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Islamic finance course launched in Edinburgh

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Britains first postgraduate course in Islamic finance is to be launched today at the Islamic & Ethical Finance Conference in Edinburgh.

 

The MSc in Islamic accounting and finance will be taught at Dundee University, who created the course to meet rising demand from banks for professionals trained in the Islamic principles of banking.

 

Not many people have that combination of accounting and financial knowledge and how it relates to Islamic law so were hoping to bridge that gap, said Dr Rania Kamla, course director.

 

The course will include an introductory element to the main issues, the most popular products and how they relate to Sharia law, how they compare to other banks and the practice of Islamic banks.

 

Islamic finance is the fastest growing financial phenomenon in the world over the last 20 years, she added.

 

There are now 300 institutions worldwide that provide Islamic banking.

 

Islamic models of finance offer an ethical alternative to the western financial system, Kamla said.

 

There is a focus on ethical and social justice in Islamic finance and it has been viewed as an ethical alternative to traditional banking, particularly since the crisis in conventional banking, but there are challenges facing Islamic banking and the course will be looking at these too.

 

Further fears for Greece following central bank report

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There were further fears for debt-stricken Greece today after the country’s central bank, the Bank of Greece (BoG), said economic growth will fall this year by 2%, worse than the Government’s forecast of between 1.2% and 1.7%.

According to the BoG: “The Greek economy has fallen into a vicious circle with only one way out: the drastic reduction of the deficit and debt.”

The report warned that the euro zone’s economic recovery remains fragile, having depended on fiscal stimulus, which must gradually be reversed as it is resulting in large budget deficits.

The Bank’s annual monetary policy report comes prior to the European Union summit which may discuss Greece’s debt crisis.

At the EU summit scheduled for later this week, it is unsure whether euro zone countries will discuss Greece’s current situation.

Last week, the euro tumbled after Greek Prime Minister, George Papandreou, warned that Greece might have to seek help from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Mr Papandreou told the EU parliament in Brussels: “This is where Europe must come in and say ‘OK in this case we either can provide what an IMF would provide … or in the end Greece may have to choose the option to go to the IMF’.”

Greece is currently taking action to reduce its public deficit from 12% to 8% of GDP this year.

The country currently has the highest debt of the 16-member euro zone, at €300 billion (£273 billion) and its economy is considered to be the euro zone’s weakest.

Mr Papandreou is seeking assistance from fellow euro zone nations to make it cheaper to borrow funds on the international financial markets.

However, tension is growing between Greece and some of its fellow euro zone nations.

Germany said euro zone nations are in serious breach of fiscal rules should be expelled from the group.

Yesterday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel told Mr Papandreou that the EU was prepared to “do what is necessary to preserve the stability of the euro zone”.

Why MBAs are Going East (BusinessWeek)

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James Tsai is the sort of MBA corporate recruiters covet. He went to a good prep school, earned a degree with honors from Middlebury College, and made vice-president in Bank of America’s (bac.) international wealth management group at the age of 26. Today, Tsai is about to graduate, straight A’s in hand, from Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management, a top-rated program in America. And he’s hustling to land his first post-MBA job — in China.

Executive Class strivers like Tsai used to have just one post-grad career destination, the U.S. Not anymore. “I am doing everything I think I can to get over there,” he says.

Every era has its version of the MBA dream. In the 1980s, it was about conquering Wall Street and choppering off to the Hamptons. The late 1990s saw a stampede to Silicon Valley. In the mid-aughts, the gilded, clubby preserve of private equity beckoned. Now, the emerging narrative is about steroidal Asia and its promise of growth. At premiere institutions such as the University of Chicago’s Booth School, the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, and Northwestern’s Kellogg, the percentage of MBAs taking jobs in Asia — including U.S. students like Tsai as well as international students — has more than doubled in the past five years, from roughly 5% of the graduating class to more than 10%. “There is a sense that the center of gravity is shifting,” says Julie Morton, Booth’s associate dean for career services.

