of nasty scenario." On Wall Street, stocks surged Thursday with
investors cheered as oil prices fell to their lowest levels in five
months. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 45.46 points to close at
10,720.22. The S&P/TSX composite index closed up 6.04 points at 10,733.08
while the TSX Venture Exchange moved 18.79 points higher to 2,020.77.
The
U.S. National Association of Realtors reported Tuesday that 69 cities
around the U.S. saw double-digit price gains during the July-September
quarter, compared with the same period a year ago, led by a 55.2 per cent
surge in the Phoenix area and a 44.8 per cent jump in home prices in Fort
Myers, Fla. Nationally, median prices for existing homes were up 14.7 per
cent in the third quarter compared with a year ago. Analysts said as sales
slow, double-digit price increases are likely to be a thing of the past as
the Federal Reserve, or central bank, keeps pushing interest rates higher
to combat inflation pressures. Freddie Mac reported Thursday that the
30-year mortgage rose to 6.37 per cent this week, the highest level in
more than two years and well above this year's low of 5.53 per cent set in
June. In addition to the big drop in construction starts in October, the
National Association of Home Builders said a new survey showed builder
optimism fell in November by the largest amount since right after the
Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. David Seiders, chief economist for the
home builders, said he believes sales of both new and existing homes,
while still setting records for a fifth consecutive year in 2005, will be
down by around five per cent next year, representing "an orderly simmering
down process." But he cautioned that there were risks that the drop-off in
activity could be more severe.
He
said one of the biggest risks is if housing purchased by speculators
starts being dumped on the market, causing a glut that will sharply
depress prices. In other economic news, the Federal Reserve reported that
industrial output posted a solid rebound of 0.9 per cent last month,
reflecting the end of a strike at aircraft maker Boeing and the resumption
of factory activity along the ravaged Gulf of Mexico coast. In September,
industrial production had fallen by 1.5 per cent, the biggest drop in more
than two decades. In another sign that the economy is recovering from the
hurricanes, the Labor Department said storm-related job losses edged down
last week to 19,000, far below the high of 108,000 hurricane-related
layoffs recorded the third week of September. Over the past 11 weeks, the
number of jobs lost because of hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma totaled
561,400. Overall jobless claims fell by 25,000 last week to a seasonally
adjusted 303,000, the lowest level since mid-April., said Martin Crusinger.
Disney posts lower profit in
fourth quarter after several charges
Net
income at media conglomerate The Walt Disney Co. dropped 26 per cent in
the fourth quarter after several charges, including the expensing of stock
options. Disney said Thursday that profit increased at its media networks
division, which includes the ABC network and ESPN cable channel, as well
as at its theme parks. But profit fell at Disney's studio, which sold
fewer DVDs worldwide, and its consumer products division. The company
released its earnings after the close of stock markets. Shares of Disney,
which had risen 14 cents to $25.99 US on the New York Stock Exchange, fell
64 cents in after-hours trading. The Burbank, Calif.-based company
reported net income of $379 million in the quarter ended Oct. 1, or 19
cents per share, compared to $516 million, or 25 cents per share in the
same period last year. The results beat estimates from analysts surveyed
by Thomson Financial, who had expected earnings of 18 cents per share.
Revenue rose slightly to $7.7 billion from $7.5 billion in the same period
last year. The company took an accounting charge related to the decrease
in value of FCC licenses of its owned television stations. Disney also
began expensing stock options in the quarter. Without the accounting
charge and the expense for stock options, Disney said its earnings for the
quarter would have been 23 cents per share.
General Motors Corp.'s
slump drops market capitalization below Ford's
General Motors Corp.
shares weakened further on Thursday, whittling down the market
capitalization of the world's biggest carmaker to less than $12
billion US. At Thursday's open, GM's market cap, or the aggregate
value of its stock, stood at $11.9 billion, less than longtime rival
Ford Motor Co. at $13.6 billion. GM's shares slipped eight cents, or
0.4 per cent, to $21.21 US in late-morning trading on the New York
Stock Exchange. The Detroit-based automaker's stock fell to an
18-year low of $20.90 during the prior session on concerns about
GM's financial hurdles and a showdown between the United Auto
Workers and management at bankrupt Delphi Corp., a key parts
supplier and former GM division. An alliance of Delphi's union
workers, including the UAW, is girding for a battle against the
company's aggressive cost-cutting plans. On Wednesday, they said the
company's latest contract proposal is "not a framework for an
agreement but a road map for confrontation." Ford's shares rose one
cent, or 0.1 per cent, to $7.66 on the NYSE.
Industry to help kids to command
toys and gadgets with the touch of a button.
The
buzzword for hot electronic toys this season is "control." In short, kids
(of all ages) love stuff they can command with the touch of a button, the
sounds of their voices and the music they play. Increasingly sophisticated
voice- and touch-recognition technology means that everything from fuzzy
creatures to fearsome dinosaurs can respond to orders. One of last year's
top electronic toys is back and going strong. Robosapien by WowWee, which
earned a high rating from the Canadian Toy Testing Council, is a
30-centimetre-high infrared remote-controlled robot. It looks part Storm
Trooper and part cartoon character, and performs 64 different functions,
any six of which it can be programmed to follow in sequence.
It
can walk forward and backward, turn, dance, give high-fives and pick
things up with its three-digit hands. Building on Robosapien's popularity,
WowWee is offering several other Robo-branded toys this year, all
recommended for age six and up. The new 81-cm-long Roboraptor is a
smooth-moving dinosaur that's programmed with three moods -- hunter,
cautious and playful -- and features touch sensors on various parts of its
body. Robopet -- a canine rendition of the Robo theme -- rounds out the
inventory. Mini versions of all three robots with limited capabilities
have also been released and cost between $15 and $20. The full-sized
versions run from $99 to $120. In the "they're back" category, the
new-and-improved Furby from Hasbro reappears. The animatronic bird-like
beastie that caused holiday toy frenzy in 1998 is now larger and more
"evolved," featuring what Hasbro calls Emo-Tronics, a combination of
robotic technology, puppetry and lifelike reactions and movements. The
Furby's voice-recognition capabilities mean the toy reacts when a child
speaks to it. Furby is recommended for age six or older, and costs $40 and
up, batteries included. Hot stuff aimed at the little girl on your list
this season includes Pixel Chix from Mattel, a sort of "live" Polly Pocket
doll living in a little 3-D house. The pixellated pixie is a virtual
girlfriend on an LCD screen inside the house, in which she eats, sleeps,
works out and hangs out, depending on the seven buttons the child pushes.
New surprises are revealed the more the toy is played with. Pixel Chix can
be connected so the virtual friends can party together.
Recommended for age seven and up, Pixel
Chix cost about $30 each, batteries included. Striking a new groove this
year are toys that respond to music, including the Sega i-Dog from Tiger
Electronics and the iZ from Zizzle. The i-Dog is a miniature robot dog
with multicolored lights on its white mug. It composes music of its own,
or grooves along, wiggles its ears and sways its head to the beat of your
music when plugged into most portable music systems. The pooch even
expresses its likes and dislikes through a seven-LED pattern. For ages
eight and up, costs about $25. What is an iZ? The iZ from Zizzle is a
funky alien-looking creature that can be twisted and turned to create new
combinations of musical rhythm and melody tracks. Its belly can be pressed
to change the beat. Its eyes bounce to the music, and its horn glows in
rainbow colors to the beat. You can also hook iZ up to your iPod or other
music source and hear it play the songs in its own way. It costs about
$50, and is good for ages five and up -- and it's proving to be a popular
gadget with tweens and teens, too. Animal, vegetable or mineral? A modern
twist on an old game of deduction is another top electronic toy pick. The
20Q by Radica is a colorful handheld plastic sphere with a scrolling
electronic readout and a few simple buttons. Based on the classic word
game of 20 questions, 20Q tries to guess what you're thinking by asking a
series of yes-or-no questions. It's uncanny how accurate the toy can be,
and even grownups enjoy trying to stump the game. Batteries are included,
ages eight and up, $15.The company has also released the 20Q Challenge, a
table-top multiplayer version of the game, for about $40, said Karen
Dourie.
