TimeLine Layout

June, 2017

  • 19 June

    Taiwan lays plans for $59bn in renewable energy finance

    Bloomberg New energy, meet new finance. That’s the thinking of Taiwan’s government, which is starting to map out funding plans for a power system that can no longer rely on nuclear reactors. Prime Minister Lin Chuan’s administration aims to increase the share of renewable energy such as water, wind and solar to 20 percent of total power output on the ...

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  • 19 June

    Oil prices decline as US adds more rigs

    Bloomberg Oil traded below $45 a barrel following a fourth weekly loss as US drillers continued to add rigs, blunting OPEC-led efforts to rebalance an oversupplied market. Futures fell as much as 0.7 percent in New York after capping the longest run of weekly declines since August 2015. US drillers targeting crude added rigs for a 22nd straight week, the ...

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  • 19 June

    Saudi bans imports of Egyptian strawberries

    CAIRO­­­­ / Reuters Saudi Arabia is banning imports of Egyptian strawberries due to pesticide residues, said Abdel Hamid al-Demerdash, the head of Egypt’s Agriculture Export Council, the latest such ban to hit Egypt as it struggles to revive its economy. The temporary ban comes into effect on July 11, Demerdash told Reuters, adding that the memo received from Saudi Arabia ...

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  • 19 June

    Water fears split Outback town over drilling fix for gas crisis

    Bloomberg In the tight-knit Outback town of Narrabri, the cold-shoulder treatment farmer Peter Gett has felt over the natural gas wells on his property has shown him that promoting Australia’s energy security comes at a cost. The fifth-generation wheat grower opened gates and cleared tracks to smooth a path for exploration of the gas reserves beneath his farm. Seven years ...

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  • 19 June

    Buyers line up as Europe’s biggest debt collector divests units

    Bloomberg A long list of potential buyers has expressed interest in the Nordic and Baltic businesses that Intrum Justitia AB and Lindorff need to divest to proceed with their merger, according to Intrum’s chief executive officer. CEO Mikael Ericson says he is confident the two firms can sell Lindorff’s entire business in Denmark, Estonia, Finland and Sweden, as well as ...

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  • 19 June

    Delivery Hero seeks $4.9bn valuation as IPO price set

    Bloomberg Delivery Hero AG plans an initial public offering valuing the company at as much as 4.39 billion euros ($4.9 billion) as the Rocket Internet SE-backed food-delivery startup seeks funds for growth. The company and current owners will sell as much as 996 million euros in stock for 22 euros to 25.50 euros apiece, according to a statement on Monday. ...

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  • 19 June

    London home sellers cut price for second time in 3 months

    Bloomberg London home sellers cut asking prices for a second time in three months and waning buyer interest hints that the slowdown may continue. Prices dropped 2.4 percent in June — the biggest for that month since 2010 — leaving them down 1.4 percent from a year earlier, Rightmove Plc said on Monday. Nationally, asking prices slipped 0.4 percent, pushing ...

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  • 19 June

    Google ‘will do more to suppress terrorist propaganda’

    Bloomberg Alphabet Inc.’s Google says it is creating new policies and practices to suppress terrorism-related videos, a response to UK lawmakers who have said the internet is a petri dish for radical ideology. Google will increase its use of technology to identify extremist and terrorism-related videos across its sites, which include YouTube, and will boost the number of people who ...

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  • 19 June

    Nurturing our capacity for regeneration

    Sparkling in the sunlight that inspired 19th-century romantic painters of the Hudson River School, Sing Sing prison’s razor wire, through which inmates can see the flowing river, is almost pretty. Almost. Rain or shine, however, a fog of regret permeates any maximum-security prison. But 37 men — almost all minorities; mostly African Americans — recently received celebratory attention. It was ...

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  • 19 June

    Infosys squabble calls for a theory of the teenage firm

    Four decades ago, two University of Rochester professors came up with a definitive theory for that “awesome social invention” known as a publicly held company. The firm, they said, was but a series of contractual agreements between the owners and their agents—the managers. And there the matter rested. Until a 20-F filing at the US Securities Exchange Commission by Bangalore-based ...

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