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Posts Tagged ‘Gerbsman Partners’

Interesting read from Bloomberg.

“Romano Prodi recalls how he persuaded Germany to allow debt-swamped Italy into the euro: support our membership and we’ll buy your milk, he said.

When Prodi toured Germany’s agricultural heartland after becoming Italian leader in 1996, he pitched “a big milk pipeline from Bavaria,” pointing to a three-year, 40 percent plunge in the Italian lira that was hurting dairy sales. “To have Italy outside the euro, a huge quantity of exports from Germany would have been endangered,” Prodi, now 70, said.

Germany got the message, allowing entry rules to be bent to create a 16-nation market for its exporters. Now, German taxpayers are footing the bill for that permissiveness as Europe bails out divergent economies lashed to a single currency with little control over national taxes and spending.

The consequences are an 860 billion-euro ($1 trillion) bill for a debt binge led by Greece, sagging confidence in the European Central Bank’s independence and mounting speculation that a currency designed to last forever might break apart.

“You have the great problem of a potential disintegration of the euro,” former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, 82, said yesterday in London. “The essential element of discipline in economic policy and in fiscal policy that was hoped for” has “so far not been rewarded in some countries.”

German-led northern Europe, with its zeal for budget discipline, is attempting to fix the mistakes made by the euro’s founding fathers in the 1990s. It is squaring off against the governments of the south over who will control the euro and the ECB; whether the currency will be used to promote growth or squelch inflation, and ultimately, whether some countries should be disbarred from the monetary union.

European Club

What was conceived as a club for Europe’s strongest economies was expanded for political reasons, leaving the currency union with minimal powers to police deficit spending and no safety net for dealing with countries, like Greece, that veer toward default.

“There was no discussion of that at all, of a crisis mechanism,” said Niels Thygesen, a retired Copenhagen University economics professor who served on the 1989 group led by European Commission President Jacques Delors that mapped out the path to the euro. “It was believed that if countries adhered more or less to prudent budgetary policies, that would not or could not happen.”

Kohl’s Role

Former German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, seeing the euro as the capstone of Europe’s economic integration and Germany’s return to the European family after two world wars, opened the door to the deficit-prone southern European countries that the Bundesbank, haunted by the memory of hyper-inflation, wanted to keep out.

Returning from the December 1991 summit in Maastricht, the Netherlands, that kicked off the euro project, Kohl told the German parliament that he wanted “the greatest possible number of countries” in the euro. That gave Italy, Spain and Portugal the encouragement to meet the economic targets to join in 1999 and Greece to follow two years later.

Defenders of the German economic model knew the threat posed by countries such as Italy, whose budget deficit was 10.2 percent of gross domestic product in 1991, when they forced European leaders to set 3 percent as the limit for euro members.

“A well-known German financial leader told me: Fortunately for Germany, Austria is between Italy and Germany,” said Alfons Verplaetse, who oversaw the Belgian central bank from 1989 to 1999. The reckoning was that only Germany and its immediate neighbors would pass the economic tests, limiting the euro to a handful of countries, Verplaetse, 80, said.

Nobel Laureate

Today’s euro is far from what economists like Nobel laureate Robert Mundell call an “optimum currency area.” Gross domestic product per person ranges from 69,300 euros in Luxembourg to 18,100 euros in Slovakia, debt from 14.5 percent of GDP in Luxembourg to 115.8 percent in Italy, and unemployment from 4.1 percent in the Netherlands to 19.1 percent in Spain.”

Read the full article here.

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Here is an article from SF gate worth looking at.

“Josh Levy, a longtime advocate of the power of social media, is having a crisis of faith.

Last week, Levy created a site — www.pledgebank.com/leavefacebook — seeking 10,000 people to pledge to quit Facebook with him to protest the social network’s most recent privacy changes.

Only 100 people have pledged so far. For individuals like Levy – who has worked with several social media startups and commented extensively on Web topics – it’s not easy letting go. But someone, he said, has to send a message.

Levy represents a small but growing undercurrent of dissatisfaction over Facebook’s march toward turning the Internet into one giant social network, a plan that relies on its members publicly sharing what they read, think, eat, watch, listen to, like and dislike.

“What Facebook is doing is not acceptable, and its attitude is too cavalier,” Levy said. “I don’t want to go back to the horse and buggy days. But I want modernity to be fair.”

Analysts say the undercurrent is not yet strong enough to impact the Palo Alto social-networking king, which has more than 400 million active members.

In fact, Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes said the site has added 10 million members since April 21, when the company touched off the latest round of privacy concerns at its developer conference in San Francisco.