 

The number of students taking international jobs usually swells in a recession, says Kellogg Assistant Dean Roxanne Hori. But Hori and others believe that the refrain of “Go East, Young Man” is not a short-term response to the U.S. economic downturn but a structural shift toward an internationalized, mobile talent market. And right now, Asia is where the career velocity and opportunity are. “This has never really happened before, except in little spurts, where you have a fairly large group of talented, recent MBAs asking for assignments in China, Vietnam, India,” says Jeff Joerres, CEO of global staffing firm Manpower. Adds Richard Florida, professor at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management: “I don’t think many of us thought Asia would become the destination for top Western talent — but it is.”

One Word Of Advice

For many MBAs, the prospect of making a bigger impact faster is simply too good to pass up, especially now that the pay packages offered by both domestic and multinational companies are competitive with those in the U.S. Shortly before James Crawford, 30, headed to Columbia B-School two years ago, his dad sat him down in the kitchen of the family’s suburban Chicago home. Think of that scene in The Graduate, only instead of saying “plastics,” Crawford’s father’s advice was “Asia.” Today, Crawford is pursuing multiple opportunities there. “I can’t imagine a career over the next 30 years that would not require or give benefit to international experience,” he says. Asia fever has also hit Wharton student Andrew Maywah, 32, who had a cushy life working at Oracle (ORCL) in Silicon Valley before graduate school. Now he is juggling offers from three Chinese companies. “It’s like the Wild, Wild West.
There is just so much happening there,” he says. “I want to be at the center of it.”

So do many Chinese who emigrated to the U.S. when they were young. They find themselves breaking the news to their families that they’re chasing the same dream that lured their parents to the U.S., only in reverse. (What better time to leverage the family capital back in the old country?) The Chinese call these returnees hai gui, or sea turtles, referring to how these animals always return to their birthplace to lay their own eggs. Then there are the international students, who until recently would likely have stayed in the U.S. to learn the soft skills of Western management, and now are heading straight back home. Piyush Singhvi, 27, was born in India, grew up in the Middle East, and, before Wharton, worked at the Dubai-based private equity firm Abraaj Capital, the largest non-state-owned firm in the region. When Singhvi enrolled in Wharton in 2008 he was certain, he says, that he would stay in the U.S. after graduation like most of his peers. But then came the
financial crisis. “It was amazing to see how many people came in with the idea that they would stay in the West, and how that’s drastically changed to just the opposite,” he says. “There are a lot more opportunities in the East.”

On Facebook, Twitter, and Skype, MBAs swap stories about the adrenaline rush of working in an emerging market and the joys of geographic arbitrage. After graduating from Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, Quan Trinh, 27, who grew up in Virginia, took a job with Johnson & Johnson (jnj.) in Shanghai. There she partakes of an upper-crust-Manhattan-type lifestyle — food delivered to her door every night, a maid who picks up after her, a balcony apartment in a compound with a pool — at Albany (N.Y.) prices. Add to the mix that she travels around Asia with top J&J execs, working in the strategic planning division for the company’s diabetes business, and, she says, “sometimes I have to pinch myself.”

Standing Room Only

Asian companies used to rarely, if ever, come to American B-school campuses for recruiting season. Now at Wharton, Chinese firms like heavyweight investment bank China Investment Corp. and IT firm Tencent are showing up, says Wharton global careers director Sam Jones. This year, CICC played to standing-room-only crowds. At Kellogg, India-based Infosys (INFY) and Tata Group are now on hand for recruiting. The University of Chicago’s Booth School is seeing so much interest from Chinese companies that it recently opened a career services office in Hong Kong.

