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  • Private Equity and Industry Performance

    Published: January 13, 2010
    Paper Released: December 2009
    Authors: Shai Bernstein, Josh Lerner, Morten Sørensen, and Per Strömberg

    Executive Summary:

    In response to the global financial crisis that began in 2007, governments worldwide are rethinking their approach to regulating financial institutions. Among the financial institutions that have fallen under the gaze of regulators have been private equity (PE) funds. There are many open questions regarding the economic impact of PE funds, many of which cannot be definitively answered until the aftermath of the buyout boom of the mid-2000s can be fully assessed. HBS professor Josh Lerner and coauthors address one of these open questions, by examining the impact of PE investments across 20 industries in 26 major nations between 1991 and 2007. In particular, they look at the relationship between the presence of PE investments and the growth rates of productivity, employment, and capital formation. Key concepts include:

    • It is still too early to assess the consequences of the economic conditions in 2008 and 2009, a period where the decrease of investment and absolute volume of distressed private equity-backed assets was far greater than in earlier cycles. Despite this caveat, it appears that:
    • PE investments are associated with faster growth.
    • There is little evidence that economic fluctuations are exacerbated by the presence of PE investments.
    • In industries with PE investments, there are few significant differences between industries with a low and high level of PE activity.
    • Activity in industries with PE backing appears to be no more volatile in the face of industry cycles than in other industries, and sometimes less so. The reduced volatility is particularly apparent in employment.
    • These patterns continue to hold when the focus is on the impact of private equity in continental Europe, where concerns about these investments have been most often expressed.

    Abstract

    The growth of the private equity industry has spurred concerns about its potential impact on the economy more generally. This analysis looks across nations and industries to assess the impact of private equity on industry performance. Industries where PE funds have invested in the past five years have grown more quickly in terms of productivity and employment. There are few significant differences between industries with limited and high private equity activity. It is hard to find support for claims that economic activity in industries with private equity backing is more exposed to aggregate shocks. The results using lagged private equity investments suggest that the results are not driven by reverse causality. These patterns are not driven solely by common law nations such as the United Kingdom and United States, but also hold in Continental Europe.
    40 pages.

    Paper Information

  • Here’s What Will Trigger Japan’s Hyperinflationary Fiasco

    A lot has been made about Japan’s debt recently, and the growing chorus of bearish hedge fund managers betting against its debt and the yen.

    Yesterday Ambrose Evans-Pritchard brilliantly warned of a brewing hyperinflationary fiasco, citing some charts from SocGen’s Dylan Grice, which showed that Japan’s debt levels are on par with other countries that have gone into such meltdowns.

    But before you bet against Japan, you have to bear in mind a key characteristic of its debt, which is that it’s all domestically held (unlike ours).

    This doesn’t answer any questions. It’s merely a starting point for more questions, and if you ask different people whether a government in debt to its own people is less leveraged than a government in debt to foreigners, you’ll get all sorts of different answers.

    Some will say that debt is debt (no matter who is doing the lending), while others will argue that Japan is much safer.

    FT’s Money Supply blog comments insightfully:

    In looking for the trigger for a Japanese debt crisis, therefore, we’re probably still looking for something that would shake the trust of domestic investors in JGBs (or rather trust in the institutions that hold them, notably Japan Post Bank). That’s not to say it won’t happen – it will, sometime – and at some point Japan may become a net importer of goods. Those forecasting a crisis, however, need to think more about what will set it off.

    Now say that there was a debt crisis this year and yields on JGBs soar as buyers went on strike. The government has two basic options: (1) Hyperinflation – it prints money to buy JGBs or (2) Retrenchment – it savagely cuts spending, causing a deep recession, and commits to a credible path to control its debt.

    I’d argue that retrenchment is far more likely – precisely because of the aging population that SocGen identify as the possible cause of a crisis.

    Bear in mind that Japan owes almost all of its debt to its own citizens. If it hyperinflates then it will wipe out their savings, life insurance and pensions – and the people who have all the savings are the elderly. If it retrenches, raising taxes and cutting services, then more of the cost will fall on the young. In aged Japan, I think the voting power of the old will lead to retrenchment in any near-term debt crisis, rather than hyperinflation.

    japanese debt

    Read the whole post at FT — >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Arcade: Serious Sam HD: TFE

     

    Serious Sam: TFE HDContent: Serious Sam HD: TFE
    Price: 1200 Microsoft Points
    Availability: Not available in Asia, India or New Zealand
    Dash Text: Play through more than 14 levels of bedlam set against the expansive backdrop of ancient Egypt. Embrace the mayhem with up to four players through online co-op on Xbox LIVE. Post your hard-earned score to the leaderboards. Earn all those wicked achievements. There are no refunds for this item. For more information, see www.xbox.com/live/accounts.

