Tuesday, 8 June 2010
British Fox.
British Fox. In any way, the first – is first. Taking away my teeth. That the special one. Than, afraid to steal too much from my sleep, straight away indicating me that this is only the Continent of King George doing it. Than was some female voice asking me very insistently to buy the tickets for children’s theater show. Immediately after, than was another dream, where again Andrew Lancaster voice imploring to I buy the train ticket for him. In this way “resting” all night, because the Co see it fit ask me for money. Comes to me now, - the yesterday people’s behaviors. Essentially, - the лягавые. I got the strong impression, that when they stemming at the “нерест” direction, - they just “cocyт”. And them translate this in Prince Phillip voice “A ты не плюйся”… Actually, that’s is why the Germany resolve to put at my path the huge chemical equipment on track, telling me something about the European Energy Policy, Oyster Card, and who’s the ‘Banker-on-the-street’. Like the rule, - they do only this. Mean, the meeting of G20 in Busan, and the ‘eurofin’, - I’m the villain, and the Lancaster’s – are the victims… And I see this like a “celestial” brake over the last decades, for sure, to got to do with a “bigger chunk” concerned to my communications. This comes directly to the pockets of the NAMES concerned. Which also, - taught me some valuable lessons: ‘Why I’m everyday poorer’. Concretely, I’m referring here to the one more article of Laurence Copyland. The professor of finance at Cardiff University Business School. Between a lot of useful information, I see one certain similarity with this kitchen my reliance. Where the NAMES concerned, after sucking me out, - go to attire me to garbage cane, or attire for me garbage… Definitely he wrote this: ‘…I may turn out to be wrong and the Germans may be made of (even) sterner stuff than I thought back in 1997, but for the moment I stand by my forecast that they will ultimately give in to the pressure. In fact, they may yet end up taking the rational, if cynical, way out: exploit their strength to borrow as much as possible in Euros – then re-launch the DM and abandon the Euro to its fate…’ But, comeback to my dreams “c выбитым зубом” in British soil, - “To see a ticket in your dream, represents the price you need to pay to attain your goals. You have decided on your path in life. A ticket signifies the start of a new endeavor. Consider also the type of ticket. A bus or train ticket symbolizes the price you pay to get ahead in life.” With the Lancaster’s Co, “we” go by stages. First was, - ‘You don’t speak an english good enough’. Referring to the “Education, education and education” In russian it’s sounds like “Tony здравствуй”… Than was, - “Buy the bicycle”, referring to the ‘buy a cycle’ which “completely unexpected” was stolen… This was yet during the Bubble Bum… The third time (economic cycle) was: - “Buy the chair”. Faithfully when the BP resolve to “jump out of my ****”. Maybe I’m too much megalomaniac? If yes, - tell me so. Sorry, but seems that any one know this “story”. Although, the Willy and Harry who was advising me in this one… How’s this progress? Personally, I see the sad future. When somebody are using my laptop bag for ‘personal profits’, - explains by itself. One more example, - all day yesterday the “race” was ‘attacking’ me. Normally, the NAMES mentioned, - put all fleet of Opel Corse’s of лягавыx the ‘Bolina cerrada’. Its are constant, but, was small deviation the type of, like yesterday’s, - which Charles the II knows what I talk about. When the BMW was with three mosqueteers inside. What I expect? The this year “Tony здравствуй”? ‘The 8%’ blog on Saturday, before the G20 and ‘eurofin’, I wrote about in terms of””… lookout for business partner or employment official who are willing now to request the re-negotiations or improved already established Agreements…” And in the annex, putting a couple of proves documentation. Also, I wrote that this is not right time to publicly change my business “Title”, or give up the Intellectual Ownership of key business or financial documents. The colleagues and co-workers, don’t seems to you that it’s fine to be the full of it?
Job Title: Project officer-Stock Options
Posted: 07/06/2010 (21:01)
Agency/Employer: Service Care Solutions
BP suffers $1bn setback in Siberia. June 8, 2010. The political storm engulfing BP intensified yesterday as the group came under renewed pressure on its Russian front. Gazprom, the Kremlin-controlled gas monopoly, has raised new questions over the future of a giant gasfield in Siberia controlled by the British group’s Russian joint venture TNK-BP. As at least two international brokerages cut their recommendations on BP to “neutral”, citing spiralling costs from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and a potential cut to the dividend, Gazprom piled on the pressure by ending hopes that it might buy Kovytka from TNK-BP for up to $1 billion. Speaking in Moscow, Viktor Timoshilov, the Gazprom executive responsible for Siberian developments, claimed that Russia’s gas export monopoly had no need for access to Kovytka’s resources because it had ample supplies elsewhere. Last week, TNK-BP said that Rusia Petroleum, its unit that controls Kovytka, had filed for bankruptcy after a lengthy battle with the Russian State over the development. The news is another body blow to BP, which yesterday announced some modest success in its efforts to contain the Gulf spill by fitting a cap on the leaking seabed riser pipe. The company said that it had siphoned off 11,100 barrels of oil on Sunday, a slight improvement on the previous 24 hours.
Discovered in 1987, the Kovytka field in Irkutsk contains an estimated two trillion cubic metres of gas and has been earmarked as a key source of energy supplies for China. Since the mid-1990s it has been majority-owned by TNK-BP, which started limited development of the field in 2001. However, in the interim Moscow identified Kovytka as a strategic field that could be developed only by a company with majority Russian ownership. As the Kremlin has increasingly flexed its muscles over the country’s resources, state officials have repeatedly threatened to strip TNK-BP of its licence to develop Kovytka.