South Korea’s Samsung Electronics has been on a hiring tear. Last year the company signed 50 non-Korean MBAs from the top 10 business schools in the U.S., double the number of 2008, says Samsung Vice-President Kim Keun Bae. Those 50 were in addition to the dozens of ethnic Koreans that Samsung scooped up from MBA programs in America. At Kellogg, the company hired 16 business school graduates alone — more than U.S.-based hiring stalwarts General Mills (gis.) and Procter & Gamble (pg.) combined. The new hires work in Samsung’s Global Strategy Group, which does all of its business in English, advising top Samsung executives on internal consulting projects. This year the company is on track to again double its hiring of U.S.-born MBAs. “The young and smart from top U.S. business schools have helped provide fresh perspectives to our company,” says Kim. “Both foreign recruits and Korean employees learn from each other, and
that helps globalize the company.”

In many cases, companies like Samsung are acing out their American rivals in hiring the very best candidates. Kellogg graduate Jonathan Scearcy, 28, had 30 job offers last year, most from top U.S. companies. But he turned them all down to take a job at Samsung so he could “get international exposure early,” he says. “If you ever want to be at a C-suite, you have to have a global skill set and you have to have significant international exposure,” says Scearcy.

“Grooming Global Citizens”

Multinationals like Citibank (C), Pfizer (PFE), Eli Lilly (LLY), and Nike China are also broadening their international programs and amping up hiring for their Asia divisions. Last fall a phalanx of high-level IBM (IBM)ers hit premiere B-schools to talk up IBM’s new five-year boot camp for its general manager program. The program gives the new hires massive international exposure, especially in places like Asia. “We are looking to attract global citizens,” says Peggy Tayloe, IBM’s recruiting director. Big Blue recently flew the recruits to its Armonk [N.Y.] headquarters, where they sipped cocktails and nibbled canapes in the inner sanctum of the company’s plush C-suite. One of the new hires hobnobbing at the party was Harvard MBA Yashih Wu, who was born in California and graduated from Princeton University. Before B-school, she worked on Wall Street and Madison Avenue. But for her those
places aren’t the career destinations they used to be. Today, she says, “It’s impossible not to think globally about one’s career.”

How much longer can the Asian allure hold? With protectionist talk rising in America, and China trying to put the brakes on its rapidly growing economy, there’s always a chance that Asia could stumble. There’s also rising concern about what the migration East might mean for the U.S.’s competitive edge. “I can’t get out of my head that two-thirds of Silicon Valley companies were started by non-U.S. citizens,” says Manpower CEO Joerres. What if, after Stanford University, Google (goog.) co-founder Sergey Brin had returned to his birth country of Russia? What if James Tsai is about to do the Next Big Thing — but in his dad’s old country in Beijing? “The best and the brightest are leaving,” says the Rotman School’s Florida. “As a country, the U.S. has never confronted this before.”

With Moon Ihlwan in Seoul

Return to the B-School Life Table of Contents

Debt Settlement America Gives Back This Holiday Season

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(1888PressRelease) December 24, 2009 – Debt Settlement America (DSA) has offered a special gift to three families this holiday season by allowing them temporary deferments. A deferment means that the client will be able to skip their regularly scheduled fee payments for one to three months, essentially allowing them to receive DSA’s services for free during that time. Debt Settlement America has given out one, two, or three month deferments for these clients as a part of the company’s efforts to assist as many people as possible in as many ways as possible.

 

One client of DSA’s who has gone through a particularly rough year has three children, two of which suffer from disabilities. This client’s 11-year-old daughter and 9-month-old daughter both require special care and attention, which cause the family to spend large chunks of time and money in doctor’s visits and bills. Because this client is unemployed herself, her husband, a trucker, works extra hours to ensure that the family is provided for and that the medical bills are covered. Due to his long work hours and lengthy travels, he has only seen their nine-month-old daughter twice since she was born. Even through these hardships this family still manages to save money, and has settled two-thirds of their debt so far. Debt Settlement America has gifted this southern family a one-month deferment so that this father can be at home with his family and his new baby girl for the holidays.

