GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES: “ALERT 6 DEC 2008”
December 6, 2008 at 11:09 am | Posted in Earth, Research, Science & Technology, USA, World-system | Leave a comment
Global Biogeochemical Cycles –
Alert 6 Dec 2008
Sat 12/06/08
AGU E-Alert (alerts@agu.org)
New articles published in Global Biogeochemical Cycles are available online.
Visit http://www.agu.org/pubs/current/gb/
PAPERS IN PRESS: access accepted manuscripts within days of acceptance.
Visit http://www.agu.org/pubs/pip.html
(subscription required)
Top downloads: http://www.agu.org/topdownloads/topdownloads.shtml
Journal subscriptions: http://www.agu.org/pubs/agu_jourinfo.html
Global Biogeochemical Cycles – Published Past 7 Days
Yao, T., Y. Liu, S. Kang, N. Jiao, Y. Zeng, X. Liu, and Y. Zhang (2008),
Bacteria variabilities in a Tibetan ice core and their relations with climate change,
Global Biogeochem. Cycles, 22, GB4017, http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2007GB003140
4 December 2008
Quaife, T., S. Quegan, M. Disney, P. Lewis, M. Lomas, and F. I. Woodward (2008),
Impact of land cover uncertainties on estimates of biospheric carbon fluxes,
Global Biogeochem. Cycles, 22, GB4016, http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2007GB003097
4 December 2008
Zeng, N., J. Yoon, A. Vintzileos, G. J. Collatz, E. Kalnay, A. Mariotti, A. Kumar, A. Busalacchi, and S. Lord (2008),
Dynamical prediction of terrestrial ecosystems and the global carbon cycle: A 25-year hindcast experiment,
Global Biogeochem. Cycles, 22, GB4015, http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2008GB003183
4 December 2008
Worrall, F., T. P. Burt, and J. K. Adamson (2008),
Linking pulses of atmospheric deposition to DOC release in an upland peat-covered catchment,
Global Biogeochem. Cycles, 22, GB4014, http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2008GB003177
2 December 2008
Global Biogeochemical Cycles –
Alert 6 Dec 2008
http://www.agu.org/pubs/current/gb/
Sat 12/06/08
KANSAS CITY FED: “RELEASE DATES FOR THE MONTHLY MANUFACTURING SURVEY”
December 6, 2008 at 10:19 am | Posted in Economics, Financial, Research, USA | Leave a commentFederal Reserve Bank of Kansas
City Press release
Kansas City Fed: “Release Dates for the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s Monthly Manufacturing Survey.”
KC Fed Update
(KCFedUpdate@kansascityfed.org)
Sat 12/06/08
The following information is now available on the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s Web site:
Read the latest press release from the Kansas City Fed: “Release Dates for the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s Monthly Manufacturing Survey.”
http://www.KansasCityFed.org/pubaffrs/pressrel/prmain.htm?ealert=PR1205
For additional information, visit the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s Web site. http://www.kansascityfed.org
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
Press release
Kansas City Fed: “Release Dates for the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s Monthly Manufacturing Survey.”
KC Fed Update (KCFedUpdate@kansascityfed.org)
Sat 12/06/08
IAEA VIDEO: NUCLEAR SCIENCE FOR FOOD SECURITY
December 6, 2008 at 12:02 am | Posted in Development, Earth, Globalization, Research, Science & Technology, Third World, World-system | Leave a comment“AFC MARKET WATCH REPORT”: ARAB FINANCE CORPORATION LEBANON
December 5, 2008 at 7:50 pm | Posted in Arabs, Economics, Financial, Middle East, Research | Leave a commentAFC Market Watch
Arab Finance Corporation (research@afc.com.lb)
Fri 12/05/08
Dear Sirs,
You will find the AFC Market Watch Report by clicking on the following link:
http://www.afc.com.lb/Documents/Research/weeklyreport.pdf
contact the financial markets desk at
or call us 24-hour on 9611747542.