You shall have music
wherever you go
Panasonic
EP3513K Real Pro Elite massage chair, $6,500, Sure, this is a little
pricey, but what the heck, you owe it to yourself. Panasonic says the
chair has technology built in that scans your body to adjust the massage
just for you. Thirty-three air bags are said to work together to press and
squeeze those tired muscles in your upper body and relax parts of the
lower body. It comes with five different programmed massages including
Shiatsu -- with squeezing and finger pressure -- and Swedish. Personalized
programs can be added for as many as three users. Lexmark C520n color
laser printer, $799 With speeds for both black and color estimated at 20
pages per minute and a cost that starts at just under $800, the new
C-series color laser printers from Lexmark are aimed at small and medium
business customers. If you're afraid your employees waste precious
supplies, these new 1200 x 1200 dpi printers come with tools that save
toner, authorize color printing and estimate the per-page cost of color.
Sonos Digital Music System zone player bundle, $1,500. You shall have
music wherever you go, if you decide that the Sonos digital system is for
you. The bundle includes a controller with an LED screen and two zone
players. These devices allow you to take the music from your computer (Mac
or PC) or an attached storage box and send it wirelessly to two separate
rooms in your house. And if you've got the cash, you could add to the
system and have the tunes flowing to 32 separate locations. It's likely
two will do for most of us. It's available in Canada at Future Shop.
INDUSTRY, LEARNING, GAMES AND FUN
The interaction
between game and player is second to none
StarPhoenix
News Editor John Grainger's eight-year-old son Gregory is my chief
tester of educational products designed for kids. Since my son is grown
up, Gregory has come to the rescue several times with Leapster products
in particular. After all, the best tester for products designed for
youngsters is someone Gregory's age - he tests a product far more
thoroughly than I ever could. This time out, Gregory tested the
Leapster L-Max, a handheld device. What follows is John's impression of
the L-Max after watching Gregory in action. The kids have been back in
the classroom for two months. How are they doing? Have there been
deficiencies in math and reading? By now, you will have been to the
first parent-teacher interviews, so you should have a grip on how your
kids are progressing. If there has been problems identified, it might be
time to find a tutor. But rather than going the human teaching route,
the Leapster L-Max Learning Game System is a way a kid can learn all by
himself - and have fun at the same time. Leapster has been around for a
few years and has always offered a quality product for children to use.
For those who haven't seen one, it's a handheld portable Game-Boy styled
unit with an attached pen, or stylus as some call it. Programs are
loaded onto the unit just like a Game-Boy game is attached. The L-Max
takes Leapster to a new level. The hook this time around is it can be
patched into the television just like a GameCube or PlayStation can be
used. It comes with a video input line jack similar to the one you use
with your DVD, or heaven forbid, your VCR. But there are two trains of
thought with this, and essentially, it comes down to personal
preference. Our product test person, eight-year-old Gregory Grainger,
was first thrilled to see his game on the big screen. But it soon became
frustrating for him trying to jump his eyes back and forth from the
smaller LCD Leapster screen to the television. It quickly grew tiresome.
At that age, their focus is still on the handheld unit. But for a
parent, this is something that can prove useful. You will be able to
monitor the game the child is playing/learning while not having to deal
with peering of the child's shoulder or dealing with glare from the
small LCD screen to help them with their programs. As such, it is more
of a teaching tool for mom and dad more so than for the kids. But make
no mistake. The Leapster is still a very desirable product for kids.
The LeapFrog people have gone to great
lengths to make teaching fun for all ages of children. They've hitched
their wagon to tapping into the creativity and drawing power from comic
heroes such as Sponge Bob Square Pants, Scooby Doo and other assorted
characters. John Graynger reported that the interaction between game and
player is second to none. The sounds and voices that comes out of the
handheld unit prompts the kids to play and easily keeps them engaged.
The child progresses through games as concepts are learned. It's quite
interesting to watch how quickly the child can pick up clues and follow
them through to a successful conclusion. Leapster provides math and
reading games for kids from kindergarten through Grade 4. With the
holiday season quickly approaching, this is the time parents should
consider adding the Leapster to Santa's wishlist. It could be a very
worthwhile endeavour.
INDUSTRY, RETAIL AND
CONSUMERS
Retailers missing the point of loyalty reward
programs, Air Miles head says
Retailers
have lost their way and have become too focused on using loyalty reward
programs as a currency to attract customers, says the president of Air
Miles. Bryan Pearson says most retailers are neglecting the wealth of
shopper data that is collected by the programs that could be used to
better market to their customers, which was one of the purposes the
program was created in the first place. "Points are really viewed as
discounts or an alternative way to get something extra and that's not a
bad thing, but I'm not sure it's sustainable in the long run," Pearson
said in an interview Thursday. "The de facto result of having a loyalty
program really viewed as a way to attract the consumer through short-term
tactical initiatives is you end up using what should be a targeted
marketing tool as a mass marketing tool." Pearson, who was in Vancouver to
speak to the city's board of trade, suggested that the majority of
consumers feel there is too much advertising and marketing out there
making targeted marketing all the more important. "It's about relevance,
its about creating a differential experience for the consumer so you can
get about getting that preferred relationship," he said. Since its launch
in 1992, the Air Miles reward program has grown from a group of 13
sponsors to more than 100 today and more than 15.4 million actively
participating individuals. But the company is beginning to face greater
competition. With a restructured Air Canada's decision to spin off its
Aeroplan program, the airline's loyalty program has looked to expand
beyond its traditional base of travel-related places to earn miles like
flights, hotels and rental cars. Rebranded and operating on its own,
Aeroplan (TSX:AER.UN, TSX:ACE.B, TSX:ACE.RV) has started to sign up new
partners including Bell, Esso and Futureshop. Aeroplan spokeswoman Gillian
Hewitt said the program would like to sign up a marquee partner in each of
several retail categories including groceries, drug stores and home
improvement. She suggested that while Air Miles may have more members,
Aeroplan's members are likely more affluent and more attractive to
marketers seeking to learn more about their customers. "There are data
mining capabilities that we have that we do offer to our partners as part
of our partnership services," Hewitt said. But Pearson says Aeroplan still
can't offer the broad snapshot of its customers' shopping habits because
while it has plenty of sponsors they don't have the same reach as Air
Miles. "It gives us a powerful insight and an ability to create that sort
of information pool that helps us work with our sponsors to begin to move
to this experience marketing," he said. By Greg Wong
Industry and Retail:
It's everything: It is a a printer. It's a CD burner. It's both!
Photo:
The Lexmark P450.
Now this is a cool idea. Lexmark, who
has been producing good quality business printers for years, is the first
to release a printer that actually contains a CD burner. That’s right, the
little P450 Photo Printer has a CD burner built-in to the printer that
enables you to burn your photos directly onto a CD without having to
connect anything to a computer. You can print or burn directly from your
camera using PictBridge technology. You also can print or burn directly
from any number of popular flash media available. The printer accepts
CompactFlash I and II, SmartMedia cards, Sony Memory Stick and Memory
Stick Pro, SD Cards, MultiMediaCards, xD Cards. It will also accept Sony
Memory Stick Duo, Mini SD Card and Sony Memory Stick Duo - all with an
adapter. You can print photos from a CD, a USB thumb drive or even from a
Bluetooth camera, although you’ll need a special adapter for that. You can
look at your pictures on the 60mm pop-up LCD screen or, if you want to get
a good look at the photos, you can connect the printer to your TV with the
appropriate adapter. The attached LCD pop-up screen isn’t just for looking
at photos though, you can crop, rotate, resize images prior to printing -
all without having to connect the P450 to a computer. Actually, it’s not a
question of whether you want to connect the printer to a computer or not -
you can’t. The Lexmark P450 is designed as a stand-alone printer that
can’t connect to a computer. When you decide to use the P450 as a printer,
you can fire off near photo lab quality 4” x 6” prints in 38 seconds at
480 x 1200 dpi resolution. You have the option of sticking your flash
media into the printer, doing whatever you like to the pictures and then
printing them all off - then you can simply archive your photos on a CD.
The Lexmark P450 has a very small footprint at 6.1” H x 10.9” W x 9.3” D
with the trays retracted, and it weighs in at 6.5 pounds. It uses a single
printer cartridge for color and black and white printing. Retailing at
$299 CAD, the P450 is ideal for people who own a digital camera but not a
computer. The digital camera revolution is fully underway, with digital
cameras outselling film cameras by a considerable margin. Not everyone has
the cash to own a computer, so there’s a definite market for a device like
the P450. It’d be a lot more useful if it could connect to a computer,
however the P450 definitely fills a niche as it comes out of the box.
