General Finance News

Latest Financial News and Advices from all over the World.

The financial/administrative dangers and pitfalls entailed in pension scheme wind ups are numerous and complicated in that they engage a variety of duties and discretions on the part of trustees. Lay and Independent Pension Trustees will be liable for any mistakes made in the administration of winding up an insolvent or no longer viable occupational pension fund, as well as any steps not taken which should have been in order to safeguard the interests of the beneficiaries. This requirement is of particular importance during the winding up of a pension scheme, and arguably even more important than the day-to-day management of a viable scheme, as the interests of members are by definition jeopardised and really what is being carried out might be described as crucial damage limitation to safeguard employees future income.

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CBA: Targets Dispute Momentum Grows

Posted by Erin Johnson On Nov - 22 - 2011

 
Next steps
 
Members in each branch currently involved in the dispute should quickly complete local endorsement of the delegation to management. They should also complete the surveys that ask for details of the impact on individuals from the targets and performance regime. Finally, these members should continue to wear the orange wrist bands to signify a commitment to change.
 
Members in other workplaces interested in joining the move for change should talk to their workplace reps and arrange local meetings supported by the union office.

Australia approves $11 billion Foster’s sale to SABMiller

Posted by Ashley Wilson On Nov - 21 - 2011

CANBERRA (Reuters) – Australias government approved on Friday SABMillers A11.5 billion (11.2 billion) deal to acquire Fosters Group Ltd under foreign acquisitions laws, but imposed conditions requiring the company to keep brewing operations in Australia.

The government approval is the final regulatory condition to be cleared ahead of the Fosters shareholders vote set for December 1, which is expected to pass the deal.

Treasurer Wayne Swan, who also approved acquisition of the remaining 50 percent of Pacific Beverages now owned by Coca-Cola Amatil, said SABMiller must keep management of the iconic Australian beer brand in Australia.

SABMiller must also continue to invest in Fosters, the maker of Victoria Bitter, Carlton Draught and Pure Blonde, and not shift any of Fosters existing brewing facilities offshore to produce beer for the Australian domestic market, he said.

“SABMiller has agreed to a number of undertakings which recognize the significance of Fosters to our economy and to our community, and support Australian jobs,” Swan said in a statement.

SABMiller last week raised its cash takeover offer for Fosters to A5.40 a share to make up for the loss of a 30 cents capital return after a tax ruling from Australian authorities.

The move made no difference to the total enterprise value of the deal, including debt.

The takeover requires approval of 75 percent of votes the December 1 meeting and has wide support from institutional investors.

SABMiller said the undertakings it had agreed with the Australian government on the takeover of Fosters were consistent with its plans for the business.

“Given the local nature of Fosters brewing business and its focus on Australian customers, these undertakings are consistent with our current intentions for the business, and will not affect our ability to integrate Fosters and PacBev or to compete effectively in Australia,” the UK-based brewer said in a statement.

SABMiller expects its biggest ever takeover deal to close by the end of the year and put it at the head of the Australian beer market with a near-50 percent share.

Growth in sales is expected to slow in 2011-12 as competition intensifies and the battle for market share depresses prices and margins.

Traditional brewers are also under increasing competition from smaller craft brewers in a local alcohol market expected to be worth around A30 billion by 2016.

The Fosters deal is part of SABMillers strategy of creating an attractive global spread of businesses to add to operations largely in the emerging markets of Africa, Latin America, Asia and Eastern Europe, but also in the United States.

The London-based brewer of Peroni, Miller Lite and Grolsch launched its initial bid for Fosters at A4.90 a share, on June 21 and then went hostile by taking the offer direct to shareholders at the same price on Aug 17, but Fosters rejected both as being too low.

Peace broke out in the acrimonious battle after SABMiller offered to raise its cash bid to A5.10, and Fosters shareholders would get the capital return and keep Fosters final dividend of 13.25 cents.

Fosters has been struggling with declining volumes as demand for traditional beers falls, and its market share has fallen to 50 percent from 55 percent.