Sincerely Yours,
Arab Finance Corporation sal
AFC Market Watch
Arab Finance Corporation (research@afc.com.lb)
Fri 12/05/08
“FRAMEWORK FOR FINANCIAL STABILITY”: SAMUEL BRITTAN “FINANCIAL TIMES”
December 5, 2008 at 3:41 pm | Posted in Economics, Financial, Globalization, Research, United Kingdom, USA | Leave a commentNew Samuel Brittan article – ‘A
framework for economic stability’
‘A framework for economic stability’
Fri 12/05/08
The Financial Times 05/12/08
‘A framework for economic stability’
The reduction to 2 per cent and 2.5 per cent of the Bank of England’s and European Central Bank’s respective official interest rates may be historically unprecedented, but it is the least the two central banks could have got away with. Their measured step-by-step approach falls below the level of events and makes me wish that the US Federal Reserve were in charge of policy on the European side of the Atlantic as well.
http://www.samuelbrittan.co.uk/text324_p.html
http://www.samuelbrittan.co.uk
New Samuel Brittan article –
‘A framework for economic stability’
Fri 12/05/08
BANK FOR INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS BIS REVIEW NO. 151: EXTREME EVENTS IN FINANCE
December 5, 2008 at 12:13 pm | Posted in Economics, Financial, Globalization, Research | Leave a commentBIS Review
Bank for International Settlements
BIS Review No 151 available
Press, Service (Press.Service@bis.org)
Publications, Service (Publications@bis.org)
bisrev151…pdf (86.6 KB)
Fri 12/05/08
Please find BIS Review No 151 attached as an Adobe Acrobat (PDF) file.
Alternatively, you can access this BIS Review on the Bank for International Settlements’ website by clicking on http://www.bis.org/review/index.htm.
What’s included?
BIS Review No 151 (5 December 2008)
European Central Bank: Press conference – introductory statement
Masaaki Shirakawa: Recent financial and economic developments and the conduct of monetary policy
Emmanuel Tumusiime-Mutebile: Uganda’s new Credit Reference Bureau
Jean-Pierre Landau: Extreme events in finance – some reflexions
Ferenc Karvalits: The impact of financial turmoil on the Hungarian economy
________________________________
BIS Review
Bank for International Settlements
BIS Review No 151 available
Press, Service (Press.Service@bis.org)
Publications, Service (Publications@bis.org)
http://www.bis.org/review/index.htm.
Fri 12/05/08
“PANIC: THE HISTORY OF MODERN FINANCIAL INSANITY”: MICHAEL LEWIS BOOK
December 5, 2008 at 4:41 am | Posted in Books, Economics, Financial, Research, USA | Leave a commentPanic: The Story of Modern Financial Insanity
by Michael Lewis (Editor)
Editorial Reviews
Product Description
A masterful account of today’s money culture, showing how the underpricing of risk leads to catastrophe.
When it comes to markets, the first deadly sin is greed. Michael Lewis is our jungle guide through five of the most violent and costly upheavals in recent financial history: the crash of ’87, the Russian default (and the subsequent collapse of Long-Term Capital Management), the Asian currency crisis of 1999, the Internet bubble, and the current sub-prime mortgage disaster. With his trademark humor and brilliant anecdotes, Lewis paints the mood and market factors leading up to each event, weaves contemporary accounts to show what people thought was happening at the time, and then, with the luxury of hindsight, analyzes what actually happened and what we should have learned from experience.
As he proved in Liar’s Poker, The New New Thing, and Moneyball, Lewis is without peer in his understanding of market forces and human foibles. He is also, arguably, the funniest serious writer in America.
About the Author
Michael Lewis‘s most recent best-selling book was The Blind Side. He lives in Berkeley, California, and is working on a book about New Orleans and Hurricane Katrina.
Michael Lewis, who previously wrote the popular book “Liar’s Poker,” takes his own spin on our country’s most notable financial catastrophes of the last twenty years. These include:
1. The 1987 stock market crash
2. Russian default and eventual failure of Long-Term Capital Management (hedge fund)
3. The Asian currency crisis
4. The bursting of the Internet stock bubble
5. And, of course, the recent subprime debacle
This book’s analysis is quite comprehensive, and, as you can imagine, the shortcoming of looking at so many factors is the treatment of each could be more thorough. The commentary and analysis that is there is excellent, and I learned a lot from it. Lewis spends a lot of time rehashing the best of past analyses from the likes of economists Joseph Stieglitz and Paul Krugman and Wall Street Journal reporters Gregory Zuckerman and Roger Lowenstein. There are excerpts from his own previous books and articles, including an account of his time as a trader at Salomon Brothers in the midst of the junk bond crash of 1987 and his observations on the Internet boom and bust. Overall his narrative is elegant and profound, and the arguments are on-target, including his lambasting of shoddy risk management at financial firms, foolish principles guiding sophisticated Wall Street traders, and the problems caused “by the new complexities of the financial markets.”