PROS: To be
able to print photos directly onto a CD from the camera or and number of
flash media is a great idea. CONS:
You can’t connect the printer to either a PC or a Mac - it’s a stand-alone
product. You can’t print directly onto the CD, and there’s no way to print
from your computer to the CD burner, said Muray Hills.
INDUSTRY, TECHNOLOGY, COMPUTERS AND FAMILIES
Entrepreneurs are ready
to fill that void. Microsoft chief financial officer Chris Liddell has
been quoted as saying his company will ship between 4.5 million and 5.5
million 360 consoles by June 2006.
Photo:
Xbox360 game machine. Three factories in China are churning them out 24
hours a day but the new Xbox 360 may still be in short supply when it hits
North American store shelves on Tuesday.
Three factories in China are churning
them out 24 hours a day but the new Xbox 360 may still be in short supply
when it hits North American store shelves on Tuesday. EB Games, which has
260 stores across the nation , says all of its Day 1 stock of the
next-generation video console is already committed to pre-orders. Some
consumers put their names down as far back as two years ago. "I think the
market right now needs a new console," said EB Games Canada president Jim
Tyo. "There's a lot of pent-up demand for this system, so we expect
(Tuesday) to be chaotic." The 360 was already listed as sold out on Future
Shop's website. Gamestop, a U.S. retailer, also had a sold-out sign on its
Internet site for all six of its 360 bundles, including the deluxe $1,999
US Omega package, which includes 20 games and other goodies, and the
top-of-the-line $4,500 package that comes with a 42-inch (107-centimetre)
plasma TV. Entrepreneurs are ready to fill that void. EBay Canada had 31
pages worth of listings for the new console as of Thursday afternoon.
Jason Anderson, Xbox Canada's head of marketing, says Microsoft plans to
sell between 2.75 million and three million units worldwide in the first
90 days of release. "We're going to be the hottest product this holiday
and Nov. 22nd is probably going to be one of the biggest retail days of
the year," predicted Anderson. The 360 is being billed by Microsoft as
more than a gaming machine.
They
see it as an entertainment hub that can play DVDs and music, and connect
to a digital camera or PC. Following the North American launch, the 360
will go to European stores on Dec. 2 and Japan on Dec. 10. Microsoft chief
financial officer Chris Liddell has been quoted as saying his company will
ship between 4.5 million and 5.5 million 360 consoles by June 2006. "I
think no matter how big the number becomes, it still won't satisfy
demand," J. Allard, Microsoft's corporate vice-president and Xbox guru,
told the website eurogamer.net. "We're going to sell every one we can
make." The 360 comes in two forms: the core ($399.99 Cdn) and premium
($499.99), although retailers will also offer the console in more
expensive bundles with games. More copies of the premium than the core are
expected on the market. Gamers who choose the core option will have to buy
the 360's 20-gigabyte hard drive separately ($129.99) if they want to be
able to play more than 200 original Xbox titles or save game play without
using a memory unit. There are some 22 million original Xboxes in the
worldwide market already. Canada represents Xbox's No. 1 market globally
on a per capita basis. In overall numbers, Canada is No. 3 behind the U.S.
and Britain. Shortages at launch date are not new. Getting hold of a
PlayStation 2 was a challenge when it launched in North America in October
2000. A computer component shortage meant Sony had to halve its initial
planned shipment of one million PS2 consoles to North America. Only about
50,000 units came to Canada at launch. Since then, more than 90 million
PS2 units have sold worldwide. Nintendo, meanwhile, has sold 19 million
GameCubes. The 360 is the first of the next-generation consoles to hit the
market. Microsoft was determined to be first out of the gate after
trailing both Sony and Nintendo the last time. Both the PlayStation 3 and
Nintendo Revolution are expected out next year. The new Xbox consoles
started arriving in Canada two weeks ago and are either already at
retailers or stored in distribution centers and warehouses. "Because we
are in such a high demand, absolutely, most retailers will be putting
pretty much all of them out on the floor and then waiting for additional
shipments to come into the country," Anderson said. And new supplies are
expected to come into the country by truck every few days. Anderson's
advice? "Get out there on Nov. 22nd." And if that doesn't work? "Just work
with whatever favorite retailer you might have. ... They'll be able to let
you know when you can get your hands on one." Added Tyo: "The consumer is
going to have to step up and get in line for it rather quickly. Because
once the media blitz hits, it's going to explode." Tyo said he has seen
consumers at his store drawn to interactive displays of the 360 technology
"like a magnet." Outside of lining up on launch day - some stores are
opening their doors at midnight Monday - your best bet may be to find a
large retailer outside of an urban area and try there. N. Daviddson
reported that Tyo says EB Games continues to take orders, although when
they will be filled is uncertain at this point. But he said the only 360
boxes in his stores for the next while will be for display purposes.
Patience may be the best advice of all. More manufacturing plants are
planned, and demand will eventually subside after hardcore gamers get
their machines. Plus there is no shortage of new games planned for the
original Xbox and other consoles. Also available are walks in the park,
books, films, time with the family.
Sweden convicts first
file-sharer
Photo: Downloading copyrighted material was made
illegal in Sweden in July.
A Swedish court has meted
out the country's first conviction for using an online file-sharing
network. 28-year-old Swede Andreas Bawer was found guilty of
breaching copyright by distributing a Swedish movie online and fined
16,000 kronor (US$2,000). The verdict was welcomed by the entertainment
industry as a step toward tougher enforcement of copyright laws. In the
past, Sweden has been criticised for being lax on online piracy and
introduced a new law in July.
This case relates to 2004, before the new law banning the
downloading of copyrighted material came into effect. Prior to the law,
an estimated 900,000 Swedes regularly downloaded movies, games and
music.
Serious
crime: The Vastmanlands district court found that downloading
copyrighted material was not illegal at the time. But it ruled that
distributing the film breached Sweden's copyright law. "This kind of crime
should be taken seriously," said the ruling. "Making a film available to
the public on the internet has significant consequences for the film
industry. Illegal material can in this way be spread quickly and reach
many people, which can lead to heavy economic losses for the copyright
owners," the court said. File-sharing carries a maximum sentence of two
years in prison, but in this case the court chose just a fine as the man
was not trying to profit financially from his actions. Bawer's lawyer said
his client had not yet decided whether to appeal against the verdict.
"It's a lot for uploading one film on one occasion and without financial
gain," said Torbjorn Persson. The Swedish Anti-piracy Agency, which
represents the entertainment industry, hailed the verdict as a big step
forward. "This sends a very strong signal to file-sharers," said Henrik
Ponten, legal council at the group. "Now we have taken the first step
toward a functioning copyright law." The decision to fine rather than send
Bawer to jail could have serious implications for the fight against
internet piracy. Swedish police can only request personal details from an
internet provider about who own a specific net address if they are
suspected of a crime that warrants a prison sentence.
Can a home wind
turbine make money?
Household windmills are becoming quite the
fashion, apparently, but can they make money?
Photo: Wind turbines are increasingly popular.
Domestic wind turbines have been described as "the
new handbags" - the latest luxury items craved by those who want to be
first to try new technology. But this description overlooks their green
credentials, because any electricity powered by the elements is reducing
CO2 emissions, which are blamed for global warming. And there are also
the financial motivations. A household with a windmill can save money on
bills and sell excess electricity back to the national grid. So could
wind turbines become a nice little earner? They are certainly on the
increase - 7,000 households have been given grants to get the turbines
installed. A report this week by the Sustainable Consumption Roundtable
envisages a future where households generate their electricity at home,
using wind, solar and heat energy - but only if the government bought
panels and turbines in large quantities for public buildings, so costs
fall. "Then we could all afford them," says Alan Knight, the group's
chairman. "To install a generator or solar panel today you need
specialist help. You should be able to buy one at B&Q and stick it in
yourself." Turbines come in a range of sizes, prices and powers, and
living close to neighbors can make planning permission problematic.
David Nisbet put up a 6kw turbine in his Essex garden in May, after
overcoming 22 planning objections from neighbors about noise and visual
impact. It is 11.5m high to the tip of the blade and it cost him
£10,000, plus a £5,000 grant.
Photo:
NISBET'S WINDMILL.