In 2007, TNK-BP struck a deal to sell the field to Gazprom for nearly $1 billion. But the talks subsequently ground to a halt. Decreased demand amid the global economic downturn plus a glut of gas supplies have undermined the rationale for developing new gas projects. Yesterday, a spokesman for BP in Moscow said that the future of the Kovytka field would be decided by a bankruptcy court in Irkutsk. He said: “It looks like the assets will be sold. It is hard to say when but I don’t expect it to be a very quick procedure.”
The remarks yesterday from Gazprom came a few days after President Medvedev questioned the future of BP. He said: “There is even an uncertainty as to what will happen to the firm. The nature of environmental responsibility is such that it can destroy anyone.” Rusia Petroleum is 63 per cent-owned by TNK-BP, with the rest owned by other groups including the regional government of Irkutsk. Separately, it has emerged that BP’s under-fire chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg is nursing a £1.4 million loss on shares he bought in the oil giant earlier this year. The Swede, who joined BP on January 1, less than four months before the explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig, paid £5.4 million for 925,000 shares in the company in two separate transactions in February and April. The average price Mr Svanberg paid was 584p a share. Yesterday the price had slumped to 432p each, making the shares worth just under £4 million.
Mr Svanberg, the former chief executive of Ericsson who has been heavily criticised for his low profile during the crisis, continued to buy shares in BP after the accident on the Deepwater Horizon. He paid just under £1.1 million for 175,000 shares on April 28 — eight days after the deadly accident in the Gulf of Mexico. He had earlier paid £4.3 million for 750,000 shares at 575p each via his investment vehicle Chas Aludden — his first purchase of BP shares. ? The Government will set out plans today to strengthen its safety regime in the North Sea oil industry, doubling annual rig inspections and creating a new taskforce to examine the country’s ability to prevent and respond to oil spills (Robin Pagnamenta writes). In the first official British response to the Deepwater Horizon spill, Chris Huhne, the new Energy Secretary, said that the events in the Gulf of Mexico were devastating and would have many long-term effects for the industry.
Mr Huhne said: “What we are seeing will transform the regulation of deep water drilling worldwide.”
He added that Britain’s safety and environmental regime was “fit for purpose”. However, he continued: “But the Deepwater Horizon gives us pause for thought and, given the beginning of exploration in deeper waters West of Shetland, there is every reason to increase our vigilance.”
Student of Moscow financial-legal academy without cause fired entrepreneurs. June 8th, 11:18 | GZT.RU. In Moscow, police detained a third-year student of the Moscow financial-legal academy. He is suspected in the shooting of an entrepreneur from a traumatic gun, told RIA Novosti source in law enforcement of the city. He was arrested June 7 on the street warm camp.
According to police, the detainee of hooliganism fired groom in a car CEO Inc. Magnum Trust. The victim sustained injuries on the wrist, forearm, and eyes. Withdrawn from the student gun in the Interior Ministry is not registered.
Manufacturing output soars in Q2. Mon Jun 7, 2010 10:05am BST. (Reuters) - Manufacturing output and orders grew at their fastest pace in 15 years in the second quarter, but worries about fiscal tightening and the euro zone economy have clouded expectations, a survey showed on Monday. The Engineering Employers' Federation said a balance of 30 percent of firms reported a rise in output in the last three months, up from 8 percent in the first quarter and the highest since the survey began in 1995.
The survey also showed firms were planning to raise prices at their fastest rate in almost two years -- something that may ring alarm bells with Bank of England policymakers who are concerned about rising inflation becoming entrenched in people's expectations. The domestic new orders balance rebounded to 24 percent from -4 percent, and the export orders balance shot up to 23 percent from 3 percent, both survey highs. The figures chime with other recent data that suggest Britain's recovery from its deepest recession since World War Two has gained traction, although weaker expectations balances highlight the downside risks for growth in 2010 as a whole. "Manufacturers are pulling in more export orders on the back of a recovering world economy and a better outlook for the domestic market is giving companies some confidence to recruit again," said EEF chief economist Lee Hopley. "But manufacturers are very aware that economic headwinds could still pick up again as there are still risks to a sustained recovery." SOFTER OUTLOOK. The pound's weakness -- sterling has lost around a fifth of its value against other currencies on a trade-weighted basis since the end of 2007 -- helped to boost exports, but the EEF said its contribution to growth had not been as big as hoped. And it said firms were worried that tough austerity measures set to be implemented in the euro zone would hurt demand for British goods and was unlikely to be offset by demand from emerging economies, posing a threat to Britain's economic recovery. "If the euro zone economy stutters in the remainder of this year, demand for UK exports from the BRIC economies will not be sufficient to pick up the baton ... and cement an export led recovery in the UK," the EEF said. Companies are also worried about what measures Britain's new coalition government will announce in an emergency budget on June 22 to curb a budget deficit running at almost 11 percent of economic output. "The extent to which consumers and businesses will share the burden of spending cuts and tax rises is uncertain," Hopley said. A balance of 22 percent of companies expected to raise output in the next three months, down from 28 percent in the March survey. And a balance of 12 percent of firms forecast a rise in domestic orders down from 21 percent in Q1, while the expectations balance for export orders fell to 15 percent from 24 percent. But companies were still planning to raise their prices, with a balance of 10 percent of firms planning to up domestic prices and 8 percent expecting to increase export prices -- the highest since Q3 2008. But the EEF said any price increases were mainly to cover the cost of dearer raw materials and competitive pressures were likely to prevent a sustained pick-up in prices. "Our survey suggests that price increases are not set to be widespread across manufacturing in the short term," it said.
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