BIG MARKET NEWS WEEK 23-29 JUNE 2014

China Monday, June 23, 2014 03:45  
 

CNY HSBC Manufacturing PMI (Jun)Preliminar
Japan Monday, June 23, 2014 08:00  
JPY Bank of Japan Governor Kuroda Speech
France  

Monday, June 23, 2014

 

09:00  
 
EUR Markit Manufacturing PMI (Jun)Preliminar
Germany

 

Monday, June 23, 2014 09:30

 

 
EUR Markit Manufacturing PMI (Jun)Preliminar
 

United States

 

Monday, June 23, 2014 16:00

 

 
 
USD   Existing Home Sales (MoM) (May)

 

 

 

Germany

Tuesday, June 24,    2014 10:00

 

 
 

EUR IFO – Business Climate (Jun)
United Kingdom Tuesday, June 24,    2014 10:30    

GBP Inflation Report Hearings
United States Tuesday, June 24,    2014 16:00  
USD Consumer Confidence (Jun)
 

United States

Tuesday, June 24,    2014

 

16:00

 

 
USD New Home Sales Change (MoM) (May)
United States Wednesday, June 25, 2014

 

14:30  
USD Durable Goods Orders (May)
United States Wednesday, June 25, 2014

 

14:30  
USD Gross Domestic Product Annualized (Q1)
United Kingdom Thursday, June 26, 2014 11:30  
GBP BOE’s Governor Carney speech
United States Thursday, June 26, 2014 14:30  
USD Continuing Jobless Claims (Jun 13)
New Zealand Thursday, June 26, 2014 00:45  
NZD Trade Balance (MoM) (May)
Japan Friday, June 27 2014 01:30  
JPY National Consumer Price Index (YoY) (May)
Japan Friday, June 27 2014 01:30  
JPY National CPI Ex Food, Energy (YoY) (May)
Japan Friday, June 27 2014 01:30  
JPY National CPI Ex-Fresh Food (YoY) (May)
Japan Friday, June 27 2014 01:30  
JPY Tokyo Consumer Price Index (YoY) (May)
Japan Friday, June 27 2014 01:30  
  JPY Tokyo CPI ex Food, Energy (YoY) (May)
Japan Friday, June 27 2014 01:30  
JPY Tokyo CPI ex Fresh Food (YoY) (May)
United Kingdom Friday, June 27 2014 01:30  
GBP Current Account (Q1)
United Kingdom Friday, June 27 2014 01:30  
GBP Gross Domestic Product (YoY) (Q1)
United Kingdom Friday, June 27 2014 01:30  
GBP Gross Domestic Product (QoQ) (Q1)

 

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Stenbeck transforms Swedish family firm into major online investor

Swedish-American heiress Cristina Stenbeck’s bet on the red-hot e-commerce business has caught the eye of investors, although doubters question the future of her Kinnevik group in a sector where new players emerge almost every day.

Shares in Kinnevik, which Stenbeck inherited at 24 on the sudden death of her father Jan, have more than doubled in half a dozen years and outstripped some of Sweden’s other renowned family investment firms under her leadership.

Yet some critics regard Kinnevik’s investment shift into online retailing where entry barriers are low as foolhardy. They question the team Stenbeck has built, saying that while it is strong on banking and financial experience, it lacks the operational ability to build long-lasting web businesses.

In its nearly 80-year history, Kinnevik has made a habit of leaping from one growth sector to the next.

http://www.reuters.com/

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Taxi medallions have been the best investment in America for years. Now Uber may be changing that.

CHICAGO — A taxicab is a car remade by government, modified dozens of ways by edicts within subsections of articles of the city’s taxi code.

“Everywhere on this car has been regulated,” John Henry Assabil says. “Look at it!”

He throws up his arms in the direction of his gold-colored 2012 Ford Transit Connect. The car’s medallion number — 813 — is painted in black plain gothic figures (must be black plain gothic figures) on the driver’s-side hood, on both passenger doors and, for good measure, on the rear. Inside, there is a camera mounted over the rear-view mirror, a dispatch radio bolted to the console, a credit-card reader snapped to the passenger headrest.

From the back of Assabil’s seat hangs a sign — lamination required — spelling out the city’s fare structure: $3.25 for the base rate, $2 for the airport departure/arrival tax, $50 vomit cleanup fee. Everywhere, there are mandatory stickers. “That one costs a dollar,” Assabil says of a window decal reminding passengers to LOOK! before opening the door into the possible path of cyclists and pedestrians. “The fine for not having it is $100.”

Then there are the holes. Several have been drilled into the roof to mount the top light that distinguishes cabs from other cars at a distance. Another has been punched right into the hood, bolting down the palm-size metal plate — the “medallion” itself — that gives Assabil the right to operate this cab, one of 6,904 in Chicago.

Every one of these requirements is a point of contention in the escalating battle between the cab industry and tech start-ups such as Uber and Lyft, which threaten to upend a pact that has long existed in Chicago and other cities: In exchange for all of this regulation, taxis have for decades held a government-backed monopoly. At the center of that bargain — and the debate over what form of transportation best serves the public — is the medallion.

Assabil, a 62-year-old immigrant from Ghana, and his wife own four. Each one grants him a license, which he’s free to sell, to operate a single cab among the limited supply in the city. As of last summer, a medallion in Chicago fetched around $350,000, a sum that would buy a comfortable condo overlooking Lake Michigan — and one that buyers often finance as they would a mortgage.

In New York, taxi medallions have topped $1 million. In Boston, $700,000. In Philadelphia, $400,000. In Miami, $300,000. Where medallions exist, they have outperformed even the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index. In Chicago, their value has doubled since 2009.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/

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