Fosters has retreated back into Australia, giving up its global beer empire and split its wine business in May, paving the way for a sale of the beer business that boasts one of the industrys highest profit margins. <

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Weekly Wrap: Bank of America’s PR Troubles

Posted by Emily Robinson On Nov - 18 - 2011

Bank of Americas public relations team must have had a brutal week. Lets talk about it!

When you control and make money off of millions of peoples homes, life savings, and debt, keeping a good public image is key to keeping customers happy and attracting new relationships — in turn keeping revenue-generating assets and deposits around. In a down economy, with loads of new regulations, this becomes a bit trickier — it becomes harder to generate revenue off of deposits and assets, and banks must trim the fat.

Indeed, with new regulations instead of bailouts from Washington, banks are finally paying the price for helping torpedo the global economy. Cus

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Stocks got off on a positive note this morning, but resisted the temptation to climb based on a positive reading of the leading econonmic indicators and higher estimates of US GDP growth in the fourth quarter. Consumer spending appears to be higher than expected and retailers’ inventories are falling which should lead to some re-stocking before the holiday shopping season kicks in with real force. Crude oil prices have fallen about -1.4% today, to below $97.50/barrel. Volume has been reasonably heavy as today brings the expiration of options. Gold prices are up a bit at $1,725.80. See our earlier story on the countries that own the world’s gold.

The unofficial closing bells put the DJIA up more than 25 points to 11,796.23 (0.22%), the NASDAQ fell more than 15 points (-0.60%) to 2,572.50, and the S&P 500 fell 0.04% or about 0.48 points to 1,215.65.

There were several analyst upgrades and downgrades today, including Hewlett-Packard Co. (NY

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Eurozone Debt Headlines Continue To Dictate Market Movement

Posted by Erin Johnson On Nov - 15 - 2011

– The major U.S. index futures are pointing to a higher opening on Friday, with sentiment getting a boost from a modest retraction in European bond yields. Nevertheless, the sovereign debt crisis plaguing the eurozone region is simmering on, with no end close at sight. The nervousness is palpable in the European markets, which are currently trading mixed. Risk appetite is picking up modestly, as reflected by the rebound seen in commodity prices. Despite this, the still-unresolved nature of the debt crisis could keep the major averages within recent trading ranges.

After bouncing moving back and forth across the unchanged line in a narrow range until the mid-session on Thursday, the major U.S. averages declined sharply before going about a consolidation move in the afternoon.

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Charitable giving in straightened times

Posted by Emily Robinson On Nov - 12 - 2011

Although the amount given to charities by private donors rose last year after falling back in the wake of the financial crisis, the sector faces significant threats from government cuts and the possibility the eurozone crisis could plunge the UK back into recession.

Personal donations decreased by 11% to £9.9 billion between 2007/08 and 2008/09, according to the 2010 UK Giving Report from the Charities Aid Foundation (CAF) and the National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO).

While the amount given last year rose to £10.6 billion, many charities are still feeling the after-effects of the downturn. The CAF calculate that charity surpluses – the amount of money charities have to fund additional operations and expand dropped by 60% between 2007 and 2009, and were last year lower in real terms than in 2002.

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Chevrolet Volt fires raise safety concerns

Posted by Erin Johnson On Nov - 10 - 2011

Investigations have been launched following two recent reports of fires involving the Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid. One report, involving a Volt that had been crash-tested by the government, centered on the cars lithium-ion traction batteries. The other incident was a North Carolina garage fire in which a Volt was reportedly being charged. The cause of the latter fire is still under investigation.

The reports call into question the safety of the lithium batteries used in all the latest plug-in electric cars. The same type of batteries caused several fires in laptop computers from Apple and Dell in 2006.

The reports raise the point that lithium batteries are still a fairly new technology and we may not understand all the safety implications. Compared with gasoline stored in a metal or plastic tank, however, lithium batteries seem pretty safe.

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