Product Details:
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The chapter list:
Introduction: Inside Wall Street’s Black Hole
Part I: A Brand-New Kind of Crash
1. Stephen Koepp, “Riding the Wild Bull”
2. Scott McMurray and Robert L. Rose, “The Crash of ’87: Chicago’s `Shadow Markets’ Led Free Fall in a Plunge That Began Right at Opening”
3. From the Brady Commission Report
4. Tim Metz, from Black Monday: The Catastrophe of October 19, 1987 … and Beyond
5. Michael Lewis, from Liar’s Poker: Rising through the Wreckage on Wall Street
6. Stephen Labaton, “The Lonely Feeling of Small Investors”
7. Richard J. Meislin, “Yuppies’ Last Rites Readied”
8. Eric J. Weiner, from What Goes Up
9. Lester C. Thurow, “Did the Computer Cause the Crash?”
10. Terri Thompson, “Crash-Proofing the Market; A Lot of Expert Opinions, but Few Results”
11. The Economist, “Short Circuits”
12. Robert J. Shiller, “Crash Course: Black Monday’s Biggest Lesson — Don’t Run Scared”
13. Franklin Edwards, from After the Crash
Part II: Foreigners Gone Wild
14. Reed Abelson, “Mutual Funds Quarterly Report; The Forecast Looks Brighter for Adventure Travel”
15. The New York Times, “Thailand Warns Currency Speculators”
16. David Holley, “A Thai Business Wonders, Will It All Crumble?”
17. Paul Krugman, Reporter Associate Jeremy Kahn, “Saving Asia”
18. Interview with Rob Johnson, from Frontline’s “The Crash”
19. The Economist, “Finance and Economics: A Detour or a Derailment?”
20. Michael Lewis, “Pulling Russia’s Chain”
21. Interview with Jeffrey D. Sachs, from Frontline’s “The Crash”
22. Michael Lewis, “How the Eggheads Cracked”
23. Joseph Stiglitz, “10 Years After the Asian Crisis, We’re Not Out of the Woods Yet”
24. Keith Bradsher, “Asia’s Long Road to Recovery”
25. Choe Sang-Hun, “Tracking an Online Trend, and a Route to Suicide”
Part III: The New New Panic
26. The New York Times, “Bigger Netscape Offering”
27. The New York Times, “Underwriters Raise Offer Price for Netscape Communication”
28. Laurence Zuckerman, “With Internet Cachet, Not Profit, a New Stock is Wall St.’s Darling”
29. Carrick Mollenkamp and Karen Lundegaard, “How Net Fever Sent Shares of a Firm on 3-Day Joy Ride”
30. Michael Lewis, “New New Money,” from The New New Thing
31. Rebecca Buckman and Aaron Lucchetti, “Cooling It: Wall Street Firms Try to Keep Internet Mania from Ending Badly”
32. Jack Willoughby, “Burning Up”
33. John Cassidy, from […]: The Greatest Story Ever Told
34. Erick Schonfeld, “The High Price of Research: Caveat Investor: Stock and Research Analysts Covering Dot-Coms Aren’t as Independent as You Think”
35. Katherine Mieszkowski, “[…]: Internet Companies Threw Millions into the Air at he Super Bowl. They’re Still Pretending They Scored a Touchdown.”
36. Mark Gimein, “Meet the Dumbest Dot-Com in the World”
37. James Surowiecki, “The Financial Page: How Mountebanks Became Moguls”
38. Jerry Useem, “Dot Coms: What Have We Learned”
39. Michael Lewis, “In Defense of the Boom”
Part IV: The People’s Panic
40. Dave Barry, “How to Get Rich in Real Estate,” from Dave Barry’s Money Secrets
41. John Hechinger, “Shaky Foundation: Rising Home Prices Cast Appraisers in a Harsh Light”
42. John Cassidy, “The Next Crash”
43. Robert Julavits, “As Bubble Speculation Rises, Industry Sees Little Fear”
44. Peter S. Goodman, “This Is the Sound of a Bubble Bursting”
45. Christopher Dodd, Opening Statement of Chairman Christopher Dodd, Hearing on “Mortgage Market Turmoil: Causes and Consequences”
46. James Surowiecki, “Subprime Homesick Blues”
47. Roger Lowenstein, “Triple-A Failure”
48. Larry Roberts, from “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer”
49. Kate Kelly, “Bear CEO’s Handling of Crisis Raises Issues”
50. Michael Lewis, “What Wall Street’s CEOs Don’t Know Can Kill You”
51. David Henry and Matthew Goldstein, “The Bear Flu: How It Spread”
52. Michael Lewis, “A Wall Street Trader Draws Some Subprime Lessons”
53. Paul Krugman, “After the Money’s Gone”
54. Matthew Lynn, “Hedge Funds Come Unstuck on Truth-Twisting, Lies”
55. Gregory Zuckerman, “Trader Made Billions on Subprime”
Panic: The Story of Modern Financial Insanity
by Michael Lewis (Editor)
GLOBALIZATION 2.0 CONFERENCE: THURSDAY MARCH 19 2009
December 4, 2008 at 11:09 pm | Posted in Economics, Financial, Globalization, Research | Leave a commentGlobal Finance’s Globalization 2.0 Conference
Invitation
Thursday, March 19, 2009 at the Harvard Club of New
York City
Global Finance Magazine (gfmail@gfmag.com)
Thu 12/04/08
Dear Global Finance Reader,
Top decision-makers are coping with forces that continue to re-shape the global financial landscape. Adapting to turbulent conditions and shifting events will lead to success in a rapidly evolving global market.