Cost: £10,000 plus £5,000 grant
Life: Blades will last 20 years, magnets in generator 20 years,
steel tower and foundations 60 years
Location: 15m from his house, 35m from neighbors
Height: 11.5m
His motivation was both financial and environmental and
he was inspired by seeing two windmills at the Ford plant where he works.
Although he says the concerns of others have been allayed, the first few
months haven't been as windy as he hoped. "In the last eight to 10 years
we've had strong south-westerly winds but not this year," he says. "It's
been fickle and I'd put this six months down as a lean year. "It's been
generating electricity but not as much as I had hoped for. It's connected
to the grid and any surplus flows back into the grid." The wind provided
80% of his electricity in the summer and he estimates it will heat the
house through winter, thereby saving him a total of £1,000 a year in
heating bills. In 10 years, he hopes to have paid off his investment, but
he will still have been buying electricity from the grid during that time.
It isn't possible to be totally dependent on wind because it doesn't blow
every minute, says Alison Hill at the British Wind Energy Association.
"You may get the 4-5,000 units a year to run a household but not every
single hour of every day so you would need to have standard electricity
grid connection to get electricity from the grid. "We are quite lucky in
the UK because when we have most wind we have most demand - winter. That
profile of generation is quite beneficial, but no-one can have 100%
self-sufficiency on wind alone. "If it looks like you have a big wind
resource and a good turbine, you can connect that turbine to the grid and
sell that, so there's an additional revenue for householders there."
Typically, a household sees a reduction of between a quarter and a third
in its annual electricity bill." Solar panels can supplement wind to boost
a home's renewable sources but some households do claim to make a profit
purely from wind, by generating so much electricity that the amount they
sell back is greater than the amount they buy. That would require a very
energy-efficient house and living in a particularly windy part of the UK,
says Ms Hill. And the future is bright - despite the end of government
grants in February - because big companies like British Gas are investing
in new kinds of turbines which have yet to come on the market, she adds.
People 'lack mortgage knowledge'
The FSA website promises to lay the mortgage world bare.
Many consumers have trouble understanding how
mortgages work and are baffled by lenders' jargon, a survey has suggested.
Nearly six out of 10 consumers said they did not know what APR (annual
percentage rate) stood for. In addition, 52% of 800 mortgage holders
interviewed were unaware what APR they were paying, according to the
Financial Services Authority (FSA). To educate consumers about mortgages
the FSA has launched a new website. The FSA, which assumed regulatory
responsibility for mortgages last year, says it wants to help explain
mortgages to consumers. To this end the regulator is spending £1.5m
publicizing it's new website.
Mortgage choice is a good thing
but consumers need to arm themselves with more knowledge.
The
website offers users tips on shopping around for a mortgage deal,
information on different types of mortgages and interactive tools allowing
them to work out what level of repayment they can afford. People will also
be able to use the website to check to see if a firm is authorized to
offer mortgage advice. "It use to be the case that consumers would be
offered one type of mortgage by their bank or building society... these
days there are so many different types of mortgages available, all with
their own jargon," David Whiteley, FSA spokesman, said "Mortgage choice is
a good thing but consumers need to arm themselves with more knowledge,
this is where the website comes in," Mr. Whiteley added.
McDonald's puts fat facts on food
Photo: McDonald's says the facts will be right in front of the customer.
Fast food giant McDonald's is to begin printing
nutritional facts on the packaging of its burgers and fries.
McDonald's said the labeling would include the fat, salt, calorie and
carbohydrate content of its foods. Critics have accused the company of
contributing towards rising levels of obesity and other health problems.
Nutritional information on items such as the Big Mac, which contains 30g
of fat, are currently only available in leaflets or on the company's
website.
McDonald's said it hoped to have the new packaging in 20,000
of its 30,000 fast food restaurants worldwide by the end of 2006.
'Take responsibility': McDonald's chief
executive Jim Skinner said printing nutritional facts on the packaging of
its foods would put the information directly in the hands of the company's
customers. "We think this the absolutely easiest way to communicate it,"
Mr. Skinner said. "We've given them what they asked for and then people
take responsibility about whether they add it up or not add it up."
McDonald's has been introducing items such as salads and fruit to its
menus, alongside the company's more traditional fare of burgers, fries and
milkshakes. Earlier this year, the US company announced that it was giving
its iconic mascot clown Ronald McDonald a sporty new makerover in a bid to
encourage children to take up more active lifestyles. But critics have
maintained that many of the foods on offer at McDonald's are unhealthy and
fattening, at a time when obesity levels in many countries are soaring.
The world's biggest restaurant company said it hoped to introduce the new
packaging by February next year in time for the Winter Olympics in Italy.
INDUSTRY: MARKETS
New
York markets put in a positive finish thanks to lower oil prices.
U.S. home construction in October
plunged by the biggest amount in seven months.
The Toronto stock market closed little
changed Thursday as earlier strong gains melted away in the face of a
tumble in the price of oil. However, the market got a boost from gold
stocks as the price of gold hit an 18-year high. New York markets put in a
positive finish thanks to lower oil prices and data that eased concerns
that September's hurricanes did lasting damage to the U.S. economy. New
York's Dow industrial average moved up 45.46 points to 10,720.22. The
Nasdaq advanced 32.53 points to 2,220.46 and the S&P 500 moved up 11.59
points to 1,242.8. Crude oil prices faltered as traders weighed the
effects of a cold front descending on the United States against a build in
U.S. heating oil inventory figures and rising U.S. natural-gas
inventories. Light sweet crude for December moved down $1.54 to $56.34 US
a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange after rising almost $1 on
Wednesday. West Texas Intermediate closed at $56.35 US, down $1.54. The
TSX energy sector backed away 0.85 per cent as EnCana Corp. lost earlier
strong gains to move down $1.25 to $52.60. But Talisman Energy shares
advanced $2 to $55.59 on a report that a major oil company made an
informal proposal for the Calgary-based company but the proposal was
rejected as inadequate. Elsewhere in the sector, units in Petrofund Energy
Trust were off 83 cents to $20.24 after it signed a deal to acquire Kaiser
Energy Ltd., a private Canadian company, for $485 million. Shell Canada
Ltd. shares added 17 cents to $34.77 on its plans to boost capital
spending plans by 60 per cent to $2.7 billion next year to develop its oil
and natural gas operations. The Toronto gold sector moved ahead 1.2 per
cent as the December contract for bullion on the Nymex hit an 18-year
high, gaining $7.80 to $486.90 US an ounce. "And it has all the gold bugs
excited," said Mark Russell, equity analyst at BMO Nesbitt Burns. "You can
say it's inflation, you can say it's central bank buying . . . there are
also concerns over the euro as a reserve currency. My issue with the gold
companies is that they don't make money because their costs have gone
through the roof." Bema Gold advanced 18 cents to $3.47. The utilities
sector was strongest, up almost three per cent, led by an 8.8 per cent
climb in CU Inc. Its shares ran up $3.64 to $45 after announcing it will
issue $185 million of 5.183 per cent debentures. The health-care sector
was the leading decliner as Biovail shares shrank $3.45 to $26.25.
Investors also took in data showing that rising mortgage rates are
beginning to dampen the U.S. housing boom.
U.S. home construction in October
plunged by the biggest amount in seven months, falling 5.6 per cent -
double what analysts had been expecting. "Most people are relieved that
housing is beginning to show some sort of response to interest rates,"
said Michael Strauss, chief economist at Commonfund in New York, adding
"the level of housing activity is still very strong by historical
standards. We are not at normal levels." Wall Street also welcomed a
report saying the manufacturing sector expanded at a slower pace in
November. The report, from the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia,
showed that prices in the region's manufacturing sector were steady or
falling. Other data showed output at U.S. factories, mines and utilities
rose 0.9 per cent in October, the fastest pace in 17 months. The increase
followed a 1.5 per cent plunge in September. On the TSX, advances beat
declines 801 to 715 with 217 unchanged. In other corporate news: -Mega
Bloks Inc. shares climbed 49 cents to $25.16 after winning a Supreme Court
case. Rival Lego had claimed the Montreal-based company infringed its
trademark by copying the "look" of the tiny knobs that allow Lego's
construction blocks to snap together. -U.S. liquor giant Constellation
Brands Inc. has asked the Ontario Securities Commission to nullify a
"poison pill" being used by Vincor International to battle Constellation's
$1.4-billion takeover bid. Vincor shares were 25 cents lower to $34.50.