 

Financial problems caused one of DSA’s west coast clients to lose her home to foreclosure, which also ended her marriage. Having lost her house and her husband, she was forced to move in with a friend, where she still pays rent. Once separated, her husband stopped helping pay off any of the debt they accumulated while still together. This client is now working to support her two young boys and resolve her debt without much support. Through it all, this client has shown determination to do everything she can to make ends meet and save to pay off her debt, and has already settled one of her accounts. This client continues to show strength to her boys to give them confidence in the future. Debt Settlement America has gifted this client a two-month deferment to help this client catch up and begin the new year on easier footing.

 

As a worker in the home improvement sector, an east coast client of DSA’s saw his pay reduced by $10,000 a year in the last year. Already in debt by that point, this client then moved his family across the country for work. Despite these challenges, this client managed to save and has settled almost half of his debt. The holiday season, however, has proven difficult for his business, and he is now struggling to meet his mortgage payments and to feed his wife and two young daughters. Debt Settlement America has gifted this family a three-month deferment to help this client get back on track financially during the slow months of his work and to allow him to continue providing for his family.

 

Debt Settlement America works to resolve unsecured debt for Americans all over the nation. Debt Settlement America’s debt negotiators work on a consumer’s behalf to secure settlement on their unsecured debts. This way, a consumer can pay off each creditor with one lump sum payment at a reduction from their original debt balance. These settlements are legally binding, and ensure that no further collection efforts or legal action will be taken on the settled accounts.

 

DSA (Debt Settlement America) is headquartered in Dallas, Texas and services clients across the nation. Since its inception in 2004, DSA has established itself as a leader in the debt settlement industry. DSA is a member of the US Chamber of Commerce, the Texas Association of Businesses, the American Bankers Association, and a Gold level member of the International Association of Professional Debt Arbitrators. DSA has been recognized as a TASC Best Practices accredited member company for the past three years.

 

To learn more about Debt Settlement America, or to receive a consultation free of charge, go to www.debt-settlement-america.com or call 866-433-7461.

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Making Some Money, a Few Ideas!

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Very few people get rich by their wages. But if you are an intelligent investor, you can be one of the elite groups. You can continue to make astounding gains if you are well versed with the stock market. You can also make thousands from the property market, gold, or by investing in the right sector at the right time. Of course, making millions of pounds everyday is not everyone’s cup of tea. But if certain ways are followed one can certainly achieve this with a special kind of knowledge.

Your hobbies can fetch you a few million pounds. Skills, contacts and knowledge that are gained and developed in hobbies like upholstery, or interior design, gardening or picture framing can boost your income. Such skills are god-gifted. Right from selling your work to teaching the craft to others, there are plenty of opportunities of making money.

If you are planning to set up a new venture, plan carefully to make it a success. You can come up with millions of ideas when you sit idle. All you need to do is take pen and paper and catch every idea that passes through your mind and jot it down. The ideas should be unique and should be your own invention. You can take suggestions from your family members and friends. Once you have finalised the theme of your new venture, research on similar businesses in your area. Find out what people want.

The Internet can be another lucrative area for creative people. Individuals with a talent for writing, drawing, photography or music can use the Internet to make enough to live comfortably at the same time do what they like to do professionally.

Commerzbank sells Dresdner Van Moer Courtens and the Belgian branch of Commerzbank International S.A. Luxembourg

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The transaction is still subject to the usual approvals from the authorities. The parties have agreed to maintain confidentiality about the details.

Dresdner Van Moer Courtens was founded in 2008 as a subsidiary of Dresdner Bank Luxembourg S.A. through the merger of asset managers Damien Courtens and Van Moer Santerre. It concentrates on wealthy private clients and securities trading.

The Belgian branch of Commerzbank International S.A. Luxembourg also operates in this area and was opened in 2006. At the end of 2008 both institutions together managed assets in the volume of EUR 615 million and employed 48 staff.

The Brussels branch of Commerzbank AG Frankfurt, which specializes in the corporate customer segment, will continue to be run by Commerzbank.