Globalization 2.0—The Conference, scheduled for Thursday, March 19, 2009 at the Harvard Club of New York City, brings together top business leaders for a front row seat to discuss strategies in this time of unprecedented change.
Global Finance’s exclusive one-day summit will open with a special keynote presentation by award-winning author Martin Wolf, Chief Economics Commentator of the Financial Times and former Senior Economist at the World Bank. Wolf offers timely insight from his latest book, “Fixing Global Finance: How to Curb Financial Crises in the 21st Century”, proposing ways to ensure financial stability in the future.
Five engaging panels will probe such hot topics as:
• The Crisis in Globalization: The New Financial Order
• Raising Capital: How to Select from a Changing Menu of Choices
• Emerging Markets: Lessons from China & India
• Debate: Can Market Forces Allocate Global Resources Without Destroying the Environment?
• Emerging Markets: The Corporate View. Brazil, Russia, Africa and the Middle East: the next wave of economies transitioning from emerging to developed.
Globalization 2.0 also offers the opportunity to network and share ideas with your peers, including CEOs, Presidents, and CFOs of multinational companies, Treasurers, Investment Bankers, Corporate Venture Capital Managers, and Strategic Investment Managers.
For more information, please visit www.gfmag.com/globalization
Global Finance’s Globalization 2.0 Conference Invitation
Global Finance Magazine (gfmail@gfmag.com)
Thu 12/04/08
BANK FOR INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS BIS REVIEW NO. 150: BERNANKE FINANCIAL CRISIS
December 4, 2008 at 4:04 pm | Posted in Economics, Financial, Globalization, Research | Leave a commentBIS Review
Bank for International Settlements
BIS Review No 150 available
Press, Service (Press.Service@bis.org)
Publications, Service (Publications@bis.org)
bisrev150…pdf (97.7 KB)
Thu 12/04/08
Please find BIS Review No 150 attached as an Adobe Acrobat (PDF) file.
Alternatively, you can access this BIS Review on the Bank for International Settlements’ website by clicking on http://www.bis.org/review/index.htm.
What’s included?
BIS Review No 150 (4 December 2008)
Jean-Pierre Roth: Fifteen months of financial crisis – a status report
Ben S Bernanke: Federal Reserve policies in the financial crisis
José de Gregorio: Price stability and financial stability – some thoughts on the current global financial crisis
Caleb M Fundanga: The importance of cross border information exchange for Zambia
Randall S Kroszner: The Community Reinvestment Act and the recent mortgage crisis
________________________________
please e-mail press.service@bis.org.
BIS Review
Bank for International Settlements
BIS Review No 150 available
Press, Service (Press.Service@bis.org)
Publications, Service (Publications@bis.org)
bisrev150…pdf (97.7 KB)
Thu 12/04/08
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF INSURANCE SUPERVISORS AGREEMENT WITH ISLAMIC FINANCIAL SERVICES BOARD
December 4, 2008 at 11:14 am | Posted in Financial, Globalization, Islam, Research | Leave a commentIAIS Press Release: IAIS signs working agreement with
the Islamic Financial Services Board
Press, Service (Press.Service@bis.org)
Publications, Service (Publications@bis.org)
IAIS_0812…pdf (63.6 KB)
Thu 12/04/08
The International Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS) and the Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB) today announced the signing of a working agreement which reinforces cooperation and mutual understanding between both organisations in the pursuit of the common goal of establishing a sound regulatory and supervisory framework for the insurance/Takāful industry.
For more information, see the attached press release.
Regards,
Press & Communications
Bank for International Settlements
IAIS Press Release: IAIS signs working agreement with the Islamic
Financial Services Board
Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB)
Press, Service (Press.Service@bis.org)
Publications, Service (Publications@bis.org)
IAIS_0812…pdf (63.6 KB)
Thu 12/04/08