-Recruiting firm Brainhunter Inc. is extending its national service - and
also reaching into the United States - after acquiring IGate Mastech Ltd.,
the Canadian staffing division of IGate Corp. of Pittsburgh. Shares in the
Toronto-based company were a dime improved to $1. -Shares in forestry
products firm Tembec declined 13 cents to $1.84 after the company swung to
a fourth quarter loss of $134.9 million from a year-ago profit of $90.7
million, reported M. Morisson.
INDUSTRY: CARS
Chrysler announces new
incentives in Detroit price war with GM and Ford
DaimlerChrysler AG's Chrysler Group said
Thursday it will give two years of free gas to customers who buy a 2005 or
2006 vehicle before Jan. 3, following announcements of new discounts by
rivals General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. Chrysler will also kick in
two years of free scheduled maintenance and increase the warranty on
mechanical parts to five years or about 96,500 kilometres. Chrysler now
offers a three-year, 58,000-kilometre warranty. The offer, called the
Miles of Freedom plan, begins Monday. "The combination of free gasoline,
free scheduled maintenance and a full warranty puts our customers' mind at
ease and allows them to fully experience the joy of driving one of our
vehicles," said Joe Eberhardt, Chrysler's executive vice-president of
global sales, marketing and service. The company said the free gas will
come in the form of a $2,400 US debit card that can be used for anything.
Alan Helfman, manager of River Oaks Chrysler Jeep in Houston, said the
free maintenance is worth $200 to $300 and the extended warranty is worth
$600 to $700. "It's a great tool for marketing," Helfman said.
DaimlerChrysler shares rose $2.03, or 4.1 per cent, to $51.18 in afternoon
trading on the New York Stock Exchange. For the rest of November,
customers will be able to choose between the new incentive or cash-back
plans already in place that expire Nov. 30. Helfman said some customers
might still choose the cash, although the new plan could be a better deal.
The 2006 Jeep Commander, which starts at $27,290, currently has a $1,500
rebate, Helfman said. Under the new plan, that would double. Chrysler is
excluding some of its hottest-selling vehicles from the plan, including
the Dodge Viper, Chrysler 300, Dodge Magnum, Dodge Charger, Dodge Sprinter
and SRT8. Chrysler is the latest of the Big Three to announce new
incentives to boost anemic sales. After a summer of heavily promoted
employee-pricing discounts, the Big Three's sales fell a combined 17.6 per
cent in October, according to Autodata Corp. Chrysler fared better than GM
and Ford, with flat sales compared to October 2004. Automakers typically
offer discounts over the holidays, but GM jump-started those promotions
earlier than usual when it announced its Red Tag discount this week. GM's
plan allows buyers to pay a fixed maximum price advertised on red tags at
dealerships. Ford's rebate offer has a similar no-haggle aspect. Under its
Keep It Simple Plan, customers are given one consistent, maximum price
that will be printed on vehicles' window stickers. Chrysler isn't the
first to offer free gas. Mitsubishi Corp. since September has been
offering one year of free gas for customers who buy a 2005 vehicle. U.S.
automakers have a love-hate relationship with incentives, which boost
sales but can cheapen a brand's image. Deane Dourbin said, Asian
automakers also use incentives, but they're generally much lower. GM, Ford
and Chrysler have all tried to pull back on incentives but returned to
them when sales slowed. As soon as October sales were released, Chrysler
slapped a $1,000 discount on all 2005 and 2006 vehicles. Chrysler had the
highest incentives of any major automaker in October at $3,075 per
vehicle, according to Autodata. Honda Motor Co. spent the least, at $618
per vehicle.
Auto-industry watchers: Renault's
surprise profit warning intensifies challenge to CEO Carlos Ghosn
Auto-industry watchers knew Carlos Ghosn
was setting himself a tough task when he took up the Renault chief
executive job and stayed on as head of Nissan as well. But a surprise
profit warning from the French carmaker, hit by flagging sales at home and
a tired model line, has made that challenge clearer than ever. Shares in
Renault SA fell 4.9 per cent to 66.00 euros, or $77.07, in Paris on
Thursday, after the company warned that weak sales in its home markets
will hit 2005 profits. With its most profitable vehicles now in decline -
western European sales of the aging Megane fell 24 per cent in the year to
October - and no new models scheduled for at least another year, all eyes
are on Ghosn. Ghosn, whose 12-month turnaround of Nissan Motor Co. became
a management case study, is expected to unveil a major new strategy for
Renault in February, 10 months after he began his new job - and the
16,000-kilometre commute to the old one. Ghosn then promised to spend a
little more time in Paris than in Tokyo, while retaining full managerial
control of Nissan, 44 per cent-owned by Renault. But some observers say
Renault's current difficulties could alter that balance. "Maybe he'll have
to have less of a controlling hand because he'll have his hands full back
in Europe," said Edmund Shing, a Paris-based auto analyst with Kepler
Equities. "It may be that Renault shareholders put some pressure on him to
spend more time at Renault and less time at Nissan." At 5.1 per cent,
Renault's operating profit margin was half of Nissan's last year, and
former CEO Louis Schweitzer had warned of a slide to four per cent this
year before he handed over to Ghosn in April, while staying on as
chairman. Amid high oil prices, weak demand for cars - particularly
larger, higher-margin vehicles - and tough competition from a leaner,
restructured Volkswagen AG and others, Renault lowered its sights further
late Wednesday, saying its full-year operating margin would be "closer to
three per cent than to four per cent." Some analysts said the warning was
expected after rival PSA Peugeot Citroen SA lowered its full-year
guidance, but Renault has been hit particularly hard as the gap in its
product line exacerbates weak European auto market conditions.
Radisson
SAS Palais Hotel Vienna
Category:
L'établissement :
deux palais du XIXe siècle forment cet hôtel
situé face au Stadtpark de Vienne. Doté d'un riche passé, cet
établissement a accueilli des membres des familles royales, une fabrique
de piano et une école de danse. De nos jours, cependant, le Radisson
accueille souvent conférenciers et voyageurs d'agrément. Situé dans une
cour intérieure, le hall est doté d'un toit en verre et d'arbustes
illuminés. Ses murs d'un jaune chaleureux et ses canapés de divers
coloris lui confèrent une atmosphère accueillante.
Services et
équipements : les nombreuses salles de
conférence de l'hôtel demeurent fidèles au passé impérial du bâtiment.
Les conférenciers s'y retrouvent sous les romantiques fresques qui
décorent leur plafond, parmi le mobilier d'époque et les lustres qui
accompagnent leurs discours. Parmi les équipements de détente est remise
en forme, l'établissement compte l'unique caisson d'isolation
sensorielle à eau salée d'Europe et propose un service de massages
Ayurvedic
INDUSTRY: CDS, DVDS, VIDEOS AND HOME THEATER
Consumers aren't
really getting the big picture
When
putting together a home theatre system, most people think about the
display, but unless they put the effort into choosing an audio setup,
they aren't really getting the big picture. Home theatre audio systems
run the gamut from low-end box-store bundles to individual components
costing thousands of dollars. At the very least, you need a
pre-amplifier and an amplifier. The pre-amp takes the sound from your
source input (such as your CD or DVD player) and passes it on to the
power amplifier, which boosts the signal before sending it out to the
speakers. Pre-amplifiers usually contain controls such as source
switching, so that you can choose between different audio inputs such as
DVD, CD and radio. They normally contain tone controls that let you
adjust the timbre of the sound. Other components are speakers and the
sound sources themselves, as there are many different types of radio,
DVD and CD player from which to choose. The cheapest option is to buy
everything in one package, commonly known as a home theatre in a box.
But beware of quality issues - audio specialists have described these as
little more than a ghetto blaster with a couple of speakers attached.
"Many of these home-theatre-in-a-box systems don't give you good audio
quality," warns Kerry Fuchs, store manager at Saskatoon-based Audio
Warehouse. "When you build a system, you want components from specialist
manufacturers." Instead of a home-theatre-in-a-box system, consumers can
opt for an AV receiver, which comes with a radio tuner, pre-amplifier
and power amplifier all in one. This leaves them more choices for the
other components such as speakers, CD and DVD systems. The more
dedicated equipment you use for each function, the better your audio
quality will be says Mark Leger, a consultant at Halifax-based
home-theatre specialist Fidelis Design. An integrated amplifier contains
just the amp and the switching in a single box, leaving the customer to
buy a dedicated radio tuner. Real afficionados buy separate
pre-amplifier and power amplifiers, following what audio retailers call
the 'separates' route. But if you want to do that, bring your wallet.