But anti-Facebook sentiment is surfacing in highly visible places, from the halls of Congress to the blogs and podcasts of influential technology experts like Leo Laporte of Petaluma.

“It seems to me that ultimately their goal is to funnel all Internet traffic through Facebook.com,” said Laporte, who deleted his Facebook profile during a recent podcast and donated money to Diaspora, a project to create a more open and private alternative to Facebook.

Ended his account

Laporte was inspired to put an end to his Facebook account by a recent blog post by Jason Calacanis, chief executive officer of Mahalo, a question-and-answer Web site. He accused Facebook and CEO Mark Zuckerberg of trading users’ privacy for profit.

“Facebook is officially ‘out,’ as in uncool, amongst partners, parents and pundits all coming to the realization that Zuckerberg and his company are – simply put – not trustworthy,” Calacanis wrote on his personal Web site.

Facebook convened a staff meeting Thursday to discuss the backlash, although some staff members described it as a routine gathering.

“We have an open culture, and it should come as no surprise that we’re providing a forum for employees to ask questions on a topic that has received a lot of outside interest,” Noyes said.

Since its inception in 2004, Facebook has evolved from a collection of private networks of college friends to an Internet juggernaut with more than 400 million users.

But privacy advocates criticize the company for exposing its customers – via public information posted on their Facebook profiles – to unwanted risks, from identity theft to workplace embarrassment.

Earlier this month, the Electronic Privacy Information Center and 14 other privacy and consumer organizations filed a complaint against Facebook with the Federal Trade Commission, accusing the popular social network of “unfair and deceptive trade practices” and violating users’ expectations of privacy and consumer protection laws.

And last month, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., asked the FTC to develop guidelines instructing social networks on how private information can be used.

All of this comes in the wake of the company’s launch of a new “open” social platform designed to bring Facebook features, such as its Like button, to other Web sites, and an experimental Instant Personalization feature that gives certain Web sites the ability to access a member’s name, profile picture, sex and network of friends. The company also launched community pages that made topics in a member’s profile more public.

Facebook defends changes

In interviews, Facebook officials have repeatedly said the majority of their members are benefiting from the innovations, which are meant to cater to the evolving sharing habits of the community. Indeed, Web sites that have partnered with Facebook, like CNN, have reported increases in traffic.

But critics say the process of hiding personal information is overly cumbersome. And minor security breaches in Facebook’s chat program have only added to the criticism.

Still, social media analysts say Facebook remains far from reaching the tipping point where it would start to lose members, especially with no comparable alternative for consumers. But the company does have a brewing public relations problem that could get worse if doesn’t act.

“Are people really going to leave Facebook and go back to e-mail as a primary source of sharing online? I don’t think so,” said Augie Ray, a senior analyst for Forrester Research Inc., a technology research firm. “Facebook will not suffer irreparable harm from continuing to offer Instant Personalization, but they will make their job of earning consumer trust more difficult.”

Explain the social benefits

Jeremiah Owyang, an analyst with San Mateo consulting firm Altimeter Group, said Facebook needs to take steps to better explain the benefits of an open social Web. And that’s compounded by Facebook constantly revising its privacy policy.

“It seems like they didn’t think things through,” Owyang said. “They keep on doing it and pushing customers along whether they like it or not. They’re going too fast, and consumers aren’t educated about what’s private and what’s public.””

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Here is a report from SF Gate.

“The Android operating system moved into second place in sales for the first quarter, outpacing the iPhone OS for the first time while still falling short of the BlackBerry platform, according to the NPD Group.

According to NPD, Google’s Android took a 28 percent share of the U.S. smart phone market during the first quarter, behind Research In Motion’s 36 percent and ahead of iPhone OS at 21 percent.

The numbers are derived from monthly consumer surveys but don’t include corporate smart phone sales. What it suggests is that Android’s momentum is picking up, helped along by aggressive sales by carrier partners such as Verizon, which offers some smart phones for free with the purchase of another smart phone.

The fact that all the carriers offer Android phones also means that sales should always be pretty robust compared with the iPhone OS, which is still an exclusive on AT&T in the United States.”

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Here is an update on the Euro crisis from Reuters.

“Europe may be months, conceivably weeks away from an expanded debt crisis that cuts more countries off from access to the markets and forces fresh emergency action by rich governments or the European Central Bank.

The many potential triggers for an expanded crisis include a failed bond auction, any signs that Athens or donor nations were backing away from a 110 billion euro ($141 billion) bailout of Greece, and a freezing up of Europe’s interbank money market.

For now, Portugal, Ireland and Spain, widely seen as the next possible “dominos” after Greece, remain in significantly better shape. The interbank market is far from grinding to a halt as it did after Lehman Brothers collapsed in late 2008.

But the spread of investor jitters in the past 24 hours, affecting markets as distant as yen swaps in Tokyo, suggests market conditions could deteriorate as rapidly as they did during the global financial crisis of 2007-2009.

“In my view there is a 10-20 percent chance that at least one more country will need rescuing as it finds itself shut out of the markets,” said Marco Annunziata, chief economist at Italy’s UniCredit bank.

“If it happens, it is most likely to happen in the coming six months.”

Lena Komileva, head of G7 market economics at money broker Tullett Prebon, said the crisis over Greece’s solvency had morphed into a capital markets crisis, and the markets had begun to feed on their own momentum.

“Another credit event similar to Greece can happen within weeks,” she said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and top economic policy makers in the euro zone appeared to recognize this in their warnings about the risk of an expanded crisis on Wednesday.

“It’s absolutely essential to contain the bushfire in Greece so that it will not become a forest fire and a threat to financial stability for the European Union and its economy as a whole,” said European Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn.

TRIGGERS

Greece became unable to finance its debt at affordable rates when its 10-year government bond yield soared near 10 percent in April. The euro zone’s other weak countries have not reached that stage; Portugal’s yield was below 6 percent on Wednesday.

Portugal sold 500 million euros in six-month Treasury bills on Wednesday at a yield of 2.955 percent, which was about four times the rate at the last such sale on March 3 but was well below maximum levels in the secondary market. This was seen as a moderately positive sign by analysts.

Spain is expected to succeed in selling 2-3 billion euros of government bonds on Thursday, although at a much higher yield than in its last auction, analysts said.

Nevertheless, every debt sale by weak euro zone states in coming months is likely to be viewed as a potential flashpoint for an expanded crisis. Portugal plans to offer more T-bills on May 19 and Spain plans another bond sale on May 20.”

Read the full article here.

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Here is an interesting newsbit from SFgate.com

“Microsoft’s cell phone rebound begins today with the release of two new phones aimed at social networking fiends.

Kin One and Kin Two are Microsoft’s play for the generation of messaging users who are forever connected to friends through platforms like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter, what some call Generation Upload.

The two phones are now available online at www.verizonwireless.com and will be available for purchase in Verizon Wireless stores May 13. The Kin One will sell for $49.99 with a $100 rebate and 2-year contract while the Kin Two will sell for $99.99 with the same requirements.

I’ve been playing with the Kin One for half a day and it feels like a fresh approach to messaging phones that should complement, along with its bigger brother, Microsoft’s upcoming Windows phone 7 smart phones.

First some basics: The Kin One sports a 2.6-inch screen, a 5 megapixel camera, a portrait slide-out keyboard, a Tegra APX 2600 processor (like in the Zune HD) with GPS, Wi-Fi, an accelerometer and 4GB of storage. The Kin Two has a 3.4-inch screen, a horizontal slide-out keyboard, an 8 megapixel camera, the ability to run 720p video, 8GB of storage along with the same processor, Wi-Fi, GPS and accelerometer of its smaller sibling.

The home screen called Kin Loop is a stream of tiles representing updates from your friends and RSS feeds. Swipe to the right and you can jump to tiles of up to 51 of your favorite friends. To the left of the home screen is your list of apps.

Where things get interesting is the Kin Spot, a circle on the bottom of the screen that remains in almost every screen. When you come across an update, a web page, a picture or video you want to share or upload, you just do a long-press on it and then drag it to the Spot. Then you decide who you want to send it to. From your favorites list or contacts page, you can drag anyone into the Spot and then decide how they’ll receive it. You can e-mail it to them or text message them. Or you can broadcast out your update to your social networks.

Apps like Tweetdeck on the iPhone let you do some of this stuff but using the Spot is fun and it works across your entire phone.

Another innovative thing about the Kin devices is that almost everything you do is backed up to the Kin Studio, which can be accessed from any browser. You can see all your communications you’ve had over the past month, week or day and you can see all your pictures and videos (up to a minute long) you’ve captured. You can also arrange the layout of your Kin device from the Studio.

The Kin devices also have full HTML browser running a version of Internet Explorer with multi-touch for zooming. The media player is built off of Microsoft’s Zune media player, with all of its elegant swooshing menus. The phone has a dedicated search button for searches on your phone, general Bing searches and Bing searches near you. The e-mail client can handle the usual Google, Yahoo, Hotmail as well as Exchange support.”

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