     

    Add Serious Sam HD: TFE to your Xbox 360 download queue

     

     

  • ‘Best of Pride’ starts this Friday on Spike

    Pride Fighting Championships will be resurrected — sort of — this Friday on Spike. Highlights from the Japanese promotion that is a favorite for hardcore MMA fans will be shown starting Friday, Jan. 15, at 10 p.m. ET. To whet your appetite, here is a bout between Chuck Liddell and a much-thinner Alistair Overeem.

    I’m sure that the UFC, who now owns all of Pride’s video library, has no ulterior motive in releasing this particular video. There is no way they released this fight because they want to show one of their great former champions beating down on the current Strikeforce heavyweight champion, right? Right.

    No matter the reasoning behind the fights chosen, all MMA fans should set their DVR for "Best of Pride." If you haven’t watched Pride yet, you don’t want to miss seeing Wanderlei Silva in his prime, the ring, footstomps, longer rounds and as they point out in the ad, giant checks. 

  • Netflix streaming to hit the Wii this Spring

    netflix_could_come_to_wii_soon_says_analyst
    The good news: read the headline again.
    The bad news: You’ll need to use a disc like in the PS3 and the Wii cannot output video over 480p. [via NYT]


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • What happened to “our bandwith”

    OK let me start here;

    Who remembers all the hype around Neotel coming to SA to save us from Helkom, MTN and Voda and we thought we will surf till our eyes drop out with close to nothing prices of broadband.
    Then there was the hype of the SEACOM cable landing in SA and the speeds of our internet will triple and even a broke man will surf and pay close to nothing and guys like us bought plenty of online games hoping we will play more online without having the terrible online delays and its not funny playing against the Americans and Europeans who use optic cables, your bullets take ages to get across the battlefield and by that time you will be dead AGAIN.

    So now I have stopped playing games and I became a bit serious with my online business and I never disconnect from 9am to 2 am the following day. What is so irritating me are the bandwidth prices of wireless networks like MTN, Voda, iBurst and the "savior" Neotel. The prices are so NOT affordable for many South Africans. Wireless technology in SA is essential therefore the prices should not be a ripoff. I for example buy 4 gigs for my little company with 2 "informal" employees and 2 gigs for me. The whole amount will be summoned up to R1200 per month for 3G internet and that’s crazy but I still pay.

    I do see a price drop with the fixed line sector and that’s welcome BUT the fact is that most people in SA dont use the fixed line for many reasons therefore they will never benefit from the price drops and the real deal should be a drop in the wireless sector.

    I truly and strongly believe that we are being taken for a ride by the wireless sector when it comes to the internet prices and I wonder what should be done for these prices to be dropped dramatically as it hurts small businesses and communication advancement in SA.

  • Algeria : Alleged Violence Against Autonomist Movement in Kabylia

    Algeria : Alleged Violence Against Autonomist Movement in Kabylia

    PARIS, January 12 /PRNewswire/ — Today, January 12th, the Kabyle Movement for independence (KMI) claim that Algerian police have clashed with thousands of protestors from their organisation in Tizi Ouzou and Vgayet.
    The KMI believe that the Algerian army have used force against this peaceful protest, arrested dozens and caused injuries among hundreds of protesters.
    The number of people who participated in this demonstration is estimated to be15000 protestors according to organizers, and 7000 persons according to Algerian police.
    The leader of the Kabyle Movement for independence (KMI), Ferhat Mehheni, has warned that the members of the KMI living in Algeria are in need of international protection since they feel threatened and fear for their lives.
    Under the pressure of the Algerian authorities, Fehrat Mehenni has been forced to live in Algeria and is now in exile in France.
    In June 2004, his son Amezianne was killed in an unsolved case.
    In 2007, the region of Tizzi ouzzou was the theatre of riots and the repression of the Algerian forces, known as the Martyrs of the Black Spring, which lead to the death of hundreds of civil victims.