"It's not worth doing separates in home theatre unless you're going to
go well over $6,000," says Jon Connelly, owner of Natural Sound of
Kitchener, Ont. When buying a power amplifier, whether it is integrated
or not, the quality-focused buyer will steer clear of units offering
lots of power but using integrated circuit outputs, warns Connolly.
Instead of focusing just on the power output from the amplifier, focus
on units with discrete, transistorized outputs, which you can buy from
$400 upwards. This will give you a better dynamic range. To get the
sound from the source to the receiver, the best option is a digital
connection, explains Fuchs. Look for an optical audio or digital coaxial
output. The alternative is to use an analogue output using standard left
and right audio jacks, but the quality will be poorer. The home theatre
world is moving to the High-Definition Multi-media Interface (HDMI),
which delivers both video and sound through one cable. DVD equipment and
receivers are already available with these connections. Dany Brandburry
said, speaking of DVD units, many of these also play CDs, and the
forward thinking consumer might want to look for one that also supports
one of two newer CD formats - Super Audio CD (SACD) or DVD-Audio
(DVD-A). While not as popular as the conventional CD music format, these
formats offer higher quality than traditional CDs. Your speaker
configuration will have a large impact on your home theatre audio
experience. Most home-theatre setups use a 5:1 surround-sound
configuration, where three rear speakers and two front-side speakers are
used along with a sub-woofer to add bass. Find out which surround-sound
system your receiver uses. Dolby Digital 5:1 is common, says Fedelis's
Leger, who prefers Digital Theatre Systems (DTS). "It has less
compression than Dolby, so if you have the option on the DVD menu, we
like to recommend DTS," he says. Dolby Prologic is an older analogue
standard that offers lower quality surround sound. But home-theatre
audio systems can also use 6:1 and even 7:1 configurations. DVDs come
with 5:1 or 6:1 sound encoding, but receivers exist with built-in
software to interpret these signals into seven channels. The results can
be astounding, Connelly says. "I was watching a movie the other night in
seven-channel, where a guy was driving in the car, and on the right hand
side I could hear the cars driving past me in one direction, and on the
other side they were driving past me in the other direction," he says.
If you can afford it, when building your speaker configuration go for
specialist speaker manufacturers. Energy, Paradigm and PSB are good
Canadian brands, Connelly says. Ultimately, says Fuchs, the best thing
to do is walk into the home-theatre store with your favorite CD and ask
to listen to it. Sometimes, the best way to buy speakers, along with the
rest of your audio setup, is to literally play it by ear.
INDUSTRY AND BUSINESS
At age 30, Microsoft tries to
untangle bureaucratic snags with a shakeup
SEATTLE,
Washington - Microsoft Corp. promises its software will make people better
workers - more productive, more profitable, more able, as the company
likes to say, to achieve their potential. Yet some wonder why the software
behemoth isn't taking more of its own medicine. As Microsoft hits 30,
critics reel off a list of complaints that sounds like, well, a Microsoft
commercial: stifling bureaucracy, frustrating miscommunication, different
units working on overlapping technology without adequate co-operation. In
short, the very ills Microsoft promises to cure with its software. Growing
pains have delayed products, leaving the door open for Microsoft to be
beaten to market by younger, more nimble competitors led by Google Inc.
and Yahoo Inc. Meanwhile, Microsoft shares have been trading at about the
same level for several years. As it gears up to release a slew of new
products, Microsoft is trying to untangle bureaucratic snags with a
corporate shakeup meant to get the best ideas to market faster and
increase the company's push toward over-the-Internet software and
services. Of course, no one would argue that the company co-founded by
Bill Gates is in dire straits. Microsoft continues to earn billions from
its flagship Windows and Office products, and the company is steadily
making inroads in markets including cellphones, video game consoles and
server software. But it isn't just Google and Yahoo that should worry
Microsoft. It's also up-comers big and small that offer products as
Internet-based services. Salesforce.com, which manages customer relations,
is a big one. Writely and gOffice, which provide web-based word
processing, and e-mail application Zimbra are among the small. Web-based
offerings give users easy online access to products and services,
sometimes for free. The threat to Microsoft is that such products, by
their very nature, could decrease the importance of Windows or Office.
Google and Sun Microsystems Inc. announced a partnership last week that,
while still vague, could eventually yield tools that provide, cheaply or
for free over the Internet, an alternative to pricey Microsoft software
such as Word or Excel. "What you've actually got going here between Google
and Sun is their own personal version of the film Kill Bill," said David
Garrity, director of research for Investec's U.S. operations. Microsoft
insists it is in a strong position to fight its competitors. Kevin
Johnson, recently named co-president of a new Microsoft unit that includes
Windows, servers and its MSN online division, said chief executive Steve
Ballmer spoke about software as a service as long as six years ago. The
company was forecasting some of these potential markets a decade ago, he
added. "We've provided the vision of where these things were going."
Still, Microsoft now lags in some high-profile areas, although Johnson
said there are plans afoot to help the company to expand further and
quicker into the field. Its competitors were the first to provide
web-based tools for finding things more easily on Windows-based desktops.
Microsoft also has played catch-up on developing its own online search
engine, the technology that formed the basis for Google's explosive
success. And while Microsoft was a pioneer in offering free, web-based
e-mail with Hotmail, Google and Yahoo have been quicker to improve their
products recently.
The company continues to struggle with
the issue of helping computer users instantly find what they need. When
Vista, Microsoft's first significant Windows upgrade since 2001, is
released next year after serious delays, it will initially lack a hotly
anticipated data management system called WinFS that would let people
swiftly find documents, pictures or e-mails. Microsoft also is tailing its
competitors in developing the money-making engine behind Google - paid
search. This month, Microsoft begins U.S. testing of its own system for
selling sponsored links next to its regular search results, which are
based on a formula that ranks web pages according to such factors as
relevance. Microsoft currently outsources that job to Yahoo, which has a
contract with Microsoft through June 2006. Microsoft also was in talks
with Time Warner Inc. about a potential deal with its America Online unit
that could help raise Microsoft's profile against Google. One potential
option was some sort of online advertising partnership. It's unclear where
those talks stand now. Johnson acknowledges that the company has sometimes
been slower than some of its competitors. He says that's partly because
Microsoft is focused on "the big, bold challenges," such as folding useful
technologies into products instead of just rushing something out to
market. And analysts note Microsoft's track record of quickly playing
catch-up and marshalling the forces necessary to stay ahead. Johnson says
the company's reorganization - which groups its seven business groups
under three large units - is designed in part to streamline
decision-making and make Microsoft more agile. If successful, such changes
could help alleviate complaints that employee productivity is being slowed
by management hoops that require too many layers of approval. In one of
the most high-profile cases, former executive Kai-Fu Lee complained in
court of groups working autonomously that should be collaborating, and of
being forced to report to too many people. Lee defected to Google and
Microsoft sued, alleging violation of a non-compete agreement. The case is
ongoing. Microsoft also is seeing the downside of a longtime corporate
culture that allowed several groups to work on the same technology,
sometimes even in competition with one another. That philosophy hasn't
been as successful as hoped with search technology, where despite multiple
efforts many analysts say the company still has work to do. Johnson said
Microsoft is trying to find ways to re-evaluate that approach while still
encouraging individual groups to develop fresh ideas. "Bottoms-up
innovation is a great thing," he said. But, he added, "At a certain point
in that innovation life cycle you have to make decisions so you avoid
duplicative or competitive work." Microsoft is facing the classic dilemma
that befalls a company that grows from a small startup to a major
corporation, said the analyst Garrity. There's really no way to manage
thousands of employees without a strong corporate structure, but that
structure will inevitably alienate some workers who remember the
freewheeling early days. "They're all victims of their own past success,"
he said. Microsoft's reorganization appears to be an attempt to tackle the
size problem - to teach the elephant to dance, said Garrity, alluding to a
popular corporate problem-solving book by James Belasco. "I don't know if
we can teach the elephant to dance, but they certainly look as if they are
getting their tutu on, reported Alison Lyn
Magellan Aerospace and CAW reach
new contract deal, ending three-week strike at Winnipeg plant
WINNIPEG - The Canadian Auto Workers
union and Magellan Aerospace Corp. have agreed to a new contract that
could soon end a three-week strike at the company's Winnipeg manufacturing
plant. The Toronto-area based aircraft parts maker said Saturday it had
reached a new three-year agreement with the union, which represents 400
workers at the Manitoba plant. Details of the agreement with CAW local
3005 were not released pending a ratification vote by unionized workers
Tuesday. The 400 workers have been on a legal strike since Sept. 15.