Press contact:

Simone Fuchs: +49 69 136 44910

pressestelle@ commerzbank.com

Student loans encourage culture of debt

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Students are racking up crippling debts because they’re not being taught the difference between student loans and other forms of credit, a financial education charity warned this week.

 

Chris Tapp, director of Credit Action, said because it’s “basically impossible” to get into difficulties with student loans, students are given the message that it’s fine to be in debt.

 

Tapp believes students should be taught the difference between student loans and other debts such as overdrafts and credit cards to help them avoid getting into financial difficulties.

 

“It’s important to make a distinction between the kind of burden that you face with student debt as opposed to any other type of debt,” he said.

 

“I don’t think that’s been done as effectively as it could have been by the government and others.”

 

Two years ago, before the onset of the credit crunch, Tapp warned that student loans were fostering a culture of debt that encouraged students to “live beyond their means”.

 

“We now have a generation for whom you’re extremely odd if you’re not in a substantial amount of debt. It’s that culture of borrowing that student loans have really fed into,” he said.

FX Asset Management teams up with Saxo Bank, and sees EUR/USD volatility

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(1888PressRelease) July 22, 2009 – FXAssetManagement.com specializing in managed forex options has teamed up with Saxo bank to provide clients unparalleled access to the true 24Hr FxOptions market in this era of “new normal”.

FXAssetManagement.com and ManagedForexOptions.com, to coincide with FXAssetManagement new website and Saxo’s new Fx Option Board ,has announced its focus on FX Options. It says it expects EUR/USD volatility similar to the 4th quarter last year.

In this era of the “new normal” of high risks and low returns such has been seen in the last 18 months as markets tumbled along with assets it would be sensible refer to an LA attorney for asset protection.

FXAssetManagement is giving clients what it feels is the best option to compete for and get the best returns. FXAssetManagement feels risk reward ratio should be much different and suggests people keep a large percentage in guaranteed and dividend yielding investments and take a smaller percentage and aim for higher returns.

Saxo bank provides an excellent platform for FXAssetManagement and it’s clients with a world class FX option product selection and protection of client funds. This FXAssetManagement says, is a tremendous combination providing it and its clients the best opportunities, as it expects EUR/USD volatility similar to the 4th quarter last year.

About

FXAssetManagement.Com is a COMMODITY TRADING ADVISOR REGISTERED, NFA ID#: 0391484 specializing in Transparent, Separately Managed Accounts, they can be contacted via its website www.FXAssetManagement.com or ManagedForexOptions.com Saxo Bank is a global investment bank specializing in online trading and investment across the international financial markets and is one of the world’s top 25 foreign exchange banks operating in the global capital markets.

Disclosure: The information provided in this document has been obtained or derived from sources believed to be reliable. FxAssetManagement Corporation, does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness, nor does FxAssetManagement Corporation assumes any liability for any loss that may result from the reliance by any person upon any such information or opinions.

Such information and opinions are subject to change without notice, are for general information only and are not intended as an offer or solicitation with respect to the purchase or sales of any foreign exchange transaction, or as personalized investment advice. In addition, any projections or views of the market provided by the author may not prove to be accurate. FxAssetManagement will not be responsible for any losses incurred on investments made by readers and clients as a result of any information contained.

LA Investment Capital Announces Five New Private Equity Funds for June 2009

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(1888PressRelease) June 20, 2009 – By taking advantage of the of a downturn market place where the supply of equity capital available for equity investments is far from reaching the demand or need for it, senior advisors and managers of LA Investment Capital look to make investments into early stage or growth stage companies that provide their equity funds a “value added investment opportunity with an opportunistic return on investment”.

LA Investment Capital prides itself on its ability make investments into US Companies that add jobs to the US Job Market while providing safe and high investment returns, and investments into foreign based companies that provide an elevated investment return potential to its US Based Equity Funds and Investors.