    source http://houston.bizjournals.com/houst…/01/12/UKTU021

    http://www.euroinvestor.fr/news/story.aspx?id=10825871

  • Heidi Montag Broke After Dropping $2 Million On “Superficial” Album

    Did Heidi Montag-Pratt just say she dropped $2 million on her new album? After three years and a pair of chuckle-worthy music videos, The Hills star independently released her debut album, Superficial, digitally on Tuesday. Despite frequent delays and little public support for the disc, Heidi can see comparable similarities between Superficial and Michael Jackson’s groundbreaking 1982 album, Thriller (No comment….) In fact, the silver spoon-fed blonde so confident that this set is her finest hour, she’s dumped her entire $2 million life savings into the project.

    “I put every dollar I have into this,” an empassionated Heidi told Entertainment Weekly Tuesday. “I’ve spent over a million, almost $2 million on this album. It’s cost as much or more than a Britney Spears album, because I wanted it to be that quality and to be able to get those people. My album would have cost a record label over $4 million,” she added. “Most artists, it’s not their own money, but I’ve actually gone broke putting every dollar I’ve ever made and my heart and soul into this music. This is my gamble. This is my chance.”

    So what happens if — by some fluke of nature — Heidi does not recoup all that money she’s spent?

    “That’s not even a possibility,” Heidi scoffed. “I think within the first week we will definitely make our money back. The songs will make an impact in pop history.”

    There is none so blind as she who will not HEAR! Girl, you cannot sing!


  • No fivesomes, please: Sleepers for the Sony Open

    http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/ept_sports_fantasy_experts__23/ept_sports_fantasy_experts-659571096-1263392612.jpg?ymkt2gCDIGFJQqQmFantasy golf season is here and I want to give you a hand (well, at least until the baseball season starts up again). So once a week I’ll be blogging here and discussing some less-than-obvious picks that I like for the upcoming PGA Tour event. Keep the lines of communication open, amigos; help me to help you.

    This week we head to the Sony Open in Hawaii, a fun place to be so long as you’re not vacationing with the Brady Kids. Let’s see what diamonds in the rough we can uncover.

    Jerry Kelly: I’ve always had a soft spot for this guy; maybe it’s his Midwestern roots, maybe it’s the fact that he went to college at the University of Hartford (cue up the Brass Bonanza), maybe it’s the fact that he needs the little things to succeed on the course because he’s not a long hitter. Kelly knows what it takes to succeed at Waialae Country Club – he won the Sony Open in 2002 and he’s had plenty of strong finishes since then (4, 5, cut, 13, 13, 3).

    Rickie Fowler: He was a hit in limited time on tour last year, in part because no one told the 21-year-old how difficult it truly is to make a go of it out here. Like Webb Simpson early last season, I’m going to use Fowler in the early events when his enthusiasm and energy can hopefully make up for the experience and course knowledge he’s spotting the rest of the field.

    Bo Van Pelt: I’ve always been surprised he hasn’t gotten more mileage from his underrated ball-striking skills. You’re going the risk-reward route with Van Pelt – he’s missed 5-of-8 cuts at this stop – but I like the fact that two of his checks landed him in the Top 15. If he can survive into the weekend, maybe something can happen. The long-overdue win from 2009 should give him an extra surge of confidence this year. Linus and Lucy are rooting for you, big guy.

    Pat Perez, Charles Howell: I’m using the same angle for these guys so I’ll lump them into one pick – we’ve learned over the years that it’s best to ride these horses early in the season, then tread carefully during the summer months. Both players have snappy resumes here (Perez offers 6-of-8 cuts made, five Top 20s, fourth two years back; Howell has never missed the cut, and he’s bagged four Top-4 finishes).

    Carl Pettersson: Let’s examine his money-list finish over the six years: 52nd, 31st, 16th, 40th, 21st, 142nd. Talent just doesn’t wither away overnight; this guy won three tournaments from 2005-2008 and cashed 20 checks or more for five straight years before last season. Put him on the "last year’s bums" list and enjoy your discount. He’s just 2-for-5 at the Sony, though he did finish tenth in 2006.

    You want a pick of the non-obvious variety? Give me David Toms and Robert Allenby (he‘ll win this year). I look forward your angles and selections in the comments.