Mississauga, Ont.-based Magellan (TSX:MAL) is an aerospace industry
supplier that designs, engineers and manufactures engine and aircraft
assemblies and components for aerospace, military and space markets. The
company employs 3,500 people and operates through subsidiaries such as
Bristol, Orenda and other units in Canada, the United States and the
United Kingdom.
INDUSTRY LATEST NEWS
Sony Corp. and NEC Corp.
to boost competitiveness
Sony Corp. and NEC Corp. agreed to set
up a joint venture combining their optical disc drive operations to boost
competitiveness, the two Japanese electronics companies said Thursday. The
new joint venture will start operations on April 1, 2006, producing DVD
drives and CD drives for use in personal computers and other electronics
devices, the two companies said in a joint statement. In one possible
problem, however, Sony and NEC support different, rival formats for
next-generation DVDs. Sony is promoting a DVD format called "Blu-ray
Disc," while NEC is promoting the "HD DVD" format it and Toshiba Corp.
jointly developed. The two formats are incompatible. Yoshibumi Yashiro, a
NEC spokesman, said the joint venture will design and make DVD drives and
CD drives that can be used with both the Blue-ray Disc and HD DVD formats
"for the time being." Whether NEC will continue promoting its HD DVD
format in the future will be decided by watching market trends, Yashiro
said. Sony, meanwhile, will promote its Blue-ray Disc format, but it does
not intend to interfere in the other partner's format business, according
to company spokesman Taro Takamine. Under a memorandum of understanding,
signed Thursday, the new joint company is 55 per cent owned by Sony and 45
per cent owned by NEC. The two companies will continue talks to strike an
official contract, the statement said. Global shipments of DVD drives are
growing as demand for digital consumer gadgets equipped with the drives
expands, including DVD players and recorders, and PCs with enhanced
audiovisual features. But price competition is also intense. Prices of
these digital products are falling steadily, and there are many DVD drive
suppliers. Through the joint venture, the two companies intend to "bolster
the business by combining each other's strength," such as Sony's optical
pickup device technology and NEC's strength in system chips, Sony
spokesman Jerald Cavanagh said. In the last fiscal year ended March 31,
their combined sales in the optical disc drive business totaled around
$1.85 billion US. Sony shares rose 1.75 per cent to finish at 4,060 yen
($34.12 US) on the Tokyo Stock Exchange on Thursday, while NEC closed at
634 yen ($5.33 US), up 0.80 per cent. Both Sony and NEC are based in
Tokyo.
Delphi Corp., the largest U.S.
auto supplier, files for bankruptcy
DETROIT- Delphi Corp., the largest U.S.
auto supplier, filed for bankruptcy Saturday, sending shock waves through
the country's auto industry, which already is weakened by high labor costs
and falling market share. Delphi's bankruptcy, which is expected to result
in plant closures and layoffs, is one of the largest in U.S. history.
Delphi filed to reorganize its U.S. operations in federal bankruptcy court
in New York, where hearings are scheduled to begin next week. Delphi's
non-U.S. operations were not included in the filing. Delphi Chairman and
CEO Robert Miller said the company hopes to emerge from Chapter 11 in
early to mid-2007. "We will make every effort to make this as quick as
possible," Miller told The Associated Press on Saturday. Miller, a
restructuring expert who was hired in July, had threatened to take the
company into bankruptcy if he failed to reach a restructuring agreement
with Delphi's former parent, General Motors Corp., and its largest union,
the United Auto Workers. Miller set a deadline of Oct. 17, when U.S.
bankruptcy laws are scheduled to change. Miller said Delphi will continue
negotiating with GM and the UAW to lower its labor costs. Miller said the
three parties agreed to continue their discussions after a bankruptcy
filing. "We mutually concluded there was still too much of the complex
work yet to be done," Miller said. "It was not going to be efficient to
work right up to the midnight deadline to the change in the law." Miller
said nothing will change immediately. Delphi will continue to pay its
50,000 U.S. employees and suppliers and will ship its products on
schedule. Delphi has 31 plants in 13 states, including Michigan, Ohio,
Alabama and California. The company has 185,000 employees worldwide. "We
are not going to adversely affect our customers," he said. "Our people
will get their pay checks and will still have their health benefits.
Retirees will continue to get their checks. Any changes to that will be
dealt with in an orderly way." Delphi will finance its operations with
$4.5 billion US in loans, including up to $2 billion in
debtor-in-possession financing from a group of lenders led by JPMorgan
Chase Bank and Citigroup Global Markets Inc. Delphi, based in the Detroit
suburb of Troy, has struggled to make a profit since GM spun it off in
1999. It lost $4.8 billion in 2004 and nearly $750 million in the first
half of this year. Delphi, No. 63 on the 2005 Fortune 500 list of the
country's largest corporations, had $16.5 billion in total assets as of
June 30, the most recent figure available, and has total debt of $6
billion, Standard & Poor's said Thursday. The company had $4.3 billion in
unfunded pension liabilities at the end of 2004, according to a company
filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Also Saturday,
Robert Dellinger was named executive vice-president and chief financial
officer. The former Sprint Corp. official succeeds acting CFO John
Sheehan, who was named Delphi's vice-president and chief restructuring
officer. The largest corporate bankruptcy in the U.S. was WorldCom Inc.,
which had $103.9 billion in pre-bankruptcy assets. Like Tower Automotive
Inc. and other auto suppliers who have recently declared bankruptcy,
Delphi has struggled with the high cost of steel and other raw materials
as well as U.S. production cuts. But Delphi also blamed its spinoff
agreement with GM for saddling it with high labour costs. Under the
agreement, Delphi is required to pay GM wages of $27 an hour to most of
its 24,000 UAW-represented workers. That's double the level of competing
suppliers, according to Standard & Poor's Ratings Services. Delphi also
had to pay full wages and benefits to 4,000 laid-off workers in jobs
banks, which cost it $400 million each year. Delphi has a total of 30,000
U.S. hourly employees and 12,000 hourly retirees. About 6,000 hourly
employees are represented by other unions, including the International
Union of Electronic Workers/Communications Workers of America. Under a
bankruptcy filing, Delphi could shift at least some of its pension
liabilities to the federal government's Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. and
could get the court to order lower wages and benefits for the UAW and
higher costs for its parts. Under the spinoff agreement, GM also is liable
for some of Delphi's pension obligations if Delphi is in bankruptcy. In a
note to investors, Merrill Lynch analyst John Casesa said GM could be
liable for $4.4 billion to $6.7 billion worth of pension and health care
benefits. Delphi and GM have been tightlipped about the negotiations. But
a letter sent from UAW leaders to union members in Kokomo, Ind., earlier
this week said Delphi asked the UAW to accept wage cuts of more than 50
per cent, to $10-$12 an hour, and eliminate the jobs bank. Delphi also
called for a reduction in health care benefits and vacation time. Delphi
also has been plagued by an accounting scandal that the FBI and the SEC
are now investigating. Six people have resigned because of the
investigation, including Delphi's former chief financial officer Alan
Dawes.
GOVERNMENT
LEGAL. COURTS
U.S. Attorney General
indicts Conrad Black and others on criminal fraud charges
Conrad Black
The U.S.
government has charged fallen Canadian media baron Conrad Black and three
other former executives of Hollinger International with fraud, in
connection with an alleged scheme to steal more than $80 million US from
the media company. The allegations stem from Hollinger's $3.2 billion sale
of hundreds of Canadian newspapers to CanWest Global Communications Corp.,
and the misuse of corporate perks. Criminal charges against Black have
been anticipated since August, when two of his associates - including
longtime business partner David Radler - and his former Ravelston Corp.
holding company were indicted. On Thursday, a warrant was issued for the
arrest of Black, as well as former Hollinger executives John Boultbee and
Peter Atkinson. If they do not turn themselves in at a yet-to-be-scheduled
court date in Chicago, the U.S. Attorney will seek their extradition. In
addition, two new charges have been laid against former Hollinger lawyer
Mark Kipnis, who was indicted seven counts of fraud this summer. Both
Black and Boultbee are facing eight counts of mail and wire fraud, while
Atkinson is facing six counts. Each count could mean five years in jail
and a $250,000 fine. If the 61-year-old Black is found guilty, he could go
to prison for up to 40 years. Through his lawyer Eddie Greenspan, Black
insisted he is innocent and will fight the fraud charges, but he did not
say whether he will go to Chicago to face his accusers. "Conrad Black
asserts his innocence without qualification with respect to each and every
one of the charges set forth in the indictment," said a brief statement
from Greenspan released late Thursday. "It will be shown that he has, at
all times, acted within the law.