The Private Equity Funds offered by LA Investment Capital are termed “True Closed-End Private Equity Funds”, or as company officials call them, “Non-Blind Private Equity Funds”. Simply put, the firm may go out seeking early and growth stage energy investment opportunities and settle to make investments into seven A+ quality privately held energy companies for a total investment amount of $100 million dollars for the seven opportunities.

After a full due diligence and audit package has been completed on each investment opportunity, Senior Management at LA Investment Capital put together a “Bulk Equity Fund Package”, better known as “A Fund”, for investors to review and make their investment into. Before making an investment into one of these “Funds”, investors get an opportunity to review each of the companies in the “Fund” (sometimes referred to as a “portfolio”), not an investment criteria or a general investment profile as offered by most funds today, and in many instances the investors even get an opportunity to speak to the managing partners of each of the companies into which the fund will be making an investment.

The true upside of this investment model is that each investor making an investment into a “Fund” is getting an investment in a truly diversified portfolio of A+ investment opportunities. Most private equity investment opportunities are single investment opportunities, meaning you invest into a single company, and your investment dollars “fly or die” with that companies success or lack-there-of. By investing in one of LA Investment Capital’s “Funds”, each share holder of a “fund” is equally invested in each of the multiple investments the fund invests into, essentially making each “fund” a “mutual fund of private equity investment opportunities”, which helps minimize the risk of each investment made by the investor(s).

The term “True Closed-End Fund” comes from the fact that after the full investment of the $100 million dollars is made by the “Fund”, the Fund never again makes another investment. The Fund and its investors simply sit back as the companies the fund has invested into perform in the market place and collect their quarterly investment returns. When the partnership with its investments come to an end, whether through and equity buy-out or IPO, the Fund simply distributes its last set of investor returns and dissolves.

In an effort to address the growing investment frauds in the market place today, and to ensure each investor that their investment dollars are safe with LA Investment Capital, LA Investment Capital has retained a private third party accounting firm to provide quarterly financial statements and year end audited financial statements to all shareholders of each of LA Investment Capitals Private Equity Funds.

LA Investment Capital currently has Private Equity Investment funds in the following market sectors: Energy, BioFuels, Oil & Natural Gas, Mineral Rights, Domestic Real Estate and International Real Estate. If you are sophicated investor looking for low risk investments with investment returns in the teens or greater, LA Investment Capital may have the investment vehicle for you.

LA Investment Capital

9107 Wilshire Blvd.

Unit 450

Beverly Hills, California 90210

www.LAInvestmentBanc.com

Eutelsat, Viasat to work together on providing internet services

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PARIS (Thomson Financial) – Viasat Inc said it has agreed with Eutelsat Communications, Loral Space & Communications Corp and Telesat to work together to expand broadband internet services via satellite.ViaSat and Eutelsat are cooperating around ViaSat’s Ka-band SurfBeam networking system and a common wholesale business model to offer service through ISPs, telecommunication companies, and direct-to-home television providers, the US company said.Eutelsat announced separately that it has selected EADS Astrium to deliver its first satellite operating exclusively in Ka-band frequencies.The satellite will form the cornerstone of a major new satellite infrastructure programme that will significantly expand capacity for consumer broadband services across Europe and the Mediterranean Basin, while providing new opportunities for local and regional television markets, it said.In a linked move, Viasat said it has awarded a contract to Space Systems/Loral, a subsidiary of the Loral group, for the construction of Viasat-1, which it expects to be the world’s highest capacity broadband satellite.The company has secured financial commitments from partners of over 100 mln usd to date towards ViaSat-1, it said.Eutelsat and ViaSat are already partners in Eutelsat’s Tooway Ka-band service using the Hot Bird 6 satellite, the company added.Andrew.Newby@Thomson.coman/lamCOPYRIGHTCopyright Thomson Financial News Limited 2007. All rights reserved.The copying, republication or redistribution of Thomson Financial News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Financial News.

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