    Photo via US Presswire

  • Targeted Genetics Exits Nasdaq

    Luke Timmerman wrote:

    Targeted Genetics, the Seattle-based developer of gene therapies that went public back in 1994, said today it has decided to allow its stock (NASDAQ: TGEN) to be delisted from the Nasdaq in order to conserve cash. The company has the equivalent of just six full-time employees, and the company is planning to further reduce costs by switching CEO Susan Robinson and David Poston, the chief financial officer, to part-time status, the company said. Targeted Genetics had $4.5 million in cash on hand heading into this year, the company said. The stock closed trading yesterday at 32 cents.







  • Momofuku by David Chang and Peter Meehan, photographs by Gabriele Stabile

    Don’t even open this book without a very full stomach, because you’ll be salivating almost immediately. Culinary bad-boy David Chang, creator of the impossible-to-get-in restaurants of the Momofuku chain (noodle barssäm barkomilk bar, and má pêche coming soon) surely knows how to feed. He’s a Korean American by way of Alexandria, Virginia, who got tired of pushing papers around after Trinity College, and headed to Japan to “teach English by day, eat noodles the rest of the time, and maybe at some point figure out what I was going to do with myself.” That notorious love of noodles sent him back to the States and the French Culinary Institute. Degree in hand, Chang went from kitchen to kitchen, from New York to Tokyo and back to New York … and finally to founding the now-legendary Momofuku.

    The logo represents the “lucky peach,” a direct translation of the Japanese name. It’s also an homage to instant noodle king Momofuku Ando, the late founder of Nissin Foods (yes, those ubiquitous Cup Noodles you find everywhere and anywhere). But more than that, my own initial reaction to the name actually gets justified on page 28 (which is not fit for family-friendly audiences, ahem): “And then there’s the homonymous quality. The restaurant was, for me, a %#&$-you to so many things. Me – a Korean American – making Japanese ramen was ridiculous on its face. Me – a passable but not much better cook – opening up a restaurant while my peers, guys I worked with who were so much more talented than me, were still toiling under other regimes, paying their dues, learning. It was no accident that Momofuku sounds like mother%#&$@^.”

    The rest is, indeed, culinary history …

    Together with food writer Peter Meehan (who adamantly admits he “hated Momofuku Noodle Bar the first time [he] went there,” but eventually became a regular), the pair have created one toothsome cookbook with deliciously memorable potty-mouthed stories in between to keep you reading (and cooking). For the unlucky peaches who can’t score a seat, we can at least drool over the pictures and hope our own cooking skills can at least approximate some of their lucky fare … are you hungry yet??!!

    Readers: Adult

    Published: 2009

  • Be Remarkable!

    Chocolate heart on a pink gerbera daisy flower for you! (square)
    Creative Commons License photo credit: Vanessa Pike-Russell

    "I will not die an unlived life. I will not live in fear of falling or catching fire. I choose to inhabit my days, to allow my living to open me, to make me less afraid, more accessible, to loosen my heart until it becomes a wing, a torch, a promise. I choose to risk my significance; to live so that which comes to me as seed goes to the next as blossom and that which comes to me as blossom, goes on as fruit." ~ Dawna Markova

    Who are you? 

    Really, who are you?  Do you know?

    More than your name.  More than your address.  More than some title on a business card. 

    Who are you?

    Deep within YOU, what is it that makes you so unique, so amazing, so incredible, so YOU?

    Hint:  It IS there.

    Have you discovered it?  Lived it?

    What is it that makes you come alive, lose track of time, imagine the possibilities, jump up and down, get lost in thought, smile for no reason at all?

    Find that piece of YOU – that piece which sings YOUR song!

    Be Remarkable! 

    Comments are closed.

  • Obama Executive Order Stokes Martial Law Fears

    ‘An Obama executive order that creates a
    council of state governors who will work with the feds to expand
    military involvement in domestic security has stoked fears that the
    administration is stepping up preparations for martial law.

    The order, which is entitled
    Establishment of the Council of Governors (PDF), creates a body of ten
    state governors directly appointed by Obama who will work with the
    federal government to help advance the “synchronization and
    integration of State and Federal military activities in the United
    States”.’

    Read more…

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  • Red Bull Racing iPhone Game Now Available

    The official game for the Red Bull Racing Formula One team is available on the iPhone and iPod touch platform, Artificial Life announced today. Dubbed Red Bull Racing Challenge, the game is retailing at $2.99 and allows players to steer the RB5 through the tracks of the 2009 season’s calendar.