He is confident
that if given a full and fair opportunity to defend himself, he will be
found innocent." The indictment also seeks criminal forfeiture of at least
$80 million US from Black, Boultbee, Atkinson and Kipnis. More than $8.5
million in net proceeds has already been seized from the sale of Black's New
York apartment last month, and from his Florida home. Black has said those
funds should be returned, saying he needs the money to pay for his lawyers.
In a letter to the FBI last month, Black's lawyer, Gregory Craig, called the
seizure of Black's money "a grotesque abuse of power designed to prevent Mr.
Black from defending himself against potential criminal charges." Observers
expect Black - a British citizen with a house in Toronto - to put up a
prolonged fight against the charges. However, the case is complicated by the
fact Black is a British citizen and could, if he wants, use Canadian and
British courts to delay extradition to the United States for years. "If his
lawyers aren't independently wealthy now, they will be when this is over,"
Jacob Frenkel, a former U.S. federal prosecutor, said. Ravelston is still
facing the same charges that were laid against the company in August. The
flurry of charges follow an investigation by the U.S. Attorney's Office, the
FBI and the Internal Revenue Service's criminal investigation division. The
man leading the investigation - Patrick Fitzgerald, U.S. Attorney for the
Northern District of Illinois - told a news conference in Chicago on
Thursday that "officers and directors of publicly traded companies who steer
shareholders' money into their pockets should not lie to the board of
directors to get permission to do so."
"The indictment
charges that the insiders at Hollinger - all the way to the top of the
corporate ladder - whose job it was to safeguard the shareholders - made it
their job to steal and conceal." It alleges the defendants fraudulently
diverted $51.8 million in 2000 from Hollinger International's
multibillion-dollar sale of the former Southam newspapers and Internet
assets to CanWest Global (TSX:CGS.SV).
Also among new
allegations is an accusation that Black and one of his co-defendants
"fraudulently misused corporate perks including a company jet for a vacation
by Black and his wife (Barbara Amiel) in the South Pacific, two Park Avenue
apartments in New York City, and corporate funds to throw a lavish birthday
party for Black's wife." The party in December 2000 cost about $62,000 US
including $13,935 for wine and champagne. Although it was "a social occasion
with little, if any, business purpose," the U.S. Attorney said, Hollinger
footed about $42,000 of the bill. Thursday's indictment expands on charges
laid in August, when Radler, Kipnis and Ravelston were each indicted on five
counts of mail fraud and two of wire fraud. Radler, Hollinger
International's ex-chief operating officer, pleaded guilty and agreed to
co-operate with U.S. authorities in the case.
Kipnis, the
company's former in-house lawyer, pleaded not guilty. Frenkel, a partner
with Washington, D.C.-area law firm Schulman, Rogers said Thursday that the
two new charges against Kipnis might have been avoided if he had agreed to
play ball with the U.S. Attorney earlier, and strike a plea agreement.
Radler, 63, pleaded guilty to one count of mail fraud in September. However,
six other counts were dropped against the Canadian-born former publisher of
the Chicago Sun-Times after he agreed to a 29-month jail term and a $250,000
US fine. The U.S. Attorney's Office alleges that Radler, Black's former
right-hand man, supervised negotiations of newspaper sales through which he
and other Hollinger managers pocketed millions of dollars in fees that
should have gone to the company. Kipnis, 58, is currently free on a $250,000
US bond and Radler, a Vancouver resident, is free on a $500,000 US bond
while he helps with the investigation., reported Taro
Pekins.
U.S. lawsuit accuses
tire maker of using slave labor in Liberia, West Africa
A U.S. federal lawsuit filed Thursday
accuses tire maker Bridgestone Firestone of employing slave labor and
child labor on its massive rubber plantation in Liberia. The suit, filed
in U.S. District Court, seeks class action on behalf of 12 adult workers
and 23 children who work and live on the Firestone Plantation in Harbel,
Liberia.
The suit claims the workers are trapped
in a "gulag of misery" and forced to work under conditions that have
changed little since the plantation was founded in 1926. "The plantation
workers are modern day slaves, forced to work by the coercion of poverty,
with the prospect of starvation just one complaint about conditions away,"
the lawsuit states. The Japanese company, with North American headquarters
in Nashville, Tenn., said it had not been served with the lawsuit, but
said the claims were "completely without merit.' Bridgestone Firestone
North American Tire is a unit of Bridgestone Corp. The company said its
workers are represented by a labor union, are highly paid, and that no one
under 18 is employed. The company also has a strict policy against child
labor. "Firestone Liberia has a courageous and hard working leadership
team comprised primarily of Liberians who are working to create hope and
opportunity for the people of the Harbel community," the company said in a
statement. The lawsuit claims workers get up at 4:30 a.m., then work 12 to
14 hours while using primitive tools to tap the rubber trees and collect
raw latex.
The suit also claims that Bridgestone
Firestone imposes impossible quotas on the laborers and cuts their pay by
half if the daily quotas are not met. In order to meet their quotas,
laborers routinely have their minor children join them, the lawsuit
claims. Laborers are paid a daily wage of $3.19 US before deductions and
must tap at least 1,125 trees per day. The court action was organized by
the Washington, D.C.-based International Labor Rights Fund, which also
helped organize a lawsuit in the 1990s against Unocal Corp. alleging human
rights violations during the construction of a pipeline in Southeast Asia.
Gary gentle states that the lawsuit claims the plaintiffs, identified only
as John, James and Jane Roe, could not bring similar court actions in
Liberia because of fear of retribution and corrupt court system. The
lawsuit requests a jury trial and unspecified damages.
COMPANIES:
Google shares top $400 threshold
Most of the Google's revenue comes from advertising sales.
Shares in Google have risen above $400 each for the
first time, capping a strong period of growth for the internet search
firm. Google shares closed up $5.30, or 1.3%, at $403.45, giving the
firm a higher market value than stalwarts Coca-Cola, Walt Disney and Cisco
Systems. Google's shares were valued at $85 each when the company listed
on the US Nasdaq stock market 15 months ago. Analysts have been excited by
the growth potential of new products.
Growth strategy: The latest of these is Google
Base - unveiled on Wednesday - which will enable people to search for
different information collected from consumers and businesses. Other
recent initiatives include a plan to supply miniature satellite maps to
mobile phones as well as a controversial online library service providing
digital prints of books. The market has also been encouraged by Google's
financial performance. The company reported a sharp rise in profits in the
last quarter, as net income rose to $381.2m (£215m) from $52m in the same
period last year. Sales in the three months to the end of September
totaled $1.57bn - 96% higher than the same period in 2004. Most of the
Google's revenue comes from advertising sales.
Investors cheer Hewlett-Packard
Mr. Hurd's plan appears to be working
Investors cheered as the US computer giant
Hewlett-Packard (HP) reported figures that suggest it is recovering.
HP's $416m (£242m) profits for the August to October quarter fell far
short of the $1.091bn made during the same period last year. But investors
accepted HP's explanation that this was due to the $1.1bn cost of a
restructuring announced in summer. Sales rose for all its units, so
investors decided to ignore the 62% fall in profits. HP shares rose 6%.
"The results look very, very positive pretty much across the
board," said SG Cowen analyst Richard Chu. "Throughout the last six to
nine months, HP has really been flexing its muscles." "We've been doing a
lot of things in the company at the same time and we've been doing that
well," said HP chief executive Mark Hurd. "HP delivered another strong
quarterly performance, with balanced revenue growth, good cost discipline,
improved margins in key businesses and strong cash flow," said Mr Hurd,
who earlier this year replaced Carly Fiorina after she was ousted. Soon
thereafter, Mr Hurd cut 14,500 jobs as part of a restructuring aimed at
slashing costs by $1.9bn per year.