    The game allows players to compete for the championship and share their records on the Online Leaderboards or race against the clock and record their best lap times. In between races, players can visit … (read more)

  • Obama Received $20 Million From Healthcare Industry in 2008 Campaign

    While some sunlight has been shed on the
    hefty sums shoveled into congressional campaign coffers in an effort to
    influence the Democrats’ massive healthcare bill, little attention has
    been focused on the far larger sums received by President Barack Obama
    while he was a candidate in 2008.

    A new figure, based on an exclusive
    analysis created for Raw Story by the Center for Responsive Politics,
    shows that President Obama received a staggering $20,175,303 from the
    healthcare industry during the 2008 election cycle, nearly three times
    the amount of his presidential rival John McCain. McCain took in
    $7,758,289, the Center found.’

    Read more…

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  • Netanyahu: Israel Will Never Share Jerusalem with Palestinians

     

    ‘Prime Minister Benjamin
    Netanyahu declared on Tuesday that Israel would never cede control of
    united Jerusalem nor retreat to the 1967 borders, according to a bureau
    statement.
    The statement came after
    Egypt’s foreign minister said in Cairo last week that Netanyahu was
    ready to discuss making “Arab Jerusalem” the capital of a Palestinian
    state.’

    Read more…

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  • Securities and Exchange Commission Orders AIG Information Sealed Until 2018

    ‘It could take until November 2018 to get
    the full story behind the U.S. bailout of insurance giant American
    International Group because of an action taken last year by the
    Securities and Exchange Commission. 

    In May, the SEC approved a request by AIG to keep secret an exhibit
    to a year-old regulatory filing that includes some of the details on
    the most controversial aspect of the AIG bailout: the funneling of tens
    of billions of dollars to big banks like Societe Generale, Goldman
    Sachs, Deutsche Bank and Merrill Lynch.’

    Read more…

    Anyone see a slight conflict of interest here???

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  • After This Awful Fiasco Over Swine Flu, We Should Never Believe the State Scare Machine Again

    ‘So the Government, as the Daily Mail
    has revealed, is trying to get rid of £1billion-worth of unwanted
    swine flu vaccine – because the deadly epidemic they were promising us
    all last year never materialised.

    Several things are shocking about this
    revelation, not least the charge by the Council of Europe’s head of
    health that major drug companies might have leaned on the World Health
    Organisation (WHO) to stoke up last year’s scare by warning that swine
    flu could be a worldwide ‘pandemic’ killing tens of millions.
    Certainly,
    those companies have made vast fortunes out of selling the vaccines
    which, at our expense, are now having to be flogged off at give-away
    prices.’

    Read more…

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  • Bayer Aspirin, Illuminated Nazi’s, and Heroin

    ‘At the time, opium was
    either being banned or in the process of being banned in most Western
    Countries. With “heroin”, Bayer’s relabeling of a narcotic was/is
    standard procedure for any Illuminati owned pharmaceutical company.
    Claiming it was “non-addictive”, when in reality it was a purer form of
    chemically synthesized Opium, is criminal at best. Even more
    interesting:

    “As part of the
    reparations after World War I, Bayer had its assets, including the
    rights to its name and trademarks confiscated in the United States,
    Canada, and several other countries. In the United States and Canada,
    Bayer’s assets and trademarks were acquired by Sterling Drug, a
    predecessor of Sterling Winthrop.

    The Bayer company then
    became part of IG Farben, a conglomerate of German chemical industries
    that formed a part of the financial core of the German Nazi regime”.’

    Read more…

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  • Turn Your MacBook TrackPad Into an Inking Machine With Inklet

    I knew it was only a matter of time until some developer figured out a way to turn the big trackpad on the MacBooks into a little tablet. The folks at Ten One Design have stepped up to the plate with Inklet, a program that does quite a bit. Inklet accepts input from the fingertip, but adds even more functionality when used with the company’s Pogo Sketch ($14.95) stylus. The Pogo Sketch is designed to add stylus control over touchscreens, and that includes the MacBook trackpad.

    While Inklet ($24.95) is designed to allow drawing into programs that accept such input, it also leverages the handwriting recognition built into OS X to convert handwritten input into text. The program has palm rejection to prevent inadvertent input when the palm is resting on the trackpad. To appreciate what Inklet can do, have